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What I learnt from infiltrating a Socialist meeting

However bad we might feel about our lot, the other side are feeling even worse

August 14, 2024 15:51
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LONDON, ENGLAND - NOVEMBER 14: A Socialist Workers Party flier calling Israel a racist state is displayed on a hoarding on November 14, 2023 in London, England. (Photo by Carl Court/Getty Images)
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Every time it all feels a bit too much – antisemitic comedians, MPs blaming Israel for riots, the constant throbbing drum roll of hate and war, you know the kind of thing – I remember the time I infiltrated a Socialist Workers Party (SWP) meeting and can’t help cracking a bitter smile. It makes me feel better. Because as powerless as we feel, as many conversations we have about whether we have a future in this country, we are still doing better than them.

I’ve been thinking about the SWP because its sister organisation, Stand Up to Racism (nice name, not nice people), managed to get itself back in the news last week when it staged a series of protests against rumoured far-right demos.

The Trotskyist SWP specialises in protests – apparently it even has its own factory to make placards – and is nimble enough to jump on popular feeling about a particular subject, like a spider going in for a kill. It stole the headlines as thousands of good-natured people who wanted to actually stand against racism found themselves holding SWP placards and listening to speeches about the perfidy of Israel and singing "From the River to the Sea”.

That the far-right never showed up – the existence of their plans was a hoax – made no difference. It won that particular war. But nothing sums up the SWP more than when it tried to replicate its success with more anti-racist demonstrations and the only target they seemed to find were some Port Vale fans having a drink at a Wetherspoons who looked on incredulously.