Difference between revisions of "The Red Front"
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==Resources== | ==Resources== | ||
− | *Revolutionary Communist Party, ''[http://www.scribd.com/doc/173310658/The-Red-Front-A-Platform-for-Working-Class-Unity-Junius-Publications-1987 The Red Front: A platform for working class unity]'', London: Junius, February 1987: 7 | + | *Revolutionary Communist Party, ''[http://www.scribd.com/doc/173310658/The-Red-Front-A-Platform-for-Working-Class-Unity-Junius-Publications-1987 The Red Front: A platform for working class unity]'', London: Junius, February 1987: 68pp. |
+ | *The Red Front, 1987 ''[http://powerbase.info/images/7/78/Vote_Red_Front.pdf Stand up fight back: Vote Red Front]'', Published by [[Alan Harding]] RCP, printed by [[Junius Publications]], London. {Election flyer} | ||
==Notes== | ==Notes== | ||
<references/> | <references/> | ||
[[category:LM network]] | [[category:LM network]] |
Latest revision as of 12:30, 28 October 2017
LM network resources
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The Red Front was an ostensibly broad coalition led by the Revolutionary Communist Party which stood in the 1987 General Election and in some other byelections at the time, such as the Knowsley North by-election on 13 November 1986, in which the RCP candidate Dave Hallsworth gained 2.1% of the vote coming fourth after the conservatives with 644 votes.[1]
Critics
The Red Front was not widely supported on the left. It did however gain the support at least temporarily of two small factions. When it formed the Red Front 'like most fronts [it] had nothing behind [it] except for the tiny Revolutionary Democratic Group (RDG) and the Squaddists of Red Action. The front’s electoral programme consisted of a minimalist series of demands, which did not attack the capitalist system, nor advocate serious reforms'.[2]
Among its critics the Alliance for Worker's Liberty described their campaign as 'by far the most incredibly stupid prank of all', granting however that they were 'more consistent' than the SWP in that they 'opposed a Labour vote'. 'They stood 14 candidates (which must have cost a lot of money), most of whom got around 200 votes - except in Knowsley North where they got 538'.[3]
Constituencies and votes
Names of candidates only included where candidate remained/remains active in the LM network[4]
- Constituency Candidate Votes Percentage
- Birmingham Sparkbrook n/a 229 0.68%
- Bristol South n/a 149 0.29%
- Glasgow Central n/a 126 0.38%
- Hackney North & Stoke Newington n/a 228 0.59%
- Hammersmith PJF Fitzpatrick 125 0.36%
- Holborn and St. Pancras 300 0.66%
- Knowsley North Dave Hallsworth Red Front 538 1.37%
- Manchester Gorton n/a 253 0.56%
- Manchester Wythenshawe n/a Red Front 216 0.51%
- Newcastle upon Tyne Central Kirk Williams 111 0.24%
- Nottingham East Kenan Malik Red Front 212 0.45%
- Pontefract & Castleford n/a 295 0.62%
- Sheffield Central CT Dingle Red Front 278 0.73%
- Vauxhall n/a 117 0.27%
Resources
- Revolutionary Communist Party, The Red Front: A platform for working class unity, London: Junius, February 1987: 68pp.
- The Red Front, 1987 Stand up fight back: Vote Red Front, Published by Alan Harding RCP, printed by Junius Publications, London. {Election flyer}
Notes
- ↑ Britain Votes/Europe Votes By-Election Supplement 1983-, compiled and edited by F.W.S. Craig (Parliamentary Research Services 1985)
- ↑ John Sullivan, As Soon As This Pub Closes ..., 1986.
- ↑ Election '87: A test for the left Workers' Liberty, No. 7, P. 4
- ↑ Candidates listed in 'Your Red Front candidates', The next step, 15 May 1987, p. 12.