Archive for the ‘Reports’ Category

UMSU Exec Election Results 2011

Friday, March 11th, 2011

Final rounds only.

Non-Sabb Officers

Life Sciences Faculty Officer:

Luke Newton: 1310
RON: 282

Humanities Faculty Officer:

Nick Pringle: 1112
Ben Green: 298
Ionut Luzinschi: 215
RON: 151

EPS Faculty Officer:

Ghalia Albarazi: 927
Cory Bernard: 889
Dean Phythian: 286

Medical Faculty Officer:

Markus Arnold: 661
Simon Gupta: 392
Rashad Roufi: 171

International Students’ Officer:

Sahibzada Yousaf: 882
Zain Iqbal: 714
RON: 256

Postgraduate Officer:

Sarah Kerton: 1273
RON: 385

Sabbatical Officers

Campaigns Officer:

Amanda: 3112

Student Activities:

Amaya: 1467
Rhona: 1413

Student Direct Officer:

Nick Renaud-Komiya: 1232
Adam Farnell: 1161

Academic Affairs:

Mo Saqib: 2071
Alex Bush: 970
Jon Ridge: 676

Welfare Officer:

Hannah Paterson: 2267
Aidan Nolan: 1090

Women’s Officer:

Sylvia Barnett: 894
Carly Jan: 874

Communications Officer:

Jeremy Buck: 2112
Tabz O’Brien Butcher: 1196

General Secretary:

Lette Newton: 1511
Andrew Speke: 1144

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Violence at the NUS/UCU National Demonstration

Thursday, November 11th, 2010

I am writing this after 20 hours of travel and protest but I wanted to get out some quick thoughts on the issue of violence at the demonstration yesterday. But take a look at the video above and tell me: does this look like a “tiny despicable minority ruining it for the others” to you? Or does it look like a thousand very pissed off students deciding that passively listening to Aaron Porter talk about “action” (as if he has any idea what that means) wasn’t enough of a message?

I made it into a pub about 3pm while in London for the NUS/UCU National Demonstration against education cuts to find out what was going on, to discover that the reason the march I had been on had stopped and then started to disperse was because a) there was a sit-in in Parliament Square, and b) student had stormed the Conservative Party HQ. Commentators repeatedly referred to “a few anarchists, not students”, being responsible, and Aaron Porter, president of the National Union of Students, accused a “small minority” of having “hijacked” the event and described the violence as “despicable”.

Ignoring the rather stupid implication that anarchists cannot be students, the fact is, however the media will spin it, maybe a couple of hundred broke into the building itself, but the reason they got away with it (the people arrested are people who stayed at Millbank well into the evening) is because of the thousands of protesters who surrounded the building and prevented the police from getting hold of them. At least 2000 people watched as people broke the windows of the Tory Party HQ and hung banners from the roof. And it would have been more if NUS stewards had not lined up at the end of the road and started lying to people that the Millbank protest had ended in an attempt to get them to go away.

I have been to a lot of protests and several that have turned violent, but this has to be one of the first where a small group of people started to engage in violent direct action and were immediately supported by *everyone* around them. I disapprove strongly of throwing fire extinguishers from rooftops, but direct action against buildings is as valid a method of protest as any other. The fact that so many people were prepared to engage in and support direct action should probably tell us all something about the potential scale of the movement that we are building, and just how powerful we can become.

And I think the message got through today that this is real, and we’re not going to go away, and people’s lives are going to be ruined by these cuts. Time to put some meaning into Mr. Porter’s dictum, “We will not stand for cuts”.

This is just the beginning.

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Pay your taxes! Vodafone shop shut down in Manchester town centre

Monday, November 1st, 2010

I do enjoy going to protests that go right. And shutting down a Vodafone store last Saturday went very well.

In the same week that George Osborne announced to great applause from his back-benches the removal of £7 billion from benefits and the destruction of the welfare state, HMRC quietly dropped its attempts to force Vodafone to pay their outstanding tax bill of £6 billion. BILLION. £6,000,000,000. So at a time when George Osborne was commending his review to the House, which will result in deaths of hundreds, the destitution of thousands and the displacement of hundreds of thousands, as “bringing Britain back from the brink of bankruptcy”, Vodafone was forgiven a tax bill that would have rendered those cuts to welfare completely unnecessary.

Why? I couldn’t possibly speculate. I merely note that John Connors, a former senior official at Her Majesty’s Revenue and Customs, moved to become Head of Tax for Vodafone in 2007, and since 2010 has been George Osborne’s adviser on corporation tax. I believe that such things in the third world are known as “corruption”, but of course such things never happen in 21st Century Britain.

5134786357 010feda17a Pay your taxes! Vodafone shop shut down in Manchester town centre

Andi is uber-angry about Vodafone stealing £6 billion in unpaid tax...

LOL. Of course they happen, and have happened. Fortunately this story has been sufficiently outrageous that even the average British citizen can’t quite believe that Vodafone has got away with paying the same amount from their profit margin that is now being taken from the hands of people who desperately need it in the name of “dealing with debt”. Spontaneous protesters shut down the flagship Vodafone store on Oxford Street last week and there was a subsequent call for sit-ins across the country at Vodafone stores last Saturday, the busiest shopping day of the week. 21 stores were shut down in places as diverse as London, Oxford, Worthing, Leeds, Sheffield, Edinburgh, Glasgow, and of course, Manchester.

5135384818 e0b7c131b7 Pay your taxes! Vodafone shop shut down in Manchester town centre

Vodafone do our work for us and shut the shop.

Given that the Manchester demo was organised at 9pm the night before, we managed a pretty respectable turnout. The Vodafone store had obviously had prior warning and was already closed and shuttered – but we still stood outside it for 4 hours, chanting and leafleting. The response from the public has been overwhelmingly positive: most were horrified at the amount of money involved and thanks us for demonstrating, several asked me what they could do to get involved, others announced they were going to switch from Vodafone immediately, and one or two spontaneously joined the protest. Sadly, we also had to deal with an Arndale security staff member who told us we were “pathetic” and “sad”, and that she didn’t care about the cuts because she had a “job for life” because “there are four things which are certain in life, death, taxes, food and securing a building”: I would add that another thing that is certain in life is “your line manager receiving a complaint letter if you are a obnoxious moron to me”. But besides that, it was a good day.

5135385020 a75d13e453 Pay your taxes! Vodafone shop shut down in Manchester town centre

We like our tax bills to be paid, yes we do.

It was, however, an isolated protest. Vodafone’s tax dodge has cost us £6 billion, but as I heard Graham Turner say at the Education Action Network the day after, Vodafone is only one company. Every billion the multinationals save from legal loopholes and negotiations with the government to cancel their debts is another billion stolen from the public services that are used and needed by all of us.

George Osborne’s “reforms” are going to effectively fire 1 million people, who won’t be able to access the benefits they need to support themselves because he’s removed those as well. If you don’t want to be one of them, I suggest you start organising.

Vodafone, we pay taxes, why don’t you?

Check out the campaign: http://ukuncut.wordpress.com

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UMSU Students for Sensible Drug Policy – Chair’s Report 09-10

Wednesday, June 23rd, 2010

SSDPBanner UMSU Students for Sensible Drug Policy   Chairs Report 09 10

Manchester Students for Sensible Drug Policy’s second year has been hard work, but enjoyable. We have gained members, developed leaflets, posters, and other materials, and held events, training sessions, stalls, and socials. We have succeeded in holding some kind of meeting or event almost every week of term, with varying degrees of success.

Our greatest success this year has undoubtedly been the campus-wide awareness of SSDP and what we do. The number of emails I have had regarding the society has been steady and we have gained a number of new members through the union website membership form, so they must be finding us somehow. We have also been approached for numerous joint events and support, and it has been extremely heart-warming to stand on a stall and have 1 in 10 of the people we talk to already on the mailing list or who have attended one of our events. I hope we can continue this awareness raising next year as well.

Our greatest failure has been an inability to get together promotion on time. Although an improvement on last year (we actually managed to produce posters this year), our inexperience and somewhat chaotic approach led to a very haphazard promotion strategy which did not pay off well. We have experimented with new methods of promotion, including Facebook ads and will continue to do so. Our primary goal as an organisation next year is to get this sorted.

Activities

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Throughout the year, we have held a wide range of events, alone and in collusion with others. It seems likely that we will continue some which have now become fixtures in our calendar, such as a termly film showing with Openmedia and a presence at Pangaea, and some will be rethinking in order to be more successful. Also throughout the term, we have put forward a motion committing the union to campaign on drug law reform to most General Meetings; this was never debated due to a failure to reach quorum this year – however, the effort we put into promoting the motion has resulted in several SSDP activists coming to General Meetings, which has been excellent.

This term we launched our newsletter, “War on People”. Although a great success among those who read it, its production severely overran the budget allocated to it and although we sold advertising to another society, Free Culture, our print run of 200 copies still cost £300. Copies have been distributed to other chapters all across the UK, and have been popular. Having learned from the lessons of our first attempt, we will be producing our second issue in time for Freshers with a view to going half-termly.

Also this term, we held two awareness weeks. Elephant in the Room week was our generic week to raise awareness of drug law reform. Although struck down by numerous problems and the unexpected cancellation of our main speaker, it was nonetheless quite fun, and we received extremely positive feedback from those who participated (although people were near unanimous that the name must be changed next year). Mephedrone Week was hastily organised in response to the criminalisation of mephedrone in April. Largely organised entirely by our Events Officer, we held some stalls, gave out leaflets containing information and safety advice on mephedrone and held a talk at the end of the week with a local speaker from Lifeline on the topic. It was low-key, but I think very successful.

Things left over from last term: the drugs guide is now complete but has been awaiting legal approval for some months. If anyone has legal expertise on drugs, we would be very, very grateful for a proofreader. The first aid workshops ground to a halt because of the convener’s commitments, but we have found a new teacher for next year. We are also planning to push ahead with our schools programme, hopefully through gaining and training volunteers through the Manchester Leadership Programme, although that is a very tentative plan at the moment.

Membership

4628785775 43369f75d8 UMSU Students for Sensible Drug Policy   Chairs Report 09 10

This year we recruited nearly 250 people onto our mailing list at Freshers Fair, and have been signing people up throughout the year. Our current mailing list is just under 300 and our Facebook group just over – allowing for overlap I would say that it is not unlikely that we are in regular contact with about 400-450 people through email, Facebook events, and stalls, which puts us somewhere in the top 40 student societies at UMSU. This is somewhat lower than I had anticipated in my interim report – however, the larger part of this can be put down to the accidental loss of over 80 email addresses at the January Pangaea stall and misplanning for Elephant in the Room Week which led to much shorter stalls than intended.

SSDP was also much more active this year in involving other people, although we did not achieve as much as we would have liked to in this area. Our Executive expanded dramatically from four to fourteen, although it must be admitted that some roles we created have not been as useful as we hoped and these have been duly scrapped. We’ve had greater commitment from a larger pool of semi-regular activists, several of whom have come from outside the main friendship circle of the society, which has been very gratifying. We have, however, accidentally lost several other potential members because of insularity and this is also something which should be addressed next year.

Our demographic remains broad, with a good mix of first, second and third years, which bodes well for our future. I have tried hard to ensure that financial hardship is not a barrier to participation in SSDP, but we have much further to go in that respect.

Finances and Equipment

4628783959 cae03278fe UMSU Students for Sensible Drug Policy   Chairs Report 09 10

This year we achieved full funding of £750, as well as claiming £270 in the first semester for first aid equipment and £300 for newsletters in the second. We have so far spent approximately two thirds of our regular budget, and one of my remaining tasks as Chair for this year is to invest in more materials for Freshers and other items with a view to next year.

In terms of equipment, this year we have acquired a projector to avoid the exorbitant costs of hiring union equipment, and have also bought a table and a gazebo. We also have access to a bike trailer, trolley, barbecue, megaphone, and numerous other pieces of equipment that will come in handy next year.

We are also very rich in resources. We currently have several thousand badges for Release and SSDP UK, numerous “nice people take drugs” wristbands, a wide selection of harm reduction literature and a reasonable supply of everything Transform has ever written. We also have in stock nearly a thousand condoms for future distribution on stalls. We do need to get more stickers, banners and develop a new leaflet, but this will happen. We will also need to get a new batch of Release bust-cards, as we get through hundreds of the damn things faster than a new-forged sword through a pat of butter.

As Chair

Me looking smart at SSDP Conference 300x199 UMSU Students for Sensible Drug Policy   Chairs Report 09 10

I mentioned in my interim report that I intended to continue to decentralise the work required to keep Manchester SSDP running. This process continued this term, with our Events Officer Andi Sidwell taking on most of the events-related work this term, which they organised with great aplomb. Kudos also has to go to our newsletter editors, Alasdair Sladen and Luke Taylor, for the hard work they put into producing War on People with very little input for me (though perhaps I should have had more input into the budget… :P). Thanks also to our Treasurer and Secretary, Jesse White and Robi Folkard, for their quiet but consistent contribution to our organisation. James Jackson, our Promotions Officer this year, didn’t do a lot as Promotions Officer, but has turned up to most of our stalls, put up a great defence against the Debating Union in our joint event with them, and gave a popular workshop at our training weekend on Stop and Search powers. Our stalls this year also could not have happened without the hours spent on them by everyone above and Mo Saqib, Benji Starr, Ste Monaghan, Miles Battye, Jess Bradley, Dan Fahey and Chris Loh. I may be amazing, but without everyone helping out this year we simply wouldn’t have got as much stuff done.

As Chair, I have continued to handle the majority of our paperwork, correspondence, communication work and interviews. I have tweaked the design of the weekly email and developed our Facebook group to be more useful. I also organised an activist training weekend which saw 7 different chapters represented to learn about running a chapter, campaigning, and effective tabling. I have continued to contribute to the long-term strategic planning on the national organisation in my capacity as a member of the Board of Directors, and recently published a 6,000 word three part guide to Running an SSDP Society, with the third part due to be published in February next year, as well as developing an activist tool-kit with a variety of resources that I have developed and acquired during my time as Chair.

The Future

SSDPBanner UMSU Students for Sensible Drug Policy   Chairs Report 09 10

I am stepping down as Chair this year, as I am taking a year out and it seems inappropriate to continue as head of a student organisation while not a student. Following our AGM, Andi Sidwell, previously both Events Officer and Secretary of Manchester SSDP, will be taking on the role. I wish them the greatest of luck with it and hope they will keep the flame of drug law reform burning on our campus. I have no idea what I will be doing, and await my performance review with interest. :)

In my remaining months in office, I will be finishing off the remaining business of our society this year – ordering materials, writing cheques, and re-registering the society and booking our Freshers’ stall. Along with Andi, I will be conducting soon-to-be-entitled-something-other-than-the-somewhat-scary-sounding-performance-reviews with all our regular activists to get more detailed feedback on how our membership feels about our direction and where they want to contribute. It is a time-consuming process, but a very rewarding one. Together we have been writing an SSDP Year Plan 10/11 which collates all the feedback we have received from the ongoing evaluations over the past year to ensure successes are repeated and failures overcome. This will be followed by an ubermeeting to plan our calendar for next year, which I believe Andi wishes to be open to all who wish to participate. And finally, I would like to organise a summer social over July/August for any activists left in Manchester before we start badgering people to stand on Freshers’ stalls.

I remain, as ever, open to the interests and suggestions of our membership. Our society has been largely built upon the systematic nicking of ideas from every society, organisation and individual willing to offer them, and I believe we have benefited greatly as a result of the mistakes and knowledge of others. Long may it continue.

Sarah McCulloch

Outgoing Chair

SSDPBanner UMSU Students for Sensible Drug Policy   Chairs Report 09 10

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NUS Conference 2010 Report

Saturday, April 17th, 2010

Well, NUS 2010 was fun. Manchester delegation all enjoyed themselves, I think, although we unsurprisingly differed on many issues and the delegation split off in our little factions reasonably early on. Commiserations to Siobhan Brown, who was ill, congratulations to me cos I got a single room as a result, and a raised eyebrow to John Gilcrist, who neither attended, offered apologies or stepped down as an NUS delegate.

FE Zone Controversy

There has been some controversy around the FE Zone motions. HE delegates have been denounced for not attending the FE caucus by the NEC, by FE delegates, the left, and numerous others. As someone who did not attend, I have three responses to this:

1. I was given to understand that as a HE delegate I was not allowed to vote on FE matters. As it turns out this was not the case and I had been misinformed.

2. Even had I realised this, I would have been extremely reluctant to contribute to decisions that affect only other students and not myself. I would not want non-LGBT students to determine the direction of NUS LGBT, I would not want NUS Scotland to be told what to do by NUS Wales (as NUS Scotland LGBT Officer Tom French made clear himself when he spoke against SSDP’s motion on the age limit on alcohol at NUS LGBT Conference 2008), so I am baffled that FE delegates has apparently been so vehement on the issue and expected me to attend and vote on issues that have nothing to do with me and everything to do with them.

3. I used the time for the FE Zone to check into my hotel and take a break. I got up at 5am to travel to Conference and would have been at the Sage until 11pm without a break had I not left. A small, but not insignificant part of the blame for the near-total absence of HE delegates has to be laid at the door of the DPC as well.

My voting record

See below my voting record. I have included commentary where my vote did not coincide with the majority of the room. The Constitution states that I may differ from union policy, stating, “Delegates who indicate their intention to differ from the above voting requirements in their manifesto may vote accordingly.” My manifesto stated I would be a dissenting voice to show where we were going wrong on a national level and on being elected I thus voted accordingly.

Higher Education

-301 (For) (Passed) Higher Education Funding
301a (For) (Passed) ELQs
301b (For) (Fell) Free Education
301c (For) (Passed) Anti-cuts
301d (Abs) (Passed) Transparency and Student Experience
301e (Agn) (Fell) Adding a sentence
-302 (For) (Passed) NSS
-303 (Don’t have a record) Complaints and Appeals
-304 (For) (Passed) Assessment and Feedback
304a Withdrawn
-305 (For) (Passed) Quality
-306 (For) (Passed) ICT and Technology
-307 (For) (Passed) Part-time students
-308 (For) (Passed) Hidden Course Cuts
-309 (Agn) (Passed) Higher Education Achievement Record
309a Deleted
309b (For) (Passed) Details
309c Withdrawn
309d (Agn) (Fell) Opposing HEAR
-310 (Agn) (Passed) Information, Advice, and Guidance into HE

The guillotine then fell.

I obviously voted for 301b Free Education, and it was disappointing that it both fell and that the main reason given for its opposition was that “we fought free education in 2004 with cheap slogans and we lost”. I would’ve suggested not running with cheap slogans instead of dumping free education altogether. I find it horrifying that the National Union of Students is advocating a tax which will actually result in students paying more for their education. Just because it’s hidden debt doesn’t mean it isn’t still debt.

I abstained on 301d Transparency and Student Experience because I felt it was wishy-washy rubbish. I voted against 309 Higher Education Achievement Record because I don’t think that students should be getting into activism or volunteering for any other reason than real passion for either. Creating a HEAR for each student will flood our unions and charitable arms with students who don’t really want to be there and just want a career and ultimately I don’t think that is a very good idea.

I voted against 310 Information, Advice, and Guidance into HE, but looking through it I’m not now sure why. I presume I heard quite a convincing speech against it.

Society and Citizenship

-401 (Agn) (Passed) Votes at 16
-402 (For) (Passed) Electoral Reform
-403 (For) (Passed) Influencing Parliament
-404 (For) (Passed) Neighbourhood
-405 (For) (Passed) Local Citizens
-406 (Agn) (Passed) Safe and Cohesive Communities
406a (Agn) (Fell) Reaffiliate to Stop the War
406b (Agn) (Passed) Promoting UAF

The guillotine then fell.

I voted against 401 Votes at 16 because I don’t think 16 year olds should have the vote. When I was 16, I didn’t believe my friends were mature to vote, even if I might have been (though I was a paid up Conservative at the time, so you may disagree…), and looking at 16 year olds now, I still think this is the case. People tell me if you can get married and die in Iraq at 16 you should be able to vote, but you can only do these things with your parents’ permission – shall we offer parents around the country their children’s votes as well?

I voted against 406 Safe and Cohesive Communities and all its amendments due to my opposition to No Platform, which has been well-documented elsewhere so I shan’t say more. I would say though that although I voted against 406a Reaffiliate to Stop the War on this basis, I do not consider Stop the War anti-semitic. Stop the War has questionable tactics, but so does Unite Against Fascism, and I find inconsistent that NUS should support one and not the other.

Union Development

-501 (For) (Passed) Campaigning and Activism
-502 (For) (Passed) Student Activities
502a (For) (Passed) Student Volunteering
502b (For) (Passed) National Partners in Volunteering
-503 (Don’t have a record) Participation and Engagement
503a (For) (Passed) Employability
503b (For) (Passed) Extra-curricular skills
503c (Abs) (Fell) Removing SUEI
503d Withdrawn
-508 (For) (Passed) Engaging Postgraduates
-509 (For) (Passed) FE Union Development
-515 (For) (Passed) Finance, Rag and Alumni Fundraising
-517 (For) (Passed) Supporting Council Chairs

The guillotine then fell.

I abstained on 503c Removing SUEI because I didn’t feel I had enough information to make a decision in the five minutes the motion was allotted.

Welfare

-601 (For) (Passed) Student Accommodation
601a (For) (Passed) Accommodation Provision
601b (For) (Passed) International/Home Student Integration
-602 (Forgot to vote) (Passed) Housing
-603 (For) (Passed) Neighbourhood and Community
-604 (For) (Passed) Crime – Not on Our Watch
604a (Dropped card) (Passed) Islamophobia
-605 (For) (Passed) Health Services and Costs
-606 (For) (Passed) Sexual Health
-607 (For) (Passed) Mental Health
-608 (For) (Passed) Pastoral Care
-609 (For) (Passed) Money and Finance
609a (For) (Passed) SLC
-610 (For) (Passed) Transport
-611 (For) (Passed) Students and Workers
611a (For) (Passed) Unpaid Internships
-612 (For) (Passed) Student Parents
-613 (Agn) (Passed) Faith and Safety
613a (For) (Passed) Hate Speech
613b (Abs) (Passed) Academic Freedom

The guillotine then fell.

I voted against 613 Faith and Safety because it affirmed No Platform, and abstained on 613b Academic Freedom because I always intended to vote against the main motion and there was no point taking a position on the amendment. Had it been a motion in its own right I would have voted for it.

AGM

-701 (See below) Defend the Diversity of National Conference
Parts were taken on the entirety of the text of Motion 701. I voted to keep them, but Conference voted to delete them. The motion was then passed by Conference, including myself, but consisted only of Amendments 701b and 701d.
701a Withdrawn
701b (For) (Passed) Part-time and Full-time Students Equality
701c Withdrawn
701d (Agn) (Passed) Yay Collaborations and NUSSL/AMSU Merger
701e (Deleted) Opposing the Collaborations Agenda
701f (Deleted) Opposing the NUSSL/AMSU Merger
-801 (Merged with 701) Challenge to the Estimates

The guillotine then fell.

701 Defend the Diversity of National Conference was a fabulously confused motion. I voted against 701d Yay Collaborations and NUSSL/AMSU Merger for the very simple reason I had never heard of either the collaborations agenda or the NUSSL/AMSU Merger before and wanted to hear the debate. After we had made it through all the amendments, we were left with the main body of the motion 701b and 701d. The owner of amendment 701b, realising from the discussion that the motion, and therefore his amendment, would fall, took parts on the entirety of the main motion text.

This therefore meant that we had to discuss this separately and either delete the text altogether or pass it into policy. However, most delegates on the conference floor believed they were voting on whether to delete the text or keep it in the main motion, and so voted to keep it so the discussion could continue. After the vote, DPC pointed out that the motion had passed into policy and hundreds of outraged delegates demanded a revote, which we then had, and the parts were deleted. I think this is unfortunate because I suspect that with another round of speeches we may well have won that argument but for the guy who just wanted to protect his amendment.

I personally voted for the motion where possible because I believe as many delegates as the budget should allow should be elected to decide the direction of our National Union. In any election, the well-organised slates and the sabbs are more than capable of running visible campaigns to win NUS delegate elections. If you have a large delegation then independents and first-time candidates stand a chance of getting in after the slates, but if you cut the delegation in half, only the partisan people whose minds and votes have already been determined will go. This makes NUS conference floor little more than a conveyor belt where debate is meaningless. Wes Streeting claimed that we’re not the National Union of Sabbaticals because only 44% of the delegations were sabbatical officers: I don’t know about other unions, but at Manchester, sabbs comprise 0.02% of our student body – 44% is a reasonable figure? I think not.

Policy Lapses

(For) (Passed) Part-time students
(Agn) (Passed) Anti-Racism

The guillotine then fell.

The “anti-racism” policy lapse, proposed by Wes Streeting, was actually a reaffirmation of the EU Working Definition on Anti-Semitism, a copy of which may be viewed here. The definition effectively states that criticism of Israel is anti-semitic, and combined with a No Platform policy, pretty much means that pro-Palestianism critics of Israel could be silenced or kept out of NUS altogether. If unions passed this definition into policy, as Manchester briefly did last year, groups such as Action Palestine could effectively be stopped from operating on campus.

I am on record as a staunch defender of Israel’s right to exist as a Jewish state, but I don’t think it can be denied that there are some pretty nasty things being done to Palestinians in the West Bank and Gaza. I’ve seen the photos and the videos and I’ve met people who’ve been there. People should be able to talk about it (and they should also, but rarely seem to, talk about the horrific abuses being visited on Palestinians by their own governments and militia groups – Hamas introduced a penalty of crucifixion for homosexuality a couple of years ago, but no-one ever mentions that. Instead Sir Gerald Kaufman, MP for Manchester Gorton, flew over to Gaza, met Hamas leaders, and declared his support for and solidarity with them only last semester). And although I very much wish people would talk about the human rights abuses that are also occurring in Sudan, China, Burma, Saudi Arabia, Egypt, Syria, Lebanon, Iran, Iraq, and numerous other countries as much as they bang on about Palestine (and I do suspect the motives of many of the activists involved), criticism of Israel is not in itself anti-semitic and certainly not criticism of their actions regarding settlements and human rights abuse in the West Bank and Gaza.

I am also appalled that the people advocating the Working Definition, including Manchester’s own Alex Goodman, who gave the third proposing speech, failed to mention what it actually said about criticism of Israel, giving speeches that talked about anti-racism and protecting Jewish students, which is absolutely right but completely beside the point. Judaism and Zionism are overlapping Venn diagrams, not interlocking jigsaw pieces, and the two shouldn’t be conflated. However, I am further appalled by the speeches against, which spent most of their time ranting about Palestine as usual instead of pointing out what was actually wrong with the motion at hand. At no point in the whole debate was the text of the Working Definition actually mentioned or quoted, and I suspect that if anyone had read it out, the 40 votes that it came down to may well have been swayed. But we’re stuck with it for another three years now, so I hope that when it comes round again, opponents of the definition will actually be a bit sane about their opposition and run a decent awareness campaign against.

Elections

My ballot is secret, but I didn’t stop believing.

Censure motions

I was not present for the censure motions because they were not included or indicated in the agenda. I therefore got to the Sage long after the ballot. I will say that the mistake that I made is almost certainly the same mistake that many other delegates made and that is why the motion of censure for Bell Dabeira-Addy passed and Daf Adley’s fell. With delegates pouring in late to the conference centre, I can entirely believe that only those with a bone to pick with the Black Students’ Officer would have turned up at the beginning, and by the time Daf Adley was up enough disinterested delegates would have turned up to sway the vote. I really don’t believe that the difference in votes had anything to do with racism.

Fringes

The first fringe that I went to was on how certain sectors, especially media and politics, exploit people desperate for a career by forcing them to work in unpaid internships for long periods of time with only the hope of a job at the end of it. Because of the near-insistence now that you have to have years of work experience before getting into journalism, internships are now a necessity for many careers but are the preserve of the wealthy few who can support themselves without income while doing them. This is even before you consider the exploitation of some employers to just keep hiring new interns and never paying anyone at all. I’ve never done an internship, so it wasn’t something I had considered before, but was a very interesting issue and I will certainly be paying more attention to it in the future.

I did briefly attend the interfaith forum but it was amazingly boring, so I left early.

The Wednesday evening fringe I attended was a discussion on hate speech. I say “discussion on hate speech”, it was more the Chair of UJS and a Vice-President of FOSIS swapping accusations of anti-semitism and zionism. And it seemed there were about five people in the room who weren’t devout Muslims or Jews. For all that, however, it was incredibly interesting to consider the issues that they and the other two speakers were raising. The main debate ended up focusing on the lists of speakers FOSIS recommends to Islamic Societies, but which have scholars such as Azzam Tammimi, who supports suicide bombings in Israel. The FOSIS guy did try repeatedly to deny this until Wes Streeting said it was available on Youtube (and I have now indeed found a video) and then spent the rest of the evening claiming that FOSIS was justified in putting his name out there “because he’s sold thousands of books and like it or not, people want to hear him”.

Thousands of people also buy the books of holocaust denier David Irving and also want to hear Nick Griffin speak in our unions, yet I do not think that FOSIS supports a repeal of no platform, so this is a truly dreadful argument. I would also say there is a great difference between thousands of people wanting to hear a jihadist speak and him being recommended as a speaker by the national umbrella of student Islamic societies in this country, who have enormous influence on and responsibility for the spiritual direction of the societies which look to them for guidance. Rashid Ali, another speaker from the Quilliam foundation, made the very good point that it would be half-acceptable to offer Azzam Tamimi as a speaker, if you balance the debate by offering other Islamic scholars as speakers too, because Islam has many diverse schools of thought and young Muslims should be able to hear all of them.

All in all, I thoroughly enjoyed that fringe and got far more out of it than I thought I was going to. I also ended up spending another hour talking to Mo about it on the way back, so clearly it has given food for thought.

Conclusion

It has been a pretty exhausting three days. I also spent some time on the Students for Sensible Drug Policy foyer stall and we signed up something like 60 extra people and gained several new potential chapters, so the cost was well worth it, I think. Our job now is to follow them up. :)

I was elected on a platform of of free education and pro-liberation and duly voted for free education and for 2009 delegate entitlements, although ultimately both fell, but I hope those who elected me will consider my mandate fulfilled.

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