Two hundred mainly young people marched through Barking today calling for the right to a decent job for all at a decent rate of pay and an end to university fees. They called for an end to cuts in jobs and services, proper public housing and for the government to bail out workers rather than bankers and bosses. London, UK. 13/03/2010.
The Youth Fight for Jobs campaign, supported by the RMT, PCS and CWU trade unions, organises in workplaces, trade unions, colleges, schools and in the communities for a better deal for young people and workers, let down by the New Labour government and abandoned by the other parties.
They see the lack of care for the working class as a situation that has led to the growth of far right parties, particularly the BNP, allowing it to blame the problems on immigration; as the YFFJ web site says: "the BNP, instead of campaigning for jobs and services, spread division and the idea that it is Muslim, Asian, black people and others that are to blame. An unemployed white youth from Barking has far more in common with an unemployed youth from a Bangladeshi family in Tower Hamlets than with the likes of Adam Applegarth, the former boss of Northern Rock, who is still raking in the millions."
The march was held in Barking as this is now seen as the "Front Line" against the BNP, where its leader Nick Griffin is standing in the forthcoming General election against Margaret Hodge, Minister for Culture and Tourism. When previously she was a minister in the Department of Work and Pensions she was often quoted as justifying increased tuition fees for students on the grounds of a largely imaginary "graduate premium" of increased earnings over their working lifetime.
When MG Rover closed down she suggested the redundant skilled car workers would be able to get jobs at a new local Tesco supermarket, and in 2006 she told a newspaper that 8 out of 10 working class voters in her constituency would be tempted to vote BNP at the forthcoming local elections as "no one else is listening to them" about unemployment, house prices and housing of asylum seekers in the area. When the BNP won 11 seats, making them the second largest party on the council, many local activists blamed Hodge for the publicity she had given them. More recently she has argued that British residents should be given priority in the allocation of council houses.
It brought back memories to hear the chant "Maggie, Maggie, Maggie, Out, Out, Out!" brought back into use for another Margaret, but this was only one of a whole page of chants distributed to marchers which were put to good use as they made their way through the outskirts of Barking to the town centre, including "When the BNP tell racist lies, We fight back and organise" and many old demonstration favourites. But an attempt at French in "Tous ensemble, tous ensemble" failed to elicit the desired response "Grève, Grève, Grève!" and the march had to return to English with "Strike, Strike, Strike!"
As the march went through the often busy streets, many stopped to watch with drivers sounding their horns in approval. One or two people looked out rather less kindly from some city centre pubs, and one man who came out of the door of one and shouted abuse was quickly pushed back inside by one of his friends.
The march was supported by a number of local groups and trade union branches, and at the rally at the end outside Barking Town hall there were a number of speeches stressing the need to get involved in the fight for jobs and against racism.





































