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Not What You Meant?  There are 16 definitions for Solidarity.

Solidarity (Scotland)

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Solidarity – Scotland's Socialist Movement
Image:Solidarity Logo.jpg
Leader Tommy Sheridan and Rosemary Byrne
Founded 2006
Headquarters Glasgow, G42 2DN
Political ideology Democratic Socialism,
Scottish independence
Political position Left-wing
International affiliation none
European affiliation none
European Parliament group n/a
UK Parliament affiliation {{{uk}}}
Colours Red, green, white
Website www.solidarityscotland.org
See also Politics of Scotland

Political parties
Elections in Scotland

Solidarity (full name Solidarity – Scotland's Socialist Movement) is a political party in Scotland, launched on September 3, 2006 as a breakaway from the Scottish Socialist Party (SSP)[1] in the aftermath of Tommy Sheridan's libel action. Formed by two of the Scottish Socialist Party's six MSPs, Tommy Sheridan and Rosemary Byrne, it has been backed by the Socialist Workers Party and the Committee for a Workers' International[2]; both former SSP platforms. The party registered 9 combinations of "Solidarity" and "Tommy Sheridan" with the Electoral Commission[3][4], as well as "Solidarity". In their first electoral test, the party failed to win any seats in the Scottish Parliament election, 2007, although they did win more votes than the SSP - Solidarity 31,066 / SSP 12,831 - and Sheridan was close to being re-elected. The party won one council seat in Glasgow in local elections, Ruth Black elected to the Craighton ward, on the same day.[5] Black subsequently defected to Labour in December 2007.[6]

Launch

On its launch, the party described itself as being an open, democratic, bottom-up party as a response to the perceived lack of the same in the SSP, and because Sheridan claimed that due to the depth of division within the SSP between its leadership on the one hand and his supporters on the other that the SSP had "run out of breath" [7]. The launch rally held in September 2006 in Glasgow featured several speakers and attracted around 600 people[8]. More than 1,000 people in total attended the ten public meetings Solidarity held in Scotland, with the largest meeting, in Dundee, attracting a crowd of 250. These public meetings attracted 600 members to the new party, of which 250 attended the founding conference on Saturday 5 November 2006.[9] The conference witnessed debates on the name of the new party and its political orientation. During the conference the Socialist Workers Party argued that Solidarity had the potential to develop into a natural home for all anti-establishment protest movements (including anti-nuclear, anti-war, environmental, refugee and asylum seeker, housing, pension, anti-poverty, lesbian and gay rights campaigns as well as the growing movement against Islamophobia and reach out to minority ethnic and religious communities). The SWP whist recognising the key role socialists could play within the new party argued that Solidarity's name should not include a reference to socialism, as this could potentially discourage people who are active in left-oriented political campaigns but who do not perceive themselves as socialists from joining. This motion was argued against by Ronnie Stevenson, Unison convenor for workers in Glasgow City Council and member of the Committee for a Workers international. After a close vote the interim title of "Solidarity - Scotland's Socialist Movement" was adopted as the name of the party. The party's draft constitution was adopted by a unanimous vote and Rosemary Byrne and Tommy Sheridan, the party's then two MSPs, were unanimously endorsed as Co-Convenors.[10][11]

References

  1. ^ BBC News Online - New socialist party for Sheridan
  2. ^ Socialist Party website - New socialist party launched in Scotland
  3. ^ Sheridan's name is 'key to success' as Solidarity aims for six seats, The Herald, January 18, 2007
  4. ^ Electoral Commission Site
  5. ^ Solidarity Emerge as Scotland's Largest Left Party - Retrieved 26/08/07
  6. ^ Solidarity councillor defection
  7. ^ BBC News Online - Sheridan unveils Solidarity party
  8. ^ The Herald - Solidarity wins on decibel count
  9. ^ Socialist Worker Online - Solidarity founding conference
  10. ^ Socialist World - Solidarity conference agrees to build a socialist party
  11. ^ Solidarity Website - Solidarity Conference Elects Co-Convenors, Tommy Sheridan and Rosemary Byrne 04 November 2006

External links

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Copyrights
Solidarity (Scotland) from Wíkipedia. ©2006 by Wíkipedia. Licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. View a list of authors or edit this article.

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