Independent Labour Publications

Independent Labour Publications is a left-wing pressure group inside the British Labour Party. It is the successor to the Independent Labour Party and is mostly known simply as "The ILP" in order to maintain that link with its predecessor organisation.

Brief history

Since its re-establishment in 1975, it has been a campaigning organisation rather than an electoral group (its constitution prevents full members from standing for elective office).[1] Before entering parliament, former Labour Member of Parliament Harry Barnes was a member of the ILP.[2] As an MP, he was obliged to resign and join a supporters group, Friends of the ILP.

It has been involved with opposition to various workfare schemes imposed by the British Conservative government of the 1980s, for arguing for open democratic structures within the Labour Party, and for an emphasis on co-operative systems of organising economic activity.[1]

With a headquarters in Leeds, the ILP meets in Scarborough annually to discuss political issues, and its internal administration is overseen by a National Administrative Council (NAC).[1]

Positions

In common with much contemporary left-wing thinking, the ILP's approach rejects both contemporary capitalism and the command economy. But unlike much of the left, it accepts the idea of a market economy as part of democratic socialist thinking.[3] The ILP has been out of line with many traditional leftist positions, for instance in its rejection of a simple "troops out" approach to the conflict in Northern Ireland,[4][5] and was critical of what it saw as knee-jerk anti-Americanism on the left following the USA's reaction to the September 11, 2001 attacks.[6][7][8]

Publications

The organisation publishes occasional pamphlets on contemporary issues. The paper Labour Leader (published 1975–86) and the ILP Magazine: for socialist renewal (published 1987–92) were successors to the Independent Labour Party's New Leader (1922–46) and Socialist leader (1946–75). A newsletter called Democratic Socialist was the belated successor to the ILP Magazine.

gollark: LyricLy has cat?
gollark: Maybe it's GTech™ world space-time rotators?
gollark: Didn't you say something about blood sugar? Maybe you should check that.
gollark: Touchscreens are to some extent the enemy of mankind. However, due to financial/phone-market constraints I have not been able to attain a phone with a hardware keyboard.
gollark: I would discriminate against all people who didn't discriminate against themselves.

References

  1. "An Introduction to the ILP's history". Independent Labour Publications. Retrieved 2015-10-01.
  2. "Vote 2001 - Candidates - Harry Barnes". BBC. 2001. Retrieved 2015-10-01.
  3. "The ILP: Our Politics". Independent Labour Publications. 2011-05-08. Retrieved 2015-10-01.
  4. Kent, Gary (2009-09-28). "Wise words on the Irish question". Independent Labour Publications. Retrieved 2015-10-01.
  5. "Peter Hain: Time to go?". Independent Labour Publications. 2006-09-06. Retrieved 2015-10-01.
  6. Miles, Alex (2009-03-15). "An anti-Americanism of fools". Independent Labour Publications. Retrieved 2015-10-01.
  7. Graham, Alistair (2007-01-22). "A few thoughts on 'anti-Americanism'". Independent Labour Publications. Retrieved 2015-10-01.
  8. Brown, Will (2009-01-22). "The left, the war and the obligations of the oppressed". Independent Labour Publications. Retrieved 2015-10-01.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.