Commemorating May Day

In recent months, the Workers Party has actively campaigned against privatisation; the introduction of water and services charges; the reduction of welfare benefits; proposals to remove free travel for older people; attempts to make working people and their families pay to see a doctor; payment for prescription charges; and payment for essential public services.

Next week we celebrate May Day, the workers’ holiday. Socialists, trade unionists, workers and labour activists will come together across the world to commemorate and celebrate our common struggles. Some will do so under circumstances of severe repression, brutality and war. Our Party, the Workers Party, will stand with them.  

We will continue our solidarity with the trade union demands in support of workers’ rights, pay and conditions and those workers who have been harassed and victimised for asserting their rights.  

Earlier this year, the Workers Party supported the historic events of industrial action organised by the labour movement in Northern Ireland when workers came together to demonstrate their power. The May Day Rally will be a further demonstration of that power, but we must now take a further step.

Our segregated and bankrupt political system which serves the interests of the tribal politicians, and the exploiting capitalist class, must be challenged.

Workers need to create a viable and effective electoral mechanism to defeat those interests and must take immediate steps to unite in a struggle in the interests of their class. Only an anti-sectarian, class-based, united workers’ struggle can deliver our objective – workers’ power and socialism.

May Day is Our Day

May Day is an international celebration of workers’ solidarity and class struggle. May Day is Our Day!

It is a time also to reject those who seek to divide workers whether on the basis of religion, race or toxic nationalism. The path to progress is through a united working class.

Poverty and inequality are inherent in the structures of capitalist society. Housing, health and education are under attack from a ruling class committed to the privatisation of public services in a ceaseless drive for profit. 

State Benefits and foodbanks

Work is low paid, precarious and casualised. The gains and achievements fought for and attained by workers over generations are being undermined and reversed. Many workers, although in employment, cannot earn enough on which to live forcing them to top up their earnings with state benefits or survive on food banks provided by charities while big corporations pay little or no tax.

Locally and globally, capitalism is already preparing the ground for the world after Covid-19. Rather than improving pay and conditions for those workers who have stood in the frontline, the capitalist class is moving to further privatise and profit from public and personal health; to cut back on public housing and education funding; to undermine social security; to place even greater restrictions on trade unions; to renew the attack on wages; to limit the minimum wage, extend precarious employment and to attack and further dilute workers’ rights.

We were never “all in this together”.

During the pandemic we have witnessed the enrichment of pharmaceutical companies in their pursuit of profit with the rich nations of the northern hemisphere, while the poorest regions are left to the ravages of the pandemic. While the working class and poor have been further impoverished the rich have become richer with a massive increase in the number of billionaires. We were never “all in this together”.

May Day is our day! It is an important occasion to celebrate our historic victories and to demonstrate our solidarity with workers’ struggles across the world.

See the Workers Party May Day statement in full here: