WITHOUT PREJUDICE
Iain McNicol
General Secretary of the Labour Party
Compliance Unit
Labour Central
Kings Manor
Newcastle upon Tyne
NE1 6PA
Dear Mr McNicol
Appeal against Expulsion from the Labour Party
Membership Number: Lxxxxxxx
I acknowledge receipt of your email of 7 September 2016, and the copy letter, received this morning. I wish to appeal against my expulsion.
PREAMBLE
I was born into a middle class Tory voting household and to my eternal shame joined the Conservative Party at age 16. Three years later I was elected Vice Chairman of the Northern Region of the Federation of Conservative Students. I even helped Margaret Thatcher get elected in 1979.
But, life is a great leveller and educator, as I am sure you will agree.
My education began in the early 1980s as a teacher in the South Yorkshire pit village of Darton. I lived in the village for four years among miners and their families, and many of my charges were destined to also become miners. I witnessed at first hand the devastation of the miners’ strike and the evil reality of Thatcherism.
My education continued in 1988 when I was hospitalised in Cardiff for four months for surgery and treatment of lung cancer. Many of my fellow patients in the ward and at the radiotherapy clinic were former miners from the south Wales valleys and sufferers from pneumoconiosis and consequential lung cancer. I listened at first hand to their stories of life in the pits and the betrayal of their futures and communities by Thatcher and her minions.
Over 10 years I had changed forever from a right wing Tory into a true blood socialist, and in 1989 I joined the Labour Party.
Such conversions are not uncommon. I am sure you remember Conservative minister Shaun Woodward crossing the floor of the Commons to join the Labour Party, where he was welcomed with open arms by our then leader, Tony Blair.
Fellow Tory MPs Peter Temple-Morris, Robert Jackson and Quentin Davies did likewise.
And today, under Jeremy Corbyn we are seeing many more conversions from the Greens, the Lib Dems and others, which I hope are being welcomed with similar enthusiasm.
As I said earlier: life is a great educator.
Over the ensuing years, unemployment, bereavement, homelessness and a career in newspaper journalism hardened my beliefs as a socialist and supporter of the Labour Party.
One of the proudest moments of my life came in 1994 when 41 Labour MPs signed an Early Day Motion in the House of Commons praising my investigative journalism into the lies then being peddled by the Conservative government. Some of my all-time political heroes signed that EDM: the late and great Tony Benn, the much missed Alan Simpson, Ken Livingstone, Dennis Skinner and ironically Jeremy Corbyn.
These names next to mine remain a personal shield of honour, which will always remain, whatever the outcome of this appeal.
However, in 2003 I left the Labour Party after being disillusioned and betrayed by Tony Blair’s social welfare policies and for leading us into an illegal war in Iraq against the wishes of the British people and the vast majority of Labour Party members.
For the next 12 years I watched and wrote from afar, dismayed by so-called New Labour and the osmosis of party policy between the Tories and Labour. I became unattached to any political party and described myself as a nihilist.
But, Jeremy Corbyn’s election as Labour Party leader in 2015 reignited a personal belief that things might change and that Labour had rediscovered its soul, cherished under Clem Atlee, Harold Wilson, Jim Callaghan and Michael Foot.
Early in July this year I rejoined the Labour Party and on 18 July received my membership card with an accompanying letter which said: “You are the newest member to add your voice, skills and passion to our movement. Labour’s strength comes from its members.”
APPEAL
- Your email/letter of 7 September 2016 refers to my application to become a member of the Labour Party… and that my application has been rejected.
I have been a member of the Labour Party from 1989-2003 and rejoined with letter of acceptance and membership card on 18 July 2016. Indeed, not only am I already a member of the Labour Party, but you also accepted my £25 Poll Tax payment as a supporter on 28 July to allow me to vote in the Leadership election.
Your action is therefore retrospective and it could be viewed that you took my £25 voting fee under false pretences.
- Your email/letter of 7 September 2016 says: “The Labour Party should be the home of lively debate, of new ideas and of campaigns to change society. However, for fair debate to take place, people must be able to air their views in an atmosphere of respect. They shouldn’t be shouted down, they shouldn’t be intimidated, and they shouldn’t be abused, either in meetings or online.”
I have NEVER in my lifetime shouted down or intimidated anyone. I have also NEVER abused anyone.
As a victim and survivor of childhood sexual abuse and later domestic abuse, which left me minutes from death, I believe the NEC needs to revisit its use of the term “abuse”.
But, if abuse means bullying, I am a long time campaigner against bullying in all its forms.
Indeed, I was the first to alert NEC member Johanna Baxter on 14 July 2016, that the cyber bully who had reduced her to tears was not a member of the Labour Party or follower of Jeremy Corbyn, but was a far right Nazi troll named Claire Khaw, a former member of the BNP.
- Your email/letter of 7 September 2016 says I am being expelled because “You have made inappropriate comments on social media including a post on 28 June 2016”.
A quick trawl of my own accounts shows that the only comments you might refer to was my blog posting: Hanging from Traitors’ Gate – Progress: Labour’s right wing Militant
I revisited this subject in more detail in another blog posting on 27 July 2016: The right wing incontinence of the Progress plotters
My blogs are always widely shared on Facebook, Twitter, Linked-in and other social media platforms. These particular blogs are typical of the scores of investigative newspaper reports which won me dozens of awards over a 28 year career in journalism.
They shine a light onto facts about Progress and its members.
If your problem is in the title of the blog piece, maybe lessons in English metaphor and history are required.
A view shared by many is that Progress is as much a right wing entryist party within a party as Militant was in the 1980s.
As for the bulk of the piece, it is written with the same dynamism that former Labour leader Neil Kinnock attacked Militant.
If your problem is with my use of the word Traitor/Traitors, I believe that anyone who has committed the treachery to our leader Jeremy Corbyn and to the 121,751 Labour Party members, 88,449 Registered Supporters and 41,928 Trade Union Affiliated Supporters who voted for him, as observed by the so-called #chickencoup, deserves to be called a Traitor.
I am sure that as a former trade union leader you have used the word traitor or scab to other comrades in times of dispute.
I know that MPs Tom Watson, John McTernan, Luke Akehurst and others have used the word Traitor, and much worse about fellow Labour Party members.
If your problem is about me naming MPs who should face deselection if they fail to ameliorate their treachery, I am doing no more or less than Neil Kinnock did when he named, shamed and threatened with expulsion Derek Hatton, Tony Mulhearn and Lesley Mahmood.
The Labour Party has thrived amid robust and lively debate. To kill or stifle that debate behind claims of bullying or intimidation is to kill the Labour Party and make it into a pink imitation of the Conservatives.
CONCLUSION
I vigorously defend my blog post and request that my expulsion is overturned.
I have been increasingly shocked by the actions of the NEC executive board and certain NEC members over the past three months.
This may not help my appeal, but in my opinion the NEC has acted against the membership of the Labour Party and in doing so has damaged the reputation of the party for the foreseeable future.
The top-down NEC dictats bullying the membership can be viewed as Stalinism.
The purge and witch-hunt of members and electors who do not hold a certain beliefs might be seen as McCarthyism.
And the encouragement for members to report other members for un-comradely actions are those of the former East German Stasi.
I never thought I would witness such behaviour from the management of the Labour Party.
Please clarify your reasons for my expulsion and confirm when my appeal will be heard.
I reserve all rights.
Yours sincerely
Nic Outterside