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Forum => Kenya Discussion => Topic started by: RVtitem on November 27, 2016, 06:08:34 PM

Title: Is there a Labour political movement in Kenya?
Post by: RVtitem on November 27, 2016, 06:08:34 PM
The only way to avert the crisis in Kenya is for a working class solidarity. The source of the crisis in Kenya is the neo-liberal economic policy that had deprived millions access to basic lives which has degenerated to ethnic disharmony in the absence of a working class solidarity that will oppose economic policies of public service privatization, social service commercialization, trade liberalization and retrenchment. This is where the role of the labour leadership comes in. Workers, cutting across ethnic lines can unite all other poor and oppressed class together to oppose economic and political policies that deprive the masses the basic necessities of lives. This will mean the formation of a working class political party that will oppose imperialism, neo-liberalism and capitalism but will fight for the nationalization of the commanding height of the economy under the working poor democratic political control and management, which will see the huge resources of the country, rather than going to the pockets of the rich few in big business and multinationals, will be used to provide adequate and secure jobs for all citizens, adequate living wages for workers, massive development of the economy, technology and infrastructure and provision of basic social services like free education, healthcare, housing, road, etc. This will mean the labour leadership abandoning the political support for the corrupt ruling capitalist class and wrest power from the political class through a democratic socialist policies.

http://www.focusnigeria.com/kenya-crisis.htm
Title: Re: Is there a Labour political movement in Kenya?
Post by: Gumzo on November 28, 2016, 05:09:57 PM
Labour ni tribe gani ?
Title: Re: Is there a Labour political movement in Kenya?
Post by: Empedocles on November 28, 2016, 05:14:16 PM
The only way to avert the crisis in Kenya is for a working class solidarity. The source of the crisis in Kenya is the neo-liberal economic policy that had deprived millions access to basic lives which has degenerated to ethnic disharmony in the absence of a working class solidarity that will oppose economic policies of public service privatization, social service commercialization, trade liberalization and retrenchment. This is where the role of the labour leadership comes in. Workers, cutting across ethnic lines can unite all other poor and oppressed class together to oppose economic and political policies that deprive the masses the basic necessities of lives. This will mean the formation of a working class political party that will oppose imperialism, neo-liberalism and capitalism but will fight for the nationalization of the commanding height of the economy under the working poor democratic political control and management, which will see the huge resources of the country, rather than going to the pockets of the rich few in big business and multinationals, will be used to provide adequate and secure jobs for all citizens, adequate living wages for workers, massive development of the economy, technology and infrastructure and provision of basic social services like free education, healthcare, housing, road, etc. This will mean the labour leadership abandoning the political support for the corrupt ruling capitalist class and wrest power from the political class through a democratic socialist policies.

http://www.focusnigeria.com/kenya-crisis.htm

Brilliant in theory.

Tell me, has it ever worked anywhere without rising from the ashes of war?
Title: Re: Is there a Labour political movement in Kenya?
Post by: Kim Jong-Un's Pajama Pants on November 28, 2016, 05:15:22 PM
Labour ni tribe gani ?

I think he is proposing a reorganization of how the Kenyan thinks.  In any other country, someone like Francis Atwoli would have power rivaling the kamwanas and Railas.
Title: Re: Is there a Labour political movement in Kenya?
Post by: Gumzo on November 28, 2016, 06:13:53 PM
The only way to avert the crisis in Kenya is for a working class solidarity. The source of the crisis in Kenya is the neo-liberal economic policy that had deprived millions access to basic lives which has degenerated to ethnic disharmony in the absence of a working class solidarity that will oppose economic policies of public service privatization, social service commercialization, trade liberalization and retrenchment. This is where the role of the labour leadership comes in. Workers, cutting across ethnic lines can unite all other poor and oppressed class together to oppose economic and political policies that deprive the masses the basic necessities of lives. This will mean the formation of a working class political party that will oppose imperialism, neo-liberalism and capitalism but will fight for the nationalization of the commanding height of the economy under the working poor democratic political control and management, which will see the huge resources of the country, rather than going to the pockets of the rich few in big business and multinationals, will be used to provide adequate and secure jobs for all citizens, adequate living wages for workers, massive development of the economy, technology and infrastructure and provision of basic social services like free education, healthcare, housing, road, etc. This will mean the labour leadership abandoning the political support for the corrupt ruling capitalist class and wrest power from the political class through a democratic socialist policies.

http://www.focusnigeria.com/kenya-crisis.htm

Brilliant in theory.

Tell me, has it ever worked anywhere without rising from the ashes of war?

Even after raising from the ashes of war, stuff like  "under the working poor democratic political control and management"
is unheard of even after the Great October Socialist Revolution (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/October_Revolution) 
Title: Re: Is there a Labour political movement in Kenya?
Post by: RV Pundit on November 28, 2016, 06:21:20 PM
This is happening in small scale - teachers, cotu, docker union - but economy has to formalize first. right now majority of kenyan workers work in informal sector - or sme - so they don't have unions. They're on their own.