Since the foundation of the Campaign Against Household & Water Taxes, WSM members have
been pushing for a strengthening of grassroots democracy in the campaign, and we believe
that the more democratic the campaign is the more likely it is to succeed. In this
article, Brian Fagan, a WSM member involved in the campaign in Kildare, outlines his
experience of being involved in building the campaign in his local area. ---- Mass civil
disobedience has happened and will continue to happen until government attempts to extract
thousands of Euros from each and every one of us to pay the new taxes have been defeated.
Ordinary people, most of whom have no political background, have built a national campaign
which has effectively thrown a spanner in the government?s plans.
Had you asked the members of the campaign a couple of years ago what they would be doing
in the future, it?s unlikely that they would have said they would be participating in
civil disobedience as part of the largest mass campaign since the Land League.
Organising
While the government schemes in Leinster House, the rest of us are meeting in pubs,
function rooms and in each other?s homes to organise this national non-payment campaign.
The members of a campaign branch discuss and organise every activity from leafleting and
doorknocking to protests and fundraising. Motions are discussed and delegates are mandated
to carry their branch?s decision to the National Steering Committee (NSC). There is no
leadership that gives orders to footsoldiers, we can all have an input into the functions
of our branch. The leadership in the CAHWT are the branches themselves, it would not be
such a successful campaign if this were not the case.
We don?t wait for decisions to be made by a leadership and then follow them, we do things
ourselves. If we decide a public meeting should be held in our area, we know we have to
put up posters, advertise online and in local papers, inform supporters, book a room,
arrange a speaker, etc. Meeting regularly, branch members volunteer to complete these
tasks and report back to the group either during meetings or via email or texts. In this
way members can feel ownership of the campaign because it was us that organised that
meeting, that march, that picket. No-one did it for us. The value of this DIY approach to
social and economic problems is enormous, not least because it is the most effective
approach, but also because it?s only through struggle that ordinary people can develop an
understanding of their power.
Simple things like ensuring that everyone introduces themselves at the start of the
meeting so that everyone knows everyone else, that the meeting chair/facilitator
encourages contributions from everyone and tries to ensure that the meeting is not
dominated by a small number of people are important. These methods help to develop
people?s confidence and ensure that everyone feels comfortable in contributing to the
meeting, however small their contribution may be.
Lessons
If we win this campaign, the lesson we must all take to heart is that it was not political
activists who won the battle, it was ordinary people. It may be suggested like in the
Anti-Water tax campaign in the 90?s that a politician getting elected will win the battle.
But getting 3 or 4 sympathetic politicians is not going to make much of a difference. We
have to make the collection of the taxes impossible through our non co-operation, our
civil disobedience.
If the campaign advances to the point that we are clearly not going to be defeated and are
growing ever stronger, the government will back down or change tack but will try to claim
that they were against the tax from the beginning but that the Troika wanted it imple-
mented. Whatever happens, we must remember that they do that because they are afraid of
our collective power and terrified of the possibility of us realising that power. Let?s
stop playing their game, on their turf, by their rules. Let?s continue to build the CAHWT
as a democratic campaign in which everyone can have a say and ensure that our future is
decided by us and not by Phil Hogan and his parasitic class.
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» (en) Ireland, anarchist WSM paper Workers Solidarity #128 - The CAHWT in Kildare: A locally-led national campaign





