Manchester was just ‘united against the Tories’

At the start of the Conservative Party conference in Manchester, people have rallied against the party. And those attending made it clear that they were “united against the Tories”.

Assembling the people

The anti-austerity group People’s Assembly is holding a “Festival of Resistance” from 2-5 October in Manchester. Talks and workshops are happening across the four days, along with live music and other performances. People’s Assembly is running these in a marquee at Piccadilly Gardens. Events include:

  • “Drive to Survive” – members of the Gypsy, Roma and Traveller (GRT) community in conversation with Shami Chakrabarti over the Tories’ police bill.
  • “Where next” for the NHS and social care?
  • A “wall of sound” noise protest outside the Tory conference on 4 October.
  • Corbyn in conversation with Guardian journalist Gary Younge.
  • The group Women Will Not Be Silenced talking about ‘rebel women and the importance of protest’.

But the main event was a protest on 3 October. And it appeared to be well-supported.

Disrupting the Tory conference

Crowds began to gather from around 12pm at this national demo. It started near Whitworth Park. People’s Assembly used the hashtag #UnitedAgainstTheTories. It reported that “thousands” turned out to march:

Groups at the protest included the:

The Young Communist League and some Marxist groups were also there:

“Johnson’s a wasteman”

Councillors and MPs from Manchester also turned out to march. And the Gypsy, Roma and Traveller (GRT) community was there; not least because of the persecution they face from the Tories’ Police, Crime, Sentencing and Courts Bill:

Chants of “Boris Johnson’s a wasteman” rang out:

Groups like Unite Community were also there, calling on the Tories to cancel the £20-a-week cut to Universal Credit. The PCS Union band provided musical accompaniment for the marchers:

There was a police presence and the predictable “evidence gatherers” were snooping around. Meanwhile, police also appeared to be blocking the road that led to the Tory conference:

Speakers at the end of the march included People’s Assembly national secretary Laura Pidcock, general secretary of the Bakers, Food and Allied Workers Union (BFAWU) Sarah Woolley, Labour MP Barry Gardiner and others. National Union of Students (NUS) president Larissa Kennedy gave a rousing speech:

“Intergenerational”

Overall, a tweet from the People’s Assembly summed up the march well:

Now, the momentum that the group brought to Manchester needs to be built on up and down the country. The fightback against Johnson’s government must continue apace.

Featured image via Saul Staniforth

By Steve Topple

This post was originally published on The Canary.