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Post by pieter on Jan 9, 2020 18:52:37 GMT -7
Slogan: Socialist Party, Brussels is not the Boss!
There is a huge Ukrainian community in Warsaw. The opinion of the Dutch Socialist Party is that Polish workers are exploited in the Netherlands and Ukrainian workers work under bad conditions for McDonalds and in greenhouses of the Polish Market garden sector. The Socialist Party blames Polish and Dutch employers and employment agencies for this practice.
Stop exploitation immigration. Political ad of the leftwing Populist and leftwing nationalist Socialist Party
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Post by karl on Jan 10, 2020 12:19:54 GMT -7
Pieter
Not sure if Socialist party is playing politecs at the expense of Polish people working in the Netherlands or other wise trying to fix what is broken in labour conditions dealing with Polish workers. For in most cases, there is a working relationship between employer and workers, for conditions of employment is to the employer to insure fair wages and safe working conditions, for my self as not being witness to these events, there is little my self many speak out with.
Karl
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Post by pieter on Jan 10, 2020 16:31:54 GMT -7
Pieter Not sure if Socialist party is playing politecs at the expense of Polish people working in the Netherlands or other wise trying to fix what is broken in labour conditions dealing with Polish workers. For in most cases, there is a working relationship between employer and workers, for conditions of employment is to the employer to insure fair wages and safe working conditions, for my self as not being witness to these events, there is little my self many speak out with. Karl Karl,
I do believe that the Socialist Party (Dutch: Socialistische Partij) certainly has opportunistic motivations for this action. It is a workers party which is interested in the cause of the native Dutch working class. But it is also a classical leftwing socialist party with certain anti-capitalist tendencies and some elements of "Workers of the world, unite!" (Proletarier aller Länder vereinigt Euch!) from The Communist Manifesto (1848) by Karl Marx and Friedrich Engels.
First the Socialist party is concerned about the rights of Dutch workers in the Netherlands, afraid that they are being ousted from their place by foreign Central-European and Eastern-European cheaper workers from Poland, Lithuania, Romania and Bulgaria. Secondly the Socialist Party is concerned about the exploitation of Polish workers in the Netherlands who often live under miserable, appaling conditions and are underpayed by both Dutch and Polish employers in the Netherlands. Thirdly the Socialist Party showed that the Polish workers that work in Western Europe are replaced by Ukrainians in Poland who also often live under appaling conditions in Poland and who are also often exploited and under payed.
So Karl, I believe it is both the typical leftwing populist and leftwing Nationalist agenda of the Socialist Party playing politics at the expense of Polish people working in the Netherlands. But in an ambivallent classical socialist way also is trying to fix what is broken in the labour conditions of the Polish workers. The Socialist Party for sure wants to put pressure on both the employers and the Dutch ministry of social affairs and employment to insure fair wages and safe working conditions for the Polish workers inside the Netherlands. The Socialist Party was a Maoist Political party from the seventies who during the eighties moved towards a leftwing social democratic, leftwing nationalist and leftwing populist position. It had some xenophobic tendencies and clearly has the interests of the Native Dutch blue color workers in mind. The party is an Eurosceptic party.
The Socialist Party (Socialistische Partij) labels itself as socialist, but has also been described as social democratic. In its manifesto of principles it calls for a society where human dignity, equality and solidarity are most important. Its core issues are employment, social welfare and investing in public education, public safety and health care. The party opposes privatisation of public services and is critical of globalisation. Lilian Marijnissen Lilian M. C. Marijnissen (born 11 July 1985) is a Dutch politician serving as Leader of the Socialist Party and ex officio its parliamentary leader in the House of Representatives since 13 December 2017. She was first installed as a member of the House of Representatives on 23 March 2017 following the general election of 15 March.
Marijnissen is a daughter of Jan Marijnissen, a politician and formerly the leader of the same party. Her mother is Mari-Anne Marijnissen. Lilian Marijnissen previously served as a member of the municipal council of Oss from 2003 to 2016 like her mother before her. She is in the first video investigating the employment agencies that sent the Polish workers to the Netherlands, the situation of the Ukrainian workers in Warsaw and the rest of Poland and how the flow of Polish workers to the Netherlands works. The SP believes that Polish workers could better work in Poland under better wages, social security and labour laws in Poland. The SP points out that due to mass immigration of Polish workers to Western Europe Polish companies and firms close in Poland and that that is a bad thing for Poland and the Poles.
Cheers, PieterP.S.- To make one point clear I (Pieter) am not a Socialist Party supporter, nor activist, voter or member of the SP.
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Post by pieter on Jan 10, 2020 16:57:04 GMT -7
Socialism has the future!
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Post by pieter on Jan 10, 2020 17:11:26 GMT -7
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