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March for a secular Europe

Join us on Saturday 14 September at the Secular Europe Campaign’s annual march and rally in Central London. Our chair Naomi Phillips will be speaking on behalf of Labour Humanists from 14.00 on Richmond Terrace, opposite Downing Street.

More on the Campaign

The “Secular Europe Campaign” is an annual effort that sees many diverse groups united in demanding an end to religious privileges and asking that the European Institutions must remain secular.
Starting in 2008, this Campaign has a special focus on the Vatican, given the enormous political and economical power it holds, but aims at representing all the issues around secularism and human rights, including opposition to state-funded faith schools, rejection of religious tribunals and support to equal rights for LGBT citizens.

The Campaign promotes:

  • freedom of religion, freedom of conscience and freedom of speech
  • women’s equality and reproductive rights
  • equal rights for LGBT people in all the European Union
  • a secular Europe – democratic, peaceful, open and just, with no privilege for religious or belief organisations
  • one law for all, no religious exemptions from the law
  • state neutrality in matters of religion and belief

The Campaign opposes:

  • the privileged status of the churches under Article 17 of the TFEU (Treaty on the Functioning of the European Union)
  • the privileged status of churches in countries where they are established
  • the special status of the Vatican at the United Nations and its economic and political privileges across Europe
  • state-funded religious schools
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Events News

Labour Humanists at BHA Conference, Leeds

We were busy speaking to people and signing up new members at the British Humanist Association‘s annual conference, held in Leeds 7-9. The conference had an absolutely fantastic programme, with speakers moving from philosophy and chemistry, to astronomy, literature and media sexism. You can have a look at what happened on Twitter and searching for #BHALeeds.

Our leaflets were popular, and it was great to see so many people declaring their affiliation by wearing our new ‘Labour Humanist’ badges!

It’s important for us to attend events such as this so we can raise awareness of our group, and for us to sign up new members. Without people, our voice cannot be heard within the Labour Party.

Join us via PayPal.

Follow us on Twitter.

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Secularist priorities for the Labour Party

Speaking at our No Prayer Breakfast fringe event at Labour Conference, Angela Eagle MP implored those present to make their voices heard within the Party on the issues they care about. Although not speaking in her position as chair of the National Policy Forum, such a request from Angela strongly implies that action to change Party policy on key humanist and secularist issues may not fall on deaf ears.

And the issues and the policies to change are many.

Topping the list at conference were faith schools discriminating against pupils and teachers, and concerns about what children and young people are actually being taught (or not) by many faith schools – not least in the new government-supported, and highly deregulated, religious Academies and Free Schools. Unfortunately previous Labour governments actively gave faith schools of all different types wide permission to discriminate and to teach a curriculum highly skewed towards the religion of the school.

Selection, discrimination, narrow religious curricula. That should not be what a Labour policy towards state-funded schools looks like.

The handing over of public services to religious groups which are allowed to discriminate against staff on religious grounds and proselytise in the provision of services, despite working under contract with the state, was another hot issue at conference.

Our ‘Secular Public Services’ pin badges were extremely popular with delegates and it’s a simple message – public services should be shared, work on the basis of equality and human rights, and never be used as a vehicle for evangelical religious groups to proselytise to often vulnerable people. Labour’s policy in the past has not been to protect the secular nature of public services but we think it absolutely should be.

There are many areas where we believe the Labour Party can and should look ahead and support the secularist position, whether that’s on constitutional reform, equal marriage, public services, education, women’s and LGBT rights, and more. Equality, non-discrimination, human rights, freedom of thought and speech, a rational and evidenced-based approach to policy making. These surely are Labour values as well as humanist and secularist values, and we think they should be enshrined in Labour policies. 

But what should Labour Humanists’ priorities be, as we grow our supporter base working within the Party to affect real policy change for real equality?

Let us know what you would like to see us focus on. Tweet us @LabourHumanists or drop us an email info {at} labourhumanists.org(.)uk 

Don’t forget you can also show your support by joining us, for the equivalent of just £1 a month. Follow the PayPal link on our home page.

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Events News

No Prayer Breakfast – write up and photos!

Together with the British Humanist Association (BHA) we held an extremely successful fringe meeting at this year’s Labour Party conference in Manchester. 100 delegates packed out the room for our 5th ‘No Prayer Breakfast’ and as usual provided really lively discussion. We had a great panel of speakers – committed Labour Humanists Angela Eagle MP and Kelvin Hopkins MP, Andrew Copson the chief executive of the BHA, Polly Toynbee the BHA’s president, and journalist and blogger Sunny Hundal. The event was chaired by Labour Humanists chair Naomi Phillips.

See photos on the BHA’s Facebook page.

‘Militant secularism’ was the theme of the No Prayer Breakfast and all speakers set out their perspectives. The discussion session from the floor covered a wide range of burning issues for humanists in the Labour Party – the government’s programme to expand discriminatory state-funded faith schools, Christian-only food banks, public services handed over to religious organisations, the growing numbers of non-religious people throughout the UK, equal marriage, and much, much more.

It was also a great opportunity to sign up new members to Labour Humanists for the equivalent of just £1 per month – people can now join online via the PayPal link on our homepage www.labourhumanists.org.uk. Delegates were also encouraged to follow @LabourHumanists on Twitter. We live-tweeted the event with photos (check out our Twitter timeline!) and the BHA also Storify-ed the event.

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Events

Join us in Manchester

We are pleased to be joining up with the British Humanist Association again to hold this year’s No Prayer Breakfast at Labour party conference, to discuss so-called ‘militant secularism’.

We have a great line-up of speakers:

Polly Toynbee (Guardian columnist and president of the BHA)
Andrew Copson (Chief executive, BHA)
Angela Eagle MP (tbc)
Kelvin Hopkins MP
Sunny Hundal (Editor, Liberal Conspiracy)
Owen Jones (Author)

Chair: Naomi Phillips (Chair of Labour Humanists)

Time: 08:00 to 09:00 Date: 02 October 2012
Venue: Hilton Hotel Room: Meeting Room 2,3,4

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Events News

Labour Humanists at Fabian Society conference

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Together with the British Humanist Association (BHA), we had a stand at the Fabian Society annual conference in London. With 1000 Labour Party members, activists, and influencers attending, this was an excellent opportunity for us to speak to people and recruit new members to Labour Humanists.

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