Thank You! 

43 Labour & Co-operative MPs elected in a Labour & Co-operative Government 

Thank you for your support in the General Election. You voted for change and all of us acting together achieved it.

As a result of your support there are now a record 43 Labour & Co-operative MPs along with 369 Labour MP's to provide 412 MPs supporting a Labour & Co-operative Government. 21 Labour & Co-operative MPs and Peers have also been appointed to the Labour Front Bench and 6 are Labour Cabinet members. A full list is of those 43 MPs is here and they can be followed online here.

The Co-op Party has significantly expanded in the last few years and has 13,000 members and 120,000 registered supporters. Now is a great time to be part of the change so click here to join the Co-operative Party and be part of of our local branch. You can read more about our work on this page and others.

Sutton Branch Co-operative Party

We are the Sutton Branch of the Co-operative Party - the party of the UK's co-operative movement, committed to building a society in where power and wealth are shared.

Democratic, public ownership of the services and utilities we all rely on. Tackling the housing crisis through co-operative housing. Fans having a say in their sports club. Credit unions as an alternative to rip-off payday lenders. Shops owned by their customers that give back to the community.

Whether in government or opposition, for a century the Co-operative Party has been a voice for co-operative values and principles in the places where decisions are taken, and laws are made. This website promotes the practical application of those values in Sutton.

We are also proud to be a sister party of the Labour Party which we have had a national electoral agreement with since 1927 and have been locally connected with since 1918. Our members are therefore active within both Sutton & Cheam and Carshalton & Wallington Labour Parties.

What we've done

On these pages you can learn more about our local campaigning within Sutton in support of Co-operative principles. There is an events page and you can also learn more about our local branch team.

Co-op Party Campaigns

The Co-op party has a long history of campaigns which continue up to the present. Past and recent activity is shown below

The Co-op Party achievements
Love It List It remote meeting
How to list Assets of Community Value

A Directory of Sutton Co-operative, Mutual & Not for Profit Local Groups

Below we list examples of various local organisations that are already Co-operatives or other forms of mutual and also not for profit groups and socially responsible business that, as they develop, may be on a journey towards greater co-operation. 

The focus here is mainly on locally based self-organised groups or activity rather than all communal bodies and collective activity mainly funded or directly provided to people by the local state in the guise of the London Borough of Sutton, Sutton Housing Partnership, Regional/National Housing Associations, NHS SW London ICP, Met Police South BCU, Transport for London or the work of National or International Charities and NGO's whose prime focus is not Sutton. 

In setting out the information below the local Party is merely reporting on the current provision and is not making any specific judgment on the current boundary between some community owned and local or national state owned organisations. In the meantime all of them have forms of democracy and membership engagement so we encourage people to get involved with them to encourage their journey to greater co-operation.

This directory is not meant to be comprehensive but aims to encourage people to explore the very wide range of co-operative, mutual and not for profit local community organisations further to see if there are spaces to create new ones. Many of the organisations operate in competitive markets and are part of the substantial UK Co-operative Economy. The directory might also be the basis for a wider community mapping project for bringing together various public bodies, not for profits and profit driven businesses as part of a Community Wealth Building project locally. 

To help further research a full list of local registered mutual organisations is at the Financial Conduct Authority (FCA) Mutual's Public Register here and type in local areas (eg Sutton, Cheam, Belmont, Worcester Park, St Helier, Carshalton, Wallington, Beddington, Roundshaw) to find both current and de-registered local mutual organisations.

This Directory is dedicated to the memory of our late member Alistair Cruickshank who made very helpful suggestions when it was being developed.

Our initial local list covering a wide range of activity areas is below:

Retail/Trade/Markets

Services

Finance

Education and Childcare

Health and Social Care

Housing

Criminal Justice and Legal

Environmental Awareness

Transport

International Fairtrade

Local Food Production

Culture, Sport and Leisure

Community

A Selection of old and new Co-operative Services now provided onlin

Up until the early 2000's many services were provided from geographical branches - see more on the history of this below. However with the rise of the internet some co-operative run services have migrated to online or phone based operation without locally based branches

At the same time the development of digital technology has also created new services entirely or enable Co-op's to be established in markets they had previously not competed in.

The following such co-operative services are used by our local members.

Services Nowadays Provided Online

New Services Provided Online

Promoting Fairtrade in Sutton

The local Co-op Party has always been a strong supporter of Fairtrade in the borough and our members are active in Sutton Fairtrade Community Group. The Group are researching current availability of Fairtrade products in the borough and have produced a guide to the local places that sell Fairtrade produce which can be read here.

Advice on setting up a local Co-operative 

If you want to start a co-operative an old but still useful guide is here. There is full legal and financial information from Co-operatives UK here

A key issue for co-operatives to address is start up and sustainability capital and Coop Finance can help with loans as well as use of Crowd Funders to sustain a business. Examples of this are in our directory above. Organisations like Stir to Action also help with the infrastructure of co-operative development by training up those advising new co-ops.

With the rise of the internet and social media there is also lots of information on how to set up a modern online digital "platform co-operative" here and here. Internet governance is an important issue nowadays in an era of complex metagovernance and like the Rochdale Co-operative Pioneers in the 19th century provides an opportunity to explore new ways of doing things and a wider range of democratic and participatory experiments. A useful site if you are setting up something online is the Community Rule website which is a governance toolkit for developing great online communities, and a joint project of the University of Colorado and Metagov - a laboratory for digital governance which build tools, practices, and communities for self-governance. Digital platforms will also likely in future utilise Artificial Intelligence (AI) so projects such as the Co-operative AI Foundation examine how online agents act in a Co-operative manner that we as humans would recognise.

Our local members are active in a number of co-operatives so can help point you to many other sources of advice.

Advice on listing Assets of Community Value (ACV)

Love It? List It! is the Co-operative Party’s campaign to list Assets of Community Value (ACV). These are the places people love that they want to preserve for the community’s use in the years to come. 

After the demutualisation of many building societies, the privatisation of services and selling off or change of use of many much loved places from community centres and allotments to local pubs, the loss of assets that make a community special has made many feel they do not have any form of local control any more and thus they can fall prey to far right populist political narratives. 

The Co-op Party provides useful four steps guidance, plus useful tips for an ACV mapping exercise.

Locally in Sutton you can apply to register an application here and the current list of applications are here. A guide to the Localism Act 2011 is here and the Assets of Community Value (England) Regulations 2012 are here.

Our members along with local Labour Party members have been involved in such processes and can point you to further sources of advice.

ACV listing is just the first step. You can also sign up to support the Co-op Party's Building Local Ownership Campaign. This calls on the Government to create a UK-wide Community Right to Buy, giving local community groups a right to buy assets of community value when they come up for sale – and increase the support and funding available to help them do it.

A brief history of Co-operatives and Mutuals in Sutton

Because co-operatives work within the current often very unstable market economy they will inevitably evolve as human needs change and the usage of goods and services change. Thus some services such as co-operative coal depots inevitably do not exist today and the widespread development of refrigeration and deep freezing reduced the need for rapid local distribution networks of depots for perishable goods. In some cases the goods or services provided are also financially unviable at various points and are discontinued. In other cases some past co-operative services such as early acute health provision and libraries have been provided by the national or local state. In addition some previously locally provided services such as insurance and travel agencies have migrated online, whilst new services such as co-operative legal services have mainly developed online in recent years and never had a local provision.

Below are a few examples of past co-operatives and mutuals in Sutton. We will add more as we research this.

South Suburban Co-operative Society Retail Stores, Services and Depots within the London Borough of Sutton in 1962.

Extract from SSCS Member Diary with thanks to Branch Chair Marylynne Burbage for her research