Frances O’Grady, the first woman general secretary of the
Trades Union Congress, says “trade unions should have a strong political
voice”. She’s so right because as things stand, their traditional “voice” in
the shape of Labour is fading away.
The last week has been wracked with tensions and real as
well as apparent turn-arounds in the trade unions’ crucial and historic
relationship with the Labour Party. A schism emerged when one of the party’s
biggest donors, the GMB, announced that it would cut its affiliation fees by
90% in response to planned rule changes by Labour.
These will terminate the present arrangement, whereby
members of affiliated unions have part of their subs forwarded to the Labour
Party. In future, individual members would have to “opt in” to membership to
make a financial contribution. Labour will hold a special conference next year
to make the changes.
Meanwhile, the party has had to back off from allegations of
vote-rigging in a parliamentary candidate selection process in Falkirk,
Scotland, in what appears to be a behind the scenes deal between the Unite
union and Labour leaders. Yet the claims originally triggered Ed Miliband’s
plans.
He remains unrepentant. Miliband’s unapologetically arrogant
anti-union stance remains nothing other an abject sop to Tory-Liberal ideology
and a continuation of Tony Blair’s policy of weakening, reducing and finally
eliminating the links between Labour and the unions that founded the party at
the start of the 20th century.
His hand is strengthened by a YouGov survey for the Labour
UnCut blog. According to the results,
Miliband’s move to make trade unionists “opt-in” is backed by 60% of members of
unions affiliated to Labour. The poll result is double-edged. It’s not
surprising that trade unionists feel disgruntled and let down by Labour which
has endorsed most ConDem policies and implemented the cuts at local council
level.
New Labour governments drove on not only the
marketisation/outsourcing of public services but the introduction of an
authoritarian surveillance state. Their rejection of the socialist Clause Four
of the Labour Party’s constitution heralded the transformation of Labour into
an openly capitalist, neo-liberal party. Blairite “modernisation”, is being
continued by Miliband.
The right to have political representation was achieved
through historic political and legal struggles that began in the early 19th
century. But now more than ever, workers and trade unionists are losing even
the semblance of a political voice. Thus, Miliband and his co-thinkers are
completing the reversal of the very process that gave rise to their party in
the first place.
Motions put to this year’s TUC reveal the rising tide of
discontent against the ConDems destruction of the welfare state and the growing
sense that even if Labour were elected in 2015, nothing much would change
because the party has accepted ConDem future budget cuts.
A crucial composite put by Unite and seconded by Unison,
proposes that “Congress believes that the crisis facing people and their local
services is so severe that we cannot wait for a general election in 2015, we
must act now.”
It calls on Congress to “instruct the General Council to
organise in the course of 2014 a nationwide march against poverty, focusing on
the bedroom tax, food banks and other effects of government policy designed to
draw in working people and their communities in all parts of the country and to
unite people around the trade union movement”.
Council should, it says, “facilitate a co-ordinated
programme of civil and industrial action involving trade unions and other
campaigns”. The motion, which is certain to be passed, also calls on unions to
“promote and support the day of action called by the People’s Assembly for 5
November 2013”.
This is not what Miliband, who speaks at the TUC tomorrow,
particularly wants to hear. And he definitely won’t be backing strikes against
the government.
Like the appointment of a woman to head the TUC after 150
years waiting, these actions are well overdue and we unreservedly support them.
At last year’s Congress, there was plenty of rhetoric and even talk of a
general strike. It came to nothing. This time round, we need deeds to match the
words. Or the TUC’s own credibility will be worthless.
Corinna Lotz
A World to Win secretary
No comments:
Post a Comment