Left victory in firefighters’ union

THE DECISIVE victory of Matt Wrack in the ballot for the general secretary
of the Fire Brigades Union (FBU) represents a big step forward for the union
and the trade union movement in general.

After a year of attacks on supporters of Matt and inquiries designed to
undermine the general secretary result, Matt’s margin of victory over
incumbent general secretary Andy Gilchrist – by 12,883 votes (63.9%) to 7,259
(36.1%) – has stopped in its tracks any immediate attempt by the current union
hierarchy to overturn the election result.

Matt immediately took the reins as general secretary at the conference. His
election represents, along with Mark Serwotka’s re-election as general
secretary of PCS, a consolidation of the advances of the Left, at least for
one section of the union movement.

Matt’s election should see the FBU take a firmer stand on vital issues like
pensions and pay than it has done in the last year, where the majority of the
union leadership have preferred to attack and witch-hunt their own members,
rather than preparing a fight on these issues.

During the build-up to the threat of co-ordinated strike action against the
proposed cuts in public-sector pensions, the FBU was noticeably absent from
the battlefield. This did not stop Andy Gilchrist and his coterie from
claiming, as the general secretary election got underway, that they had played
a significant role in forcing the government to back down.

As well as the threat to firefighters’ pensions there are a number of
pressing issues that Matt Wrack will have to deal with, arising from this
week’s conference.

An increasingly aggressive management are trying to impose change at a
whole number of levels – including the issue of regional control centres and
rationalisations arising from the Integrated Risk Management Plans (IRMP) –
which pose a big threat to firefighters’ working conditions. The control
centre reorganisation threatens 900 jobs, mainly of women workers.

At the same time, the union conference this week was due to discuss the
next step after its disaffiliation from the Labour Party at its conference
last year.

A composite resolution – being moved by Socialist Party members from
Northern Ireland FBU and seconded by London – was set to call for the union to
allow its regional and brigade structures to support candidates and parties
outside of Labour.

The union’s executive council are opposing this democratisation of the
union’s political fund.

Socialist Party members will be verbally making the call for the FBU, along
with other unions like the RMT railworkers’ union, who are also disaffiliated
from Labour, to host a conference where unions can begin taking the first
clear steps towards offering trade union-backed candidates in elections as a
step towards a new mass party of the working class.

All of these issues will require urgent attention from Matt Wrack as the
newly elected general secretary. It is also possible that the old guard in the
union will be waiting for an opportunity to launch a counter-offensive to try
and make Matt a political hostage.

There will be an urgent need to build an open, genuinely democratic Left
organisation at all levels of the FBU to consolidate Matt Wrack’s election.

The Socialist Party welcomes his election and will wholeheartedly support
any moves he makes that improve firefighters’ conditions and strengthen the
Left in the union. At the same time, the FBU membership need their confidence
rebuilding after the setbacks of their dispute in 2003-2003 and the misrule of
the Gilchrist years.

That means not just arguing for greater democracy in the union, which Matt
and his supporters made the key plank of their election platform, but also
outlining a clear strategy to stop the bosses’ attacks and win victories for
members on pensions, pay and conditions.