The Socialist

The Socialist 4 February 2009

Workers show their strength


Lindsey refinery: workers show their strength

Firm strike leadership gains results

Organising real trade unionism

Response from Italy

Staythorpe power station: "It's all about money"

The diary of a striker

Striking at Fiddlers Ferry


United action needed to save education

Youth Fight for Jobs campaign

Gaza protests: Police attacks show stewarding vital

May Day: Lords judgement backs police


Corus steal jobs: Workers must fight back

Weather chaos exposes cutbacks

Car industry bailout plan

Wirral: Stop the cuts and closures

Fast news

Liverpool: Far right BNP exposed


Sri Lanka: Stop the slaughter!

Sri Lanka: Thousands trapped in war zone

France: millions strike against Sarkozy's policies

Economic crisis - cracks appear in the bosses' EU

Iceland: Devastated by global crisis


Lessons of the Jarrow Crusade: no return to the 1930s!

 
 
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Socialist Party Policy statements
Socialist Party contemporary Marxist analysis

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Fast news

Peer pressure

SHOCK! 'POLITICIANS accept money from big business to amend legislation', screamed several newspaper headlines recently.

But instead of the usual exposé of MPs who work for companies, this time it's the Lords leaping to get kickbacks. Four Labour peers were named as offering their services to amend legislation in return for companies' cash. Another, cross bench peer Lady Coussins, was paid by drinks firms to table amendments that diluted proposed laws making alcoholic drinks carry health warnings for pregnant women.

Surely the shock would be if the present parliamentary politicians didn't accept payments from big business!


Privatisation failure

LABOUR'S DRIVE to outsource welfare provision to the private and voluntary sectors appears to have come a cropper. The latest research shows that the punitive Pathways to Work scheme, aimed at getting people off incapacity benefit, has been a total failure, achieving a paltry 27% success rate.

Overall, the private sector has provided only 60% of the expected jobs for people on incapacity benefit and the long-term unemployed in the six months to September 2008, despite consuming 98% of the expected expenditure.


Gagging order

RAIL WORKERS employed by First Capital Connect have been threatened with the sack if they told passengers about the company's plan to close 23 ticket offices.

Despite raking in £48.3 million in profits in the six months to 30 September last year, First Capital Connect wants to axe jobs and close ticket offices at 28 stations along the Thameslink route in the evenings and weekends to save money.

TSSA union general secretary Gerry Doherty said: "We shall resist any attempt to silence or intimidate our members. This is about free speech.

"What is in FCC's commercial interests is not in the passengers' interests. They will have to buy more expensive tickets from machines and their stations will be less secure with closed ticket offices."


Bailout bonuses

PLANS WERE drawn up for big increases in boardroom pay at Lloyds bank after it received £17 billion in a government bailout.

Pay advisers argued that executive directors were entitled to more generous packages following its takeover of rival HBOS in October.

The scheme was only dropped under pressure as it was deemed 'inappropriate' in the current economic climate.

Eric Daniels, Lloyds chief executive, is paid a basic salary of £1 million. In 2007 he received £2.8 million, including £1.8 million in 'performance related' pay.

The bank's other five executive directors before the HBOS takeover was announced had basic salaries of between £590,000 and £680,000.


In this issue


Lindsey refinery

Lindsey refinery: workers show their strength

Firm strike leadership gains results

Organising real trade unionism

Response from Italy

Staythorpe power station: "It's all about money"

The diary of a striker

Striking at Fiddlers Ferry


Socialist Party youth and students

United action needed to save education

Youth Fight for Jobs campaign

Gaza protests: Police attacks show stewarding vital

May Day: Lords judgement backs police


Socialist Party campaigns

Corus steal jobs: Workers must fight back

Weather chaos exposes cutbacks

Car industry bailout plan

Wirral: Stop the cuts and closures

Fast news

Liverpool: Far right BNP exposed


International socialist news and analysis

Sri Lanka: Stop the slaughter!

Sri Lanka: Thousands trapped in war zone

France: millions strike against Sarkozy's policies

Economic crisis - cracks appear in the bosses' EU

Iceland: Devastated by global crisis


Marxist analysis: history

Lessons of the Jarrow Crusade: no return to the 1930s!


 

Home   |   The Socialist 4 February 2009   |   Join the Socialist Party

Subscribe   |   Donate   |   Bookshop

Related links:

Pay:

triangleNational Shop Stewards Network

triangleCome to the 6th annual NSSN conference!

triangleCouncil workers in Cheshire strike against attacks on pay

triangleVictory for Greenwich Unite library campaign

triangleThem & Us

triangleThe battle to defend pensions continues

Privatisation:

triangle'Save Heatherwood Hospital' campaign yielding results

triangleExposed: the dirty world of NHS privatisation

trianglePrivatisation pushes up transport costs in Yorkshire

triangleCare home closures in Sheffield