The Socialist

The Socialist 30 June 2009

Militant action pays!

Militant action pays!


Decent jobs not poverty schemes!


Victories show the way forward for struggles

Total's fat fingers in every pie

"We came out with Lindsey and we'll go back with Lindsey"


New Labour's house building plans amount to just a drop in the ocean

Pride not profit - London Pride Saturday 4 July

Crisis looms in FE colleges

Tower Hamlets demo

Councils try to gag us

Campaign to save Lewisham Bridge school continuing

Fast news

BNP: Looking beneath the suits


National Shop Stewards Network Conference Confident and enthusiastic


25 years ago: Liverpool - a city that dared to fight


Glasgow council: Social work dept staff start all-out strike

Justice for the Shrewsbury pickets march and rally

Construction industry in major crisis

 
 
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Total's fat fingers in every pie

THE CONSTRUCTION workers at Lindsey won a magnificent battle for the working class. They managed to turn back the cost-cutting plans of Total, the multinational energy giant rated as one of the world's six 'supermajor' oil companies. Total has its fat fingers in many pies.
Phil Whitehurst, a senior GMB union shop steward at Lindsey, spoke about the dispute to big crowds at last weekend's Glastonbury festival and linked up with a group campaigning against Total in Burma.

Total operates a huge natural gas pipeline from Burma to Thailand, despite the European Union imposing sanctions against Burma's military regime. Phil Whitehurst handed over a £500 cheque on behalf of the British trade union movement to the campaign.

Total is also one of 32 oil companies who are bidding to take over six oilfields and two gas fields in war-shattered Iraq, which still has one of the world's largest untapped oil reserves of 115 billion barrels.

Since 2003, US and British troops have been occupying Iraq, bringing death and bloodshed to the civilian population and to the soldiers. Now, Iraqi and foreign oil contract workers could face the prospect of violence on the streets and oilfields in an attempt to get their employers a profitable foothold in Iraq.

If their plans succeed, this would mainly benefit the oil monopolies, their executives and shareholders. These Western-based firms want to make a fortune from stealing Iraq's oil.

But the Lindsey dispute shows that the organised working class is potentially the strongest power on earth. The workers' movement should take confidence that, by fighting for policies based on workers' unity and socialist internationalism, the ruthless plans of Total and the other oil giants can be defeated. We can then put the idea of transforming society along socialist lines back on the political agenda again.

Roger Shrives

In this issue

Militant action pays!


Youth fight for jobs

Decent jobs not poverty schemes!


Socialist Party editorial

Victories show the way forward for struggles

Total's fat fingers in every pie

"We came out with Lindsey and we'll go back with Lindsey"


Socialist Party campaigns

New Labour's house building plans amount to just a drop in the ocean

Pride not profit - London Pride Saturday 4 July

Crisis looms in FE colleges

Tower Hamlets demo

Councils try to gag us

Campaign to save Lewisham Bridge school continuing

Fast news

BNP: Looking beneath the suits


National Shop Stewards Network

National Shop Stewards Network Conference Confident and enthusiastic


Socialist Party Marxist analysis

25 years ago: Liverpool - a city that dared to fight


Workplace news and events

Glasgow council: Social work dept staff start all-out strike

Justice for the Shrewsbury pickets march and rally

Construction industry in major crisis


 

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Related links:

Total:

triangleLindsey refinery dispute: Workers show strength

triangleSellafield's lethal gas

triangleLeft lessons in London elections

Lindsey:

triangleConstruction workers strike to defend agreements

triangleLindsey refinery fire death: inquiry needed

triangleSuccessful meeting to defend Teeside Corus jobs

triangleA present that can last all year - a subscription to The Socialist

GMB:

triangleUnions cautiously welcome talks with Unilever

triangleUnion members lobby the TUC Public Services Liaison Group

triangleUnilever workers strike to defend pensions

Construction workers:

triangleNext construction workers' protests: Wednesday 15th February

triangleConstruction workers continue protests on 1st February

triangleConstruction workers plan mass protest on Friday 3rd Feb

Burma:

triangleChina: Earthquake disaster exposes regime's failings

triangleBurma cyclone disaster: Wealth and privilege put before aid

triangleBurmese students join London march

Oil:

triangleStriking oil tanker drivers demand meaningful talks

triangleStrike action by Jet tanker drivers

triangleKazakhstan - 20 years of authoritarianism!

Iraq:

trianglePower and terror

triangleConsequences of 9/11: a world turned upside down

triangleIraq war: Labour's lie machine