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Home | The Socialist 7 July 2009 | Join the Socialist Party Postal workers need a national fightback
THOUSANDS OF postal workers will strike in London this week. Much of the entire postal network will be involved in a 'day of action' next week (17 July) as workers struggle to defend postal services and their jobs and conditions. Most 'posties' are convinced that the day of action should involve striking. Dave Griffiths and Bill MullinsThese strikes are in response to an undeclared war on the industry, its workforce and its trade union, the CWU. Despite the apparent government retreat from privatisation of Royal Mail, a huge threat still hangs over the whole industry and the vital service it provides. The CWU has opposed Labour's privatisation plans, plans that would also be eagerly carried through by the Tories. Labour is reeling from voters' rejection of its unpopular policies. That, together with the economic crisis leaving few private takers for part of Royal Mail, means they had to backtrack. But the government have only 'kicked it into the long grass' and the threat to pensions and pay continues. Meanwhile Royal Mail management goes on with the government's war against the postal industry. They have continued, and even stepped up, attacks on the workforce as they keep trying to soften up the industry and its workers for privatisation. Their 'slash and burn' cuts are steadily destroying a vital public service as they seek to tear up routes, shift patterns and workloads, and slash jobs. They are ruling by diktat not agreement, bullying workers and local unions and are in effect trying to derecognise the CWU.
They are also trying to impose a pay freeze, in an industry that made £320 million profit last year from its workers and whose bosses enjoy lavish rewards. Workers have had enough! Such a national assault on workers requires a national fightback. Bosses have been allowed to attack area by area, office by office. There are now over 160 ballot requests for industrial action by postal workers in response to cuts, bullying and intimidation. Many complain that the balloting process has been too slow to meet the bosses' onslaught. Union leaders had hoped for an agreement for 'modernisation' that would avert the privatisation threat. Many postal reps worried about what the union would have to give away to achieve this. But management haven't averted their attack. Weakness in the face of attack has only invited aggression and can undermine workers' confidence in the union, leaving a more difficult job for lay union reps. The 17 July stoppage needs to be a national strike to send a clear message to Royal Mail and the government. If that means defying anti-union laws, so be it. If the union leaders won't do this, then at least they should announce that they will organise a national ballot for industrial action as soon as possible. Whatever happens, postal workers should be prepared to take unofficial action from below. In this issue
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