The Socialist

The Socialist 31 March 2010

We Will Not Pay

We will not pay!

Help fund Socialist Party campaigns

Stop the cuts, build a socialist alternative


PCS: Striking against government attacks

PCS budget day strike: Support grows across country


BA cabin crew strike: 'We shall not be moved'

Fight the decimation of London tube jobs

Network Rail dispute: RMT signalworker speaks to The Socialist

Workplace news in brief


NUT conference: fight cuts and excessive workload

Socialist elected to NUT executive


Trade Unionist and Socialist Coalition Standing against cuts and privatisation


Yorkshire on the campaign trail

Developing a strategy to defeat the far-right

Waltham Forest: on march against redundancies

Cameron shows Tories still anti-gay

Council cuts: Grim Reaper moving to Surrey

Lewisham councillors' record

News in brief


Terror returns to Moscow For workers' unity against terror, repression, racism and capitalism

Eurozone crisis: Hanging together or hanging separately


Future Jobs scam: attacks on young unemployed

Southampton University protest

May Day march in Hull: Rebuilding traditions of struggle


When We Were Miners

 
 
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PCS: Striking against government attacks

Wrexham PCS workers on strike, photo Andrew McCoy

Wrexham PCS workers on strike, photo Andrew McCoy   (Click to enlarge)

Following the tremendous civil service two-day strike on 8 and 9 March, PCS members once again demonstrated their anger at the government's attempt to rip up their contracts under the Civil Service Compensation Scheme. On budget day - 24 March - PCS members again took strike action and the message to Brown, Jowell and the Cabinet Office was clear - PCS will continue its campaign until there is a negotiated settlement.

John McInally, Public and Commercial Services union (PCS) national vice-president, personal capacity

Chancellor Alistair Darling crossed PCS picket lines to deliver his budget speech. Many areas reported increased participation in this action, and the Department for Work and Pensions group has recruited 1,200 new PCS members since the campaign began.

PCS members know this dispute is about more than defending redundancy payment terms, it is about defending jobs and services and preventing privatisation. Whoever wins the election will target the civil service for major cuts: all the main political parties agree working and middle-class people must pay for the economic mess made by the banks and the unregulated free market.

Striking Sheffield civil servants, members of PCS, photo R Faulds

Striking Sheffield civil servants, members of PCS, photo R Faulds   (Click to enlarge)

Hidden in the detail of Darling's plans is the shocking truth Labour is seeking to hide from working class voters - cuts of up to 25% in some departments, far deeper than anything under Thatcher. Our dispute is an important early sign of workers' struggles to resist and reverse the political establishment's plans for a decade of "austerity" - which will mean misery for most in society.

The hypocrisy of Brown and Labour ministers calling for negotiations to settle the British Airways and rail disputes, while refusing to negotiate with their own workforce, has angered many, including Labour MPs.

165 MPs, the vast majority Labour, have now signed the Early Day Motion supporting the union's position. These MPs understand that to attack low-paid workers in the run-up to a general election will mean that civil servants who are unlikely to vote Tory are more likely not to vote at all, endangering the seats of Labour MPs in marginal constituencies.

The exposure of appalling Stephen "cab for hire" Byers, architect of New Labour and unprincipled low-life, who was prepared to use his 'contacts' as a former minister to line his own pockets, could not be a sharper contrast with hard working and low paid civil servants.

PCS workers on strike and protesting outside the Welsh Assembly, photo Cardiff Socialist Party

PCS workers on strike and protesting outside the Welsh Assembly, photo Cardiff Socialist Party   (Click to enlarge)

PCS's national executive committee (NEC) met after the strike to plan the next stages of the campaign. April's NEC will consider further industrial action in relation to any announcements on the general election date. The government is the employer so there may be an issue as to whether there is actually anyone to negotiate with for a period of time. The national overtime ban will be extended until 14 May and departmental groups will be asked to draw up plans for disruptive action and work-to-rules.

PCS's political campaigning will be stepped up. This high profile activity will include targeting ministerial and marginal constituencies, including a national tour of our "battle bus" to such constituencies and larger workplaces. If ministers think we are going to ground until the election is over then they are in for a rude awakening. We will expose their treatment of low-paid workers and their plans to make us pay for the crisis caused by their friends in the City.

PCS is also continuing with its legal challenge to the redundancy scheme cuts. The government is running scared and they have used the most cynical delaying tactics to have it put back until April, but PCS will have its day in court, as well as its days on the picket lines. PCS will use all available methods to build the pressure until there is a fair and acceptable negotiated settlement.


In this issue

We will not pay!

Help fund Socialist Party campaigns

Stop the cuts, build a socialist alternative


PCS strike action

PCS: Striking against government attacks

PCS budget day strike: Support grows across country


Transport strikes

BA cabin crew strike: 'We shall not be moved'

Fight the decimation of London tube jobs

Network Rail dispute: RMT signalworker speaks to The Socialist

Workplace news in brief


NUT conference

NUT conference: fight cuts and excessive workload

Socialist elected to NUT executive


Trade Unionist and Socialist Coalition

Trade Unionist and Socialist Coalition Standing against cuts and privatisation


Socialist Party news and analysis

Yorkshire on the campaign trail

Developing a strategy to defeat the far-right

Waltham Forest: on march against redundancies

Cameron shows Tories still anti-gay

Council cuts: Grim Reaper moving to Surrey

Lewisham councillors' record

News in brief


International socialist news and analysis

Terror returns to Moscow For workers' unity against terror, repression, racism and capitalism

Eurozone crisis: Hanging together or hanging separately


Youth

Future Jobs scam: attacks on young unemployed

Southampton University protest

May Day march in Hull: Rebuilding traditions of struggle


Socialist Party review

When We Were Miners


 

Home   |   The Socialist 31 March 2010   |   Join the Socialist Party

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Related links:

PCS:

trianglePCS conference votes for more joint action against cuts

triangleBrighton: PCS conference - Socialist Party public meeting

triangleM10: Angry workers walk out across the country

trianglePensions strike reports - 10th May

triangleMessage of support to the 10 May strikers

triangleTransport department workers vote to strike over cuts

Labour:

triangleCon-Dems' hypocrisy over children's care

triangleLeadership shows weakness at CWU conference

triangleBuilding the electoral alternative in Brent

triangleWales TUC - Oppose all cuts!

MPs:

triangleThem & Us

triangleTory sleaze is back!

triangleMPs back the Jarrow March for Jobs

Election:

triangleCon-Dems battered in Scotland

triangleLondon, Hackney TUSC election rally

triangleLondon, Lambeth TUSC election meeting

Civil Service:

triangle30 November shows... We can win!

triangleUnite votes Yes to strike action on 30 November

triangleOne Wales rule for the rich...

John McInally:

triangleTrade unionists denounce Hutton's attacks on public sector workers' pensions

triangleWorkers celebrate May Day: Marching together against the bosses' attacks