The Socialist

The Socialist 9 February 2011

Big Society? Big Con!

The Socialist issue 657

Big society? ... big con!

Fight the cuts - whoever makes them

Ditch the library cuts

Hands off our forests!

Campaigners reject maternity unit cuts

Billy Bragg helps raise Exeter Anti-Cuts funds

Institute of Directors, bosses' organisation, bares its teeth at unions

Solidarity with the Egyptian masses

Uprising in Egypt - Socialist Party public meetings

EDL racists terrorise Luton

Fast news


National education shutdown needed

PCS young members' network conference

Yorkshire: organising the student movement

Demonstrating against cuts in Grimsby

Volunteering 'plaster' for unemployment


Egypt: Is revolution derailed?

Economic crisis in Greece: Immigrants made scapegoats

Solidarity messages needed for US prison reform activist


Southampton campaigners march in defence of jobs and services

Jobs massacre at Pfizer

Striking against health job cuts

Scottish Unison members oppose leadership's sell-out

Leicester Unison members rally against all cuts

March against the job losses in Greenwich

Unite anti-cuts conference


Woody Sez


Life on the autistic spectrum

 
 

PDFs for this issue

Page 1 pdfPage1 pdf

Page 2 pdfPage2 pdf

Page 3 pdfPage3 pdf

Page 4 pdfPage4 pdf

Page 5 pdfPage5 pdf

Page 6 pdfCentre pages pdf

Page 8 pdfPage8 pdf

Page 9 pdfPage9 pdf

Page 10 pdfPage10 pdf

Page 11 pdfPage11 pdf

Page 12 pdfPage12 pdf

Socialist Party logo Socialist Party on the climate change demo December 2007, pic Paul Mattsson Socialist Party News
Socialist Party Policy statements
Socialist Party contemporary Marxist analysis

Link to this page: http://www.socialistparty.org.uk/issue/657/11158

Seach this siteGoogle search the site

Printable versionPrintable version

email to friendemail to friend

Facebook

Twitter

Home   |   The Socialist 9 February 2011   |   Join the Socialist Party

Subscribe   |   Donate   |   Bookshop

Scottish Unison members oppose leadership's sell-out

Social care workers on strike in Scotland, photo Duncan Brown

Social care workers on strike in Scotland, photo Duncan Brown   (Click to enlarge)

Just days before councils across Scotland meet to slash public services, the February meeting of Unison Scottish Council was presented with a paper for debate entitled The Public Sector Workforce Framework.

A Scottish Unison member

The paper, marked "strictly not for publication" was the product of continuing discussions between the Scottish government, Scottish Trades Union Congress (STUC) and the Confederation of Scottish Local Authorities (COSLA).

The paper's stated aim was "the pursuit of the goal of no compulsory redundancies in exchange for agreement to real and meaningful working practices that allow employers to generate the package of savings required to fund this goal".

Social care workers on strike in Scotland, photo Duncan Brown

Social care workers on strike in Scotland, photo Duncan Brown   (Click to enlarge)

An hour before the full council, the union's Scottish Committee meeting had debated the paper and, on a narrow vote of eleven to eight, recommended acceptance.

The document represented a thinly disguised attempt by a section of the Unison Scottish leadership to overturn the Unison council's position for coordinated industrial action to defeat cuts, as proposed by the Glasgow City Unison branch and agreed at the council's previous meeting in December.

Also agreed in December was the call for councils to set needs budgets and to call on elected politicians to refuse to make cuts. However, the proposed document shows that the Scottish leadership accepts cuts are inevitable.

The debate was sharp and protracted with many delegates opposing on two counts: firstly, over being 'bounced' into making a decision without time to consult members; secondly, that the content of the proposal represented a 'sell-out' of the membership in advance of any struggle against the employers.

Branch delegations that had consistently supported the leadership previously were split, in one case providing speakers both for and against the motion.

It was unfortunate that some delegates who consider themselves to be on the left were pushing for acceptance, arguing for the 'new reality' of reduced council budgets.

One delegate, a member of Socialist Appeal, explained that his branch had adopted a similar approach twelve months ago when it became clear that the council would be heading for a crisis.

Speaker after speaker condemned, not only the intention of the proposal, but the signal that it would send to employers who would use it to undermine local action.

If carried it would also represent a severe blow to the morale of the membership who are looking for a firm lead from the union at this time. After over an hour of debate the meeting voted to reject the partnership framework by a big majority.

This represents a victory for Unison members who want the union to have a clear strategy to defeat the cuts.


In this issue


Socialist Party news and analysis

Big society? ... big con!

Fight the cuts - whoever makes them

Ditch the library cuts

Hands off our forests!

Campaigners reject maternity unit cuts

Billy Bragg helps raise Exeter Anti-Cuts funds

Institute of Directors, bosses' organisation, bares its teeth at unions

Solidarity with the Egyptian masses

Uprising in Egypt - Socialist Party public meetings

EDL racists terrorise Luton

Fast news


Socialist Party youth and students

National education shutdown needed

PCS young members' network conference

Yorkshire: organising the student movement

Demonstrating against cuts in Grimsby

Volunteering 'plaster' for unemployment


International socialist news and analysis

Egypt: Is revolution derailed?

Economic crisis in Greece: Immigrants made scapegoats

Solidarity messages needed for US prison reform activist


Socialist Party workplace news

Southampton campaigners march in defence of jobs and services

Jobs massacre at Pfizer

Striking against health job cuts

Scottish Unison members oppose leadership's sell-out

Leicester Unison members rally against all cuts

March against the job losses in Greenwich

Unite anti-cuts conference


Socialist Party review

Woody Sez


Comment

Life on the autistic spectrum


 

Home   |   The Socialist 9 February 2011   |   Join the Socialist Party

Subscribe   |   Donate   |   Bookshop

Related links:

Scotland:

triangleCon-Dems battered in Scottish local elections

triangleCon-Dems battered in Scotland

triangleRare sighting of Tories in Scotland

triangleDerby Socialist Party: Scotland - Do socialists support independence?

triangleCameron's attack on Scottish independence referendum backfires

triangleUnacceptable! Draconian sentences for Dundee 'Facebook riot' teenagers

Unison:

triangleWorkers demand pensions battle is stepped up

triangleCome to the NSSN conference!

triangleUnison attacks TUSC candidate

triangleUnison leadership 'woefully inadequate' in face of cuts

Council:

triangleCouncil workers in Cheshire strike against attacks on pay

triangleVictory for Greenwich Unite library campaign

triangleGreenwich libraries - fighting back can win

Cuts:

triangleBristol East Socialist Party: There is an Alternative

triangleDemo against cuts at Salford university

triangleWalthamstow Socialist Party: France - Greece - Austerity rejected!

Glasgow:

triangleAnger over Tommy Sheridan 'gagging order'

triangle250 'rank & file' electricians meet in Glasgow

triangle1915 - How strikes and rent strikes won gains for Scottish tenants