The Socialist

The Socialist 14 December 2011

Tories speak for the rich, not for us

The Socialist issue 698

Tories speak for the rich - not for us


Hands off our NHS!

Unacceptable! Draconian sentences for Dundee 'Facebook riot' teenagers

Striking to defend pensions

No progress at climate conference

Them & Us

Why I joined the Socialist Party


Stand up to the Con-Dem government


Inside Job: Capitalism is a failed system: support the socialist fightback

TV review: Britain's great housing scandal exposed


All out now to stop the sites!

Pensioners and workers - united fight needed

Occupy London tours Canary Wharf

Action after N30

Langdon school strike

Public sector pensions - where now?

Tax workers on strike

Workplace news in brief


"Putin is a thief", "Putin is a thief"

Kazakhstan - 20 years of authoritarianism!


Cameron's drugs problems

Attacks on Tupe rights hit hard

Building bosses and their blacklist

 
 

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All out now to stop the sites!

Rob Williams, Chair, National Shop Stewards Network
Construction workers’ strike on 14 December: Corus Redcar electricians, photo Elaine Brunskill

Construction workers’ strike on 14 December: Corus Redcar electricians, photo Elaine Brunskill   (Click to enlarge)

The construction workers' strike on 14 December could be the biggest strike in the construction industry for almost 40 years. The electricians fighting to defend their national agreement (JIB) will be taking action alongside the other trades in the NAECI 'Blue Book' agreement fighting a pay freeze. It's the same message, big construction companies with £ billions in their order books, making £ millions in profit screwing their employees to get even more profit and hiding behind this government, their anti-union laws as well as EU law that enshrines the 'race to the bottom'.

But despite all this, construction workers are fighting back and the NAECI workers are taking a leaf out of the electricians' book with their second 'day of action'.

The biggest of the 'Dirty 7' big contractors, Balfour Beatty (BBES), may have outlawed the strike by their electricians but 7 December (D7) saw protests, stoppages and walkouts all over the country.

Construction workers’ strike on 14 December: Corus Redcar electricians, photo Elaine Brunskill

Construction workers’ strike on 14 December: Corus Redcar electricians, photo Elaine Brunskill   (Click to enlarge)

Electrician Alan Keays commented after D7: "The day's events show the enormous power and potential of the rank and file when they pull together. This dispute may go on for many months yet as the rogue 7 dig their heels in. We must continue the weekly protests and maintain the numbers, and push Unite to make it an official strike in construction in the new year. Whatever happens the rank and file have transformed the construction sector of Unite in the last four months."

Unite's strike was won by an 81% margin yet the bosses can run to the courts and use the Tory anti-union laws to stop a just and legitimate strike. Yet it's perfectly legal for them to impose new Besna contracts on electricians which will result in them losing up to 35% in pay.

There's supposed to be talks at Acas between Unite and the 'Dirty 7' on 15 December. This shows that the stoppages are having an effect and the potential for a total victory. But any talks have to be transparent and in front of the members.

If it's true that Unite called off the official strike last week only because of the threat of an injunction, they should have gone ahead with it and at least called Balfour's bluff. However, they are re-balloting, and we hope that the new vote is an even bigger one and across all the companies and also links many official or unofficial strikes with the NAECI workers.

But the walkouts on 7 December showed that we can't and won't wait to jump through the legal hoops. D7 also saw many public sector workers and young people joining the protests. This is crucial as the government and the Tory press try to split private sector workers from those in the public sector who went on strike on N30 to defend their pensions.

Workers in Unilever have been on strike to defend their pensions. Car companies Ford and BMW are trying to close their pension schemes to new starters. Workers at the building company Cemex are balloting for action over pensions.

The Socialist Party and the National Shop Stewards Network is calling on the TUC to support Unison in Scotland's motion naming 25 January as the date for the next public sector general strike as a follow-up to N30.


In this issue


Socialist Party feature

Tories speak for the rich - not for us


Socialist Party news and analysis

Hands off our NHS!

Unacceptable! Draconian sentences for Dundee 'Facebook riot' teenagers

Striking to defend pensions

No progress at climate conference

Them & Us

Why I joined the Socialist Party


Socialist Party editorial

Stand up to the Con-Dem government


Socialist Party reviews

Inside Job: Capitalism is a failed system: support the socialist fightback

TV review: Britain's great housing scandal exposed


Socialist Party workplace news

All out now to stop the sites!

Pensioners and workers - united fight needed

Occupy London tours Canary Wharf

Action after N30

Langdon school strike

Public sector pensions - where now?

Tax workers on strike

Workplace news in brief


International socialist news and analysis

"Putin is a thief", "Putin is a thief"

Kazakhstan - 20 years of authoritarianism!


Readers' Comments

Cameron's drugs problems

Attacks on Tupe rights hit hard

Building bosses and their blacklist


 

Home   |   The Socialist 14 December 2011   |   Join the Socialist Party

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Related links:

Construction workers:

triangleNational Shop Stewards Network 6th annual conference

triangleConstruction workers demand better pay and conditions

triangleConstruction workers fight on

triangleSparks resolve to continue protests

triangleRank & File construction workers meeting

triangleExposed: involvement of security services in construction blacklist

Strike:

triangleStrike at Sussex Downs College

triangleCome to the 6th annual NSSN conference!

triangleSecond strike by Tilbury dockers over attack on contracts

triangleM10: Angry workers walk out across the country

Construction:

triangleWANTED - decent affordable housing!

triangleAnti-blacklisting battle continues on building sites

triangle'Priceless victory' of sparks against the Dirty Seven

Unite:

triangleNational Shop Stewards Network

triangleVictory for Greenwich Unite library campaign

triangleUnite's Health officer explains the need to strike

Electricians:

triangleSalford Socialist Party: Lessons of the electricians' dispute

triangleSparks protest at Conoco and solidarity with Jet tanker drivers

triangleSweetheart stitch-ups in the electrical industry: A spark's history of the Joint Industry Board

National Shop Stewards Network:

triangleNational Shop Stewards Network (NSSN) 6th annual national conference

triangleKick out the Con-Dems and end austerity

triangleDisabled people fighting back