Longbridge: No more asset-stripping, renationalise, don’t subsidise
THE ROVER crisis is mainly down to the greed and short-sightedness of the
capitalist owners. But the trade union leaders’ lack of leadership has also
played a part.
Bill Mullins, Socialist Party industrial department
When BMW abandoned their link with the Longbridge plant in early 2000, Tony
Woodley, now the TGWU general secretary but then the union’s national officer
for the car industry, supported the Phoenix Four’s takeover of Rover.
Woodley appeared at the factory gates alongside Phoenix director John
Towers to the cheers of the Longbridge workers. His support for this group of
gangster capitalists, probably through a lack of confidence to demand that the
government take Rover into public ownership, played a direct role in the
debacle to come.
If he had called for the re-nationalisation of Rover, including the Cowley
plant in Oxford and the Powertrain plant near Birmingham, this would have been
supported by many of the workers. Instead, he gave Phoenix unearned political
capital.
The Rover debacle is a direct result of the deliberate policy by the Labour
government not to ‘interfere’ with the workings of the capitalist markets.
Successive Tory and Labour governments have thought they could swap Britain’s
manufacturing base for a service-based economy.
Blair is a proponent of unfettered market capitalism in Europe. He has
demanded that Germany, France and Italy as well as the rest of the ‘old’
members of the EU deregulate their economies.
He supports the introduction of labour laws that allow the European
capitalists to ‘restructure’ industry without the irksome opposition of the
trade unions. As far as Blair is concerned, this is the only way that the
European economies can compete with the rising economies of China and India.
No altruism
WHEN IN 2000 BMW announced that it was pulling out of Longbridge, they
willingly handed over the whole operation to Phoenix for a token £10. At the
same time they agreed an interest-free loan of £420 million.
The hard-headed BMW board didn’t do this out of altruism but to allow them
to concentrate on the production of the successful new mini in Oxford. If BMW
had hung onto Longbridge they would have been forced to come up with plans for
new models. But the cost of developing new models is measured in hundreds of
millions of pounds and this didn’t fit in with their plans.
BMW gave a massive sigh of relief when the Labour government and the trade
union leaders promoted Phoenix as the new owners. This was a way out of their
predicament. It was cheap at the price compared to trying to keep the factory
going – with all the political overheads if they eventually had to close it.
The financial jiggery-pokery that the Phoenix Four got up to should have
come as no surprise to anyone, least of all the union leaders. Their attempt
to suck the Chinese bosses into the morass has failed and no wonder.
The state-owned Shanghai Automotive Industry Corporation has been busy for
the last eight months building up facilities to produce the ‘K’ series engine
that powers most of the Rover models.
Workers from Birmingham have been sent over to train the Chinese workforce
and to help build the new production facilities. The Chinese government want
to enter the world car market and they needed the rights to produce cars and
engines. They have now got this and they don’t need what’s left in Longbridge.
From the outset, the Phoenix Four were determined to keep control of
whatever profits they could loot from Rover separate and hidden from the
outside world, above all the Longbridge workers. They did this by separating
Rover’s finance arm (MGR Capital) from its manufacturing arm. MGR Capital was
sold directly to the Phoenix Four in a controversial transaction.
Up to the end of 2002, MGR Capital was showing a profit of £13.7 million.
In the same period the four directors paid themselves £15.1 million as
directors of MGR Capital. They also set up a trust fund (ie a pension fund)
for themselves from MGR for £12.9 million on an unsecured loan.
The Phoenix Four made the most of everything they could get their hands on,
including selling off the land and the parts business, before the collapse of
the company’s whole financial edifice.
Rover Cars meanwhile were declaring huge losses, which added to the
atmosphere of doom and gloom that enveloped the plant.
Some commentators have speculated that Longbridge workers would have been
better off if BMW had shut up shop in 2000 and given each of them a lump sum
of £50,000 and put the rest into their pension funds, instead of giving
Phoenix a free loan of £420 million.
Now the workers face a future with little more than the maximum state
redundancy payment of £3,360 and no chance of getting their hands on any of
their pension until they are 65, if they’re lucky.
Walking away with millions
200,000 CARS were produced at Longbridge in 2000. By last year this had
fallen to 73,000. Instead of developing new models, BMW’s £420 million loan
has been used to cover the losses of Rover Cars. For a personal investment of
£60,000 each the Phoenix Four have walked away with millions.
But even more scandalous is the behind-the-scenes smug talk by New Labour:
"It doesn’t matter about manufacturing in Birmingham or anywhere else because
there are loads of jobs available elsewhere".
But what are these jobs?
Back in the early 1980s, the giant Round Oak steel works in Dudley, five
miles from the Longbridge plant, was shut down as part of British Steel’s cut
backs. 10,000 workers with trade union-negotiated rates of pay and conditions
worked there at the time.
Soon after it shut, a couple of Black Country speculators bought up the
derelict site and developed a massive shopping centre – Merry Hill.
Yes, the place employs about the same number of people that Round Oak did
but 9,000 of them are on no more that the minimum wage of £4.85 per hour. Most
are on part time, temporary contracts with all the associated insecurity.
What a magnificent job by capitalism! They have rid themselves of a
"Bolshie" trade union-organised workforce and got instead the glories of
MacDonald’s, Clinton’s card shops and flower-arrangers. With slave-labour
wages to boot.
This is the real threat that the Longbridge workers feel in their very
bones and that is why they will have little choice but to fight for their jobs
now.
But will there be a fight back?
There has been no shop floor meeting in Longbridge for six months or more.
For the last five years union leaders have told the workforce to keep quiet
and back the Phoenix Four, as they strove to do the latest deal with whoever
they could find. It was a group of Indian capitalists one day and the Chinese
the next. All have come to nothing.
What is needed is for the union leaders to live up to their
responsibilities and give a lead. What have they got to lose by demanding that
the government take Longbridge into public ownership with no compensation to
the Phoenix robbers?
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Socialist councillors: Demand for public ownership and control
COVENTRY SOCIALIST Party councillor Dave Nellist will move the following
motion at the Coventry City council meeting on 19 April:
"This Council notes with dismay the level of job losses in the region’s car
industry in recent months including major redundancies or threatened
redundancies at Jaguar, Peugeot and Rover, together with a number of smaller
companies and those who are suppliers to those named;gives 100% support to those workers wishing to oppose redundancies and
calls for the trade unions to develop an urgent regional and national campaign
in support of manufacturing jobs;believes that the trades unions should be given immediate access to the
books of Jaguar, Peugeot and Rover to see how subsidies, profits and internal
transfers have affected the financial health of those businesses, and that
with many thousands of jobs affected there should be no excuse of "business
secrecy" hiding the facts from those most closely involved;demands an urgent investigation into the role of Rover’s directors and
their five year control of the company, and an end to asset stripping or
movement of production facilities without the agreement of all plants
concerned;and resolves that since hundreds of millions of pounds of public money
would have to come into this region to deal with the consequences of the
collapse of Rover, that such public money should be invested now to retain
Rover jobs, on condition that the ownership of Rover be now transferred back
to the public sector and a plan drawn up, in conjunction with Rover workers
themselves, for that public investment, under democratic public control, to
produce a new product range that will better address the real transport needs
of the whole of society."