Public sector workers’ anger gets a hearing

TUC conference:

Public sector workers’ anger gets a hearing

OUTSIDE THE TUC conference, a head of steam is building up amongst
public-sector workers for action against this government. In a small way
this found its way into the conference.

Ken Smith

However, whilst conference applauded those preparing to take action –
such as the NHS Logistics workers and PCS members – the resolutions
sought to build broad alliances which avoid any specific commitment to
effective action.

On the NHS, Dave Prentis, general secretary of UNISON, made a fiery
speech condemning the government. However, nowhere did he say that the
anger that is escalating daily would be pulled together immediately in
the form of a national demonstration or action. Instead the TUC and
UNISON are going to call a national demonstration in February, too late
for many workers facing NHS cuts and closures now.

Mark Serwotka of civil service union PCS, announced that his union is
prepared to call national action in the new year if the government does
not conduct satisfactory negotiations on pay, job cuts and
privatisation.

Speaking in the debate on public services, Mark pointed out the
scandal of private consultants being paid £2.2 billion – consultants
getting an average of £750 a day sitting opposite civil servants getting
£120 a day for the same job.

Mark also catalogued how in the Department for Work and Pensions,
40,000 jobs had been lost and charities are being lined up to deliver
employment programmes in a throw-back to the 1930s. On top of that, 150
employers a year are not being inspected for infringements of the
national minimum wage because of job cuts.

National demo

Pressure was being put on the PCS by the TUC to drop the call for a
national demonstration and day of action. The composite resolution calls
for the unions to explore the possibility of a national demonstration
and action. However Mark made it clear that the PCS was calling for a
national demonstration and day of action and would be working towards
it.

He said: "I believe a national demonstration and day of action would
be fantastically popular and necessary if we mean what we say when we
oppose privatisation."

He also said that if and when Tony Blair’s farewell tour takes place,
there should be demonstrators outside hospitals, schools, job centres,
courts, ambulance stations – all saying ‘no to privatisation’ and ‘yes
to public services’.

He concluded: "Let’s mobilise our members together across all
sectors, in a united display of opposition to the theft of public
services."

Speaking in the debate on pensions, Janice Godrich, PCS president,
warned that the unions should not be scared into responses on the Turner
Report that they might later regret. She said that the unions’ response
needed to raise aspirations, not lower them.

In the debate on organisation, Chris Baugh, assistant general
secretary of PCS, talked about the need to build a new layer of
activists from the ground up and to build a healthy new shop stewards’
movement, particularly drawing on young workers involved in democratic
youth structures in their union.

Outside the conference on the fringe, the debates were dominated by
the Labour leadership crisis. Many union delegates felt that neither
Blair nor Brown nor many of the other candidates would do anything to
resolve the problems facing working people.

The union leaders called for a change in policy direction but after
this TUC many workers will be saying that the TUC and the unions need a
change of direction if they’re going to be effective in making any
government ministers sit up, regardless of who is prime minister.