Coventry Workers Fight Back

"STORM CLOUDS gather over council" was the headline in the
Coventry Evening Telegraph after the announcement of the ballot results on
the council’s single status deal.

Socialist Party members working for Coventry Council

This rotten proposal claims to help the low paid but does it by robbing
the pay packets of those slightly better off by between £1,700 and
£8,000.

The campaign to oppose the deal has united all levels of council staff
from bin men to benefit staff, from street cleaners to senior secretaries
– it is the revolt of the boots and the suits.

UNISON members voted 3-1 against the deal 1,307 votes against 419. GMB/Apex
members voted 61% against 42.6% for. Only in the TGWU was the vote
narrower with 53.5% against and 46.2% for. The turnout was highest amongst
UNISON members at 63.7%, GMB/Apex 57% and TGWU 61.4%.

New Labour’s deal

The TGWU is the union whose leadership are closest to New Labour. New
Labour are the real owners of this deal despite the council being Tory.

The majority of the gainers from the deal are also probably in this
union.

Any future campaign must clearly argue for the preservation of the
gains for the lowest paid but not at the expense of other staff.

Across the board the proposal has been decisively rejected. This is no
small thanks to Socialist Party members who distributed nearly 2,000
bulletins across the council workforce clearly calling for a ‘no’ vote.

Our two Socialist councillors have been the only ones to publicly come
out in opposition to the proposal.

In stark contrast, the New Labour "opposition" have been
silent. As one Tory councillor said to a Socialist Party member, they were
probably "crapping themselves" at the thought of the Tories
exposing the fact that this was New Labour’s deal.

Union leaders

The union leaders have not been much better. At no point have they
called for decisive rejection of the deal. Some even argued: "This is
the best we could get" even though many of their members stood to
have their pay cut by £2,000 or more a year.

UNISON’s leader Dave Prentis said it would not be: "Heads down and
gobs shut for Labour" but council workers in our city could have done
with a few local union leaders’ gobs being wide open and shouting for a
decisive ‘no’ vote.

Both the council’s chief executive and the union leadership are busy
putting the ball in each others respective courts.

But after such an overwhelming rejection the union leaders should be
asking their members how they want their ball played. We urge that special
general meetings be convened by all the unions to decide the next step.

The Tory council leader appears to have taken a step back from his
deputy’s comments implying that the deal would be imposed. Any attempt to
impose the deal would be met by massive anger and not just in the council
workforce.

Job losses

Countless people in the city are looking at job losses at Jaguar and
creeping low pay in the city.

The threat of industrial action against any imposition could have a
huge echo, not least because it is happening at the same time as benefit
office staff and other low-paid civil servants are taking action to defend
their jobs.

Dave Nellist and Karen McKay – the city’s two Socialist Party
councillors, will be moving a motion calling for no losers in any deal at
the 2 November council meeting. There are increasing signs of dissent
amongst New Labour’s own ranks. Two councillors left the party a week ago.

A united campaign across Coventry, linking those fighting for public
services with the campaign against the Jaguar closure and the "McDonaldisation"
of pay in the city is a potent possibility.


Public Meeting:

Defend Public Sector Pay and Jobs

Thursday 11 November, 7.30pm, Albany Pub, Albany Road, Earlsdon.

Come to the meeting to discuss a strategy to fight back.