The Socialist

The Socialist 17 November 2005

Time for a new workers' party

Time for a new workers' party

Socialism 2005: Building a socialist alternative

"Looking forward to changing the world"

Campaign for a new workers' party

Northumbria socialist students rock against racism

Selection and 'free market' threaten our schools

We want our buses back!

Reinstate Andy Beadle

Eighth strike for £8 an hour

SACKED for speaking out

PCS launches jobs campaign

Angry Commons cleaners fight back

A struggle for survival

Bush regime in crisis

 
 

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Coventry:

PCS launches jobs campaign

OVER 100 PCS members marched through the centre of Coventry on 12 November, against government plans to cut hundreds of jobs from regional Jobcentres and 550 jobs from the offices of the Learning and Skills Council in the city.

A Coventry Socialist Party member

They were joined by dozens more local trades unionists, many of whom had worked at famous employers Jaguar, Marconi, and Peugeot - all of whom had declared redundancies in the recent past.

And to rub salt into the wound, the night before the march the local NHS hospital announced 250 redundancies!

Speakers at the rally condemned the haemorrhage of jobs from Coventry and had sharp words for the government's role - inaction over manufacturing job losses, and direct responsibility for public sector job cuts.

Main speaker, Mark Serwotka, PCS general secretary, lamented the lack of choice his members had faced at the general election, when: "Tories wanted 235,000 public service job cuts, Labour wanted 104,000, and the Liberal Democrats wanted targeted, compassionate job cuts" (!)

To those who, like a local TGWU speaker, wanted greater union engagement with the Labour Party, Mark responded: "My union hasn't given a penny to the Labour Party, and while I'm general secretary, we never will". His members clapped and cheered him.

The other main speaker, Councillor Dave Nellist of the Socialist Party, argued for an independent political voice for working people and further joint trade union action against job cuts. He called for a meeting for reps and shop stewards in the New Year. This should consider the changing economy of Coventry, including the sharp fall in recent years in manufacturing jobs and the Gershon-inspired cuts in the public sector, and to discuss a joint union response. The initiative was backed by a regional PCS speaker, and by Mark Serwotka.

The union co-ordinating committee which had planned the march and rally will meet again shortly to discuss further action.

For further details of PCS campaigns in Coventry contact Ian Devoy, PCS, [email protected]


DWP strike ballot

OVER 90,000 civil service union PCS members in the Department for Work and Pensions are being balloted as part of the union's campaign against attacks on jobs, services and rights resulting from the so-called "modernisation" programme.

The ballot is due to begin at the start of December. If no settlement is reached the action will begin with a two-day group-wide strike, discontinuous action and an overtime ban.


In this issue

Time for a new workers' party

Socialism 2005: Building a socialist alternative

"Looking forward to changing the world"

Campaign for a new workers' party

Northumbria socialist students rock against racism

Selection and 'free market' threaten our schools

We want our buses back!

Reinstate Andy Beadle

Eighth strike for £8 an hour

SACKED for speaking out

PCS launches jobs campaign

Angry Commons cleaners fight back

A struggle for survival

Bush regime in crisis


 

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