Construction workers plan more action


After a mass picket at Staythorpe power station contruction workers marched into Newark town centre, photo Steve Score

After a mass picket at Staythorpe power station contruction workers marched into Newark town centre, photo Steve Score

After another mass picket outside Staythorpe power station on 24 February to protest against the exclusion by Alstom of UK labour from jobs on the site, 3-400 construction workers marched into nearby Newark town centre demanding “What do we want? Jobs!”

Alistair Tice

At the rally, Unite union joint general secretary Derek Simpson said that cheap foreign labour was an attack on the national agreement. But when challenged from the floor: “What are you going to do about it?” he rounded on the hecklers calling them BNP and “tossers”. He then used increasingly nationalist rhetoric before prematurely stepping down from the rostrum.

It’s correct for Derek Simpson to say that: “It is a class issue, not a race issue”. But if he then appears in the Daily Star with the British Jobs for British Workers slogan, and fails to lead action to achieve workers’ demands, then scapegoating of foreign workers can grow. Disturbingly, a small minority of workers at the front of the march had chanted “Foreigners out!”

The Socialist Party showed how such nationalist moods can be countered during the Lindsey Oil Refinery (LOR) strike and has produced leaflets saying: “Our fight is not against foreign workers, it is with the bosses, the government and EU laws”, and placards with slogans like “Stop the race to the bottom”, “Don’t let the bosses divide us”, and “Workers of the world unite”, for the Staythorpe/Newark protests.

It highlights the importance of the national dispute adopting a clear set of class demands, such as those adopted at the LOR strike mass meeting, and the need to campaign for them amongst the membership and promote them in the media.

After a mass picket at Staythorpe power station contruction workers marched into Newark town centre, photo Steve Score

After a mass picket at Staythorpe power station contruction workers marched into Newark town centre, photo Steve Score

It was left to Jerry Hicks, left candidate in the current Unite/Amicus general secretary election, speaking through a megaphone after the official rally had been closed, to capture the mood of most construction workers present. He said that: “Five day’s strike action at LOR achieved more than the union in five months”. He could have said five years! And regarding the threat of sequestration of union funds, he said that whilst he would fight that: “What would we lose? The officials’ cars, offices and £100K salaries?”

Increasingly, the mood amongst construction workers is that if the officials can’t or won’t organise action, then we’ll have to.

Shop stewards’ meetings took place after the Newark rally and in Sheffield on 28 February to formulate proposals to be put to the NAECI [the national agreement the bosses are trying to undermine] stewards’ forum in Eastbourne on 9-10 March. These called for a midweek march on parliament and Alstom’s HQ in London, to be supported by delegations from every site in the country. That could be the beginning of action that could achieve victory.