
The Socialist 1 June 2011
Strike - to defend jobs and pensions

Glencore - Profiting from global hunger
New attacks on women's sexual and reproductive rights
Disabled protester - "inadvertently struck with a police baton"
Shoesmith sacking - social work under growing pressure
Egypt and Tunisia: Revolutions at the crossroads
Greece: unite the struggles and bring down the government
Strike - to defend jobs and pensions
Government plans for the NHS: Privatisation and world class profits!
"Frontline first" a dangerous tactic - unity is the key
Cardiff NHS protest against Topshop tax dodger
Demonstration against closure of day centre in Llandeilo
Southampton - council workers' strike spreads
Saltend construction workers' struggle ends
Lewisham teachers - Action threat spells victory
Newcastle East Coast rail call centre - Save jobs!
18 years since Stephen Lawrence murder
Coventry action against academies grows
Yorkshire meetings make Jarrow plans
Lib Dems - a party rooted in capitalism
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Link to this page: https://www.socialistparty.org.uk/issue/673/12133
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"Frontline first" a dangerous tactic - unity is the key
by a medical secretary
The Conservatives have pledged to protect "frontline" NHS services and cut back on bureaucracy. In reality, this is another broken promise. They have no intention of saving even frontline staff. It is important that trade unions should unite health workers against their plans, not seek to divide them.
The nursing union, the RCN, has a national campaign called "frontline first". While it has every right to fight for its own members, their approach plays into the government's agenda that some cuts are necessary, and divides healthworkers against each other.
I have seen admin staff in Unison wearing badges saying "I am frontline", making the point that we are just as important to the running of the NHS, enabling nurses and doctors to do their jobs efficiently.
The RCN website talks of speaking out against NHS cuts that are harming patient care, but also exposing where there is waste in the system. In reality, the NHS has long been under-funded. The Trust I work for has had vacancy freezes, so that gradually less and less staff are under more pressure to do the same job, resulting in a rise in stress and sickness.
The way to win a campaign is to give workers the confidence that if they take action then these cuts can be beaten. As part of the Trade Unionist and Socialist Coalition (TUSC) Socialist Party members attempted to do this, by standing in elections on a no-cuts platform.
Unison and the RCN should be balloting for strike action, in unity with the teaching unions and civil service union PCS, who are taking action to protect their pensions on 30 June. That way we could show the government the unity of public sector workers and that we are determined to resist any attacks on our terms and conditions.
The inefficiencies in the NHS come from the privatisation that has already happened under Labour and the Tories. In 1979, admin costs were only 6%. The introduction of the "internal market" by the Tories doubled this to 12% and with Labour's foundation trusts, this has risen to nearer 20%.
In preparation for my hospital becoming a Foundation Trust, we will have to record every contact with a patient, even if it is just a phone conversation. This is only because the hospital will then be charged per contact, as if it was a business. The real source of inefficiency is the private market.
The Socialist Party would reverse the privatisation of the NHS and place our public services under truly democratic workers' control. We would get rid of genuine inefficiencies - pharmaceutical companies overcharging for drugs, expensive PFI schemes and allow NHS hospitals to cooperate with each other and share best practice, rather than have to compete with each other for patients.
The NHS brought free health care to millions for the first time when it was introduced, but 60 years later these gains are being taken away from us, as multinationals move in for the kill. We need to fight for a socialist society, so that we can win a genuinely public NHS now and for future generations.
In this issue
Socialist Party news and analysis
Glencore - Profiting from global hunger
New attacks on women's sexual and reproductive rights
Disabled protester - "inadvertently struck with a police baton"
Shoesmith sacking - social work under growing pressure
International socialist news and analysis
Egypt and Tunisia: Revolutions at the crossroads
Greece: unite the struggles and bring down the government
National Shop Stewards Network
Strike - to defend jobs and pensions
Socialist Party NHS campaigning
Government plans for the NHS: Privatisation and world class profits!
"Frontline first" a dangerous tactic - unity is the key
Cardiff NHS protest against Topshop tax dodger
Demonstration against closure of day centre in Llandeilo
Socialist Party workplace news
Southampton - council workers' strike spreads
Saltend construction workers' struggle ends
Lewisham teachers - Action threat spells victory
Newcastle East Coast rail call centre - Save jobs!
Socialist history
18 years since Stephen Lawrence murder
Youth fight for jobs and education
Coventry action against academies grows
Yorkshire meetings make Jarrow plans
Socialist Party feature
Lib Dems - a party rooted in capitalism
Related links:
NHS Emergency - Fight for a fully funded, publicly owned, socialist NHS
Fully resource the vaccination programme now
NHS pandemic warnings ignored - renationalise our NHS
Dispatches from the front - health workers speak out
Protect the NHS - Funding, Pay, PPE, Public ownership
Londoners suffer and Khan piles on pressure
Nottingham City Council: Major battles against cuts ahead
Swansea & West Wales: Join the fightback in 2021 against Tory cuts and new austerity
Northern Ireland: Thousands of nurses continue to strike for better pay
NHS workers angry at reality of mis-sold 'pay rise'
Unison get sec election shows left can win NEC
Our health and livelihoods before their profits