The Socialist 17 January 2018
Cuts cause NHS crisis

Carillion crisis: demand action to save jobs and services
NHS crisis: under pressure from all angles - end cuts and sell-offs!
Victory! Trump's UK visit cancelled by fear of protests
Corbyn's Labour needs 100% anti-cuts strategy and fight for democracy
Tunisia: explosion of protests against government austerity
Stop repression in Hong Kong and China
RMT strikes against driver-only operation continue
Mini-strike wave continues and intensifies
Hackney school cleaners strike
PCS union 2018 elections - nominate the left slate for a continued fighting leadership
We must fight all council cuts!
No to the Woolwich monster block
Undercover policing legal challenge
Heating scandal on east London estate
Lobby pushes Liverpool council to oppose privatisation
Packed Newham meeting against academies
Socialist Party women's meeting brings together members to share experiences
Southern Socialist Party conference
Opinion: foster care is work - carers deserve workers' rights
Opinion: British imperialism can take no credit in fight against Isis
Theatre: 'Young Marx' shows growth in great platform for his ideas
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Carillion crisis shows chaos of privatisation
Demand action to save jobs and services
Rob Williams, Socialist Party industrial organiser
Tens of thousands of Carillion employees will have gone to work this morning wondering what will happen to their jobs and pensions after the company announced that it is going into liquidation.
The future of the workers must be the priority. No worker should lose their job or pension.
However, no doubt the Tory government will be more interested in trying to avoid being implicated in yet another scandal.
The biggest disgrace is that Carillion, like many others, has profited for so long from privatised and outsourced public service contracts under successive Tory, New Labour and Con-Dem governments.
Carillion has been handed extensive contracts for providing public services in prisons, hospitals, schools, military sites, libraries and major construction projects (including building Royal Liverpool Hospital and Midland Metropolitan Hospital in Sandwell - both presently well behind schedule).
Even the arch-Thatcherite newspaper City AM warned that these deals "imperil public faith in business and the very principles of a market-led economy."
Apparently, Carillion is building the new HQ in Birmingham city centre of PricewaterhouseCoopers, the accountancy firm which is overseeing the administration of Carillion!
The Times quotes former New Labour transport secretary Lord Adonis, who resigned last month as the head of the National Infrastructure Commission.
He is now correctly asking why Carillion was seemingly buoyed up by the Tories who awarded the company a further £2 billion worth of contracts (on top of the eye-watering £16 billion it already had) long after its financial problems emerged.
But the Blairites in office were part and parcel of this neoliberal privatisation offensive which enriched companies like Carillion and put them at the heart of public services such as the NHS.
The effect on those who worked in these services and the public has been devastating, as profits are made at our expense.
- Carillion - a multinational based in Wolverhampton - employs around 50,000 workers worldwide, nearly 20,000 of them in the UK.
- The Tory government paid Carillion £1.7 billion in 2016 - a third of the company's income.
- When Carillion went into financial loss last year, its chief executive Richard Howson resigned - with his £688,000 a year pay and benefits package being paid to him for a year after he left. The present interim CEO, Keith Cochrane, has been on a salary of £750,000.
Bring all contracts back in house!
Carillion has been part of the 'race to the bottom,' including in construction, where it was forced to admit its role in blacklisting after the heroic campaign by victimised workers.
In 2012-13, 200 outsourced workers employed by Carillion at the Great Western Hospital in Swindon took strike action against job losses and pay cuts.
The Financial Times reports that the opening of the Royal Liverpool Hospital has been delayed because of construction faults such as cracks in the concrete beams.
These parasitic companies can't regulate themselves. This scandal must be the signal for this policy to be reversed. There must be no bailouts or compensation for the fat cats.
We support the call of Mick Cash, the general secretary of the transport union RMT: "The infrastructure and support works must be immediately taken in house with the workforce protected."
In London the RMT has called on London mayor Sadiq Khan "to take immediate measures to bring Carillion's London rail contract work into direct public ownership through Transport for London with guaranteed protection for the workforce, their jobs, pay, conditions and their pensions."
This must be applied to all outsourced workers in the public sector.
Labour's shadow business secretary Rebecca Long-Bailey is quoted as also calling for Carillion's workers to be taken back in house, which is to be welcomed.
And this is the perfect opportunity for Jeremy Corbyn to reiterate his general election commitment to renationalise the railways, which would include bringing cleaners and other outsourced workers back in house. Corbyn should also call for Carillion's accounts to be opened and scrutinised by the workforce and the unions. The company should be taken into public ownership with compensation paid only on the basis of proven need.
He should also use this scandal to put himself and the trade unions at the head of the 3 February demonstration against the winter crisis in the NHS, called by Health Campaigns Together and the People's Assembly.
Labour and the unions should immediately pledge to finance trains and buses from every area to come to London for a mass mobilisation to force out the Tories who, along with their big business friends, are destroying the NHS and our public services.
This version of this article was first posted on the Socialist Party website on 15 January 2018 and may vary slightly from the version subsequently printed in The Socialist.
In this issue
Socialist Party news and analysis
Carillion crisis: demand action to save jobs and services
NHS crisis: under pressure from all angles - end cuts and sell-offs!
Victory! Trump's UK visit cancelled by fear of protests
What we think
Corbyn's Labour needs 100% anti-cuts strategy and fight for democracy
International socialist news and analysis
Tunisia: explosion of protests against government austerity
Stop repression in Hong Kong and China
Workplace news and analysis
RMT strikes against driver-only operation continue
Mini-strike wave continues and intensifies
Hackney school cleaners strike
PCS union 2018 elections - nominate the left slate for a continued fighting leadership
Socialist Party reports and campaigns
We must fight all council cuts!
No to the Woolwich monster block
Undercover policing legal challenge
Heating scandal on east London estate
Lobby pushes Liverpool council to oppose privatisation
Packed Newham meeting against academies
Socialist Party women's meeting brings together members to share experiences
Southern Socialist Party conference
Opinion
Opinion: foster care is work - carers deserve workers' rights
Opinion: British imperialism can take no credit in fight against Isis
Theatre: 'Young Marx' shows growth in great platform for his ideas
Home | The Socialist 17 January 2018 | Join the Socialist Party
Related links:
Capitalism fails NHS services in Liverpool: scrap PFI!
Weak Tories must go. General election now!
Tories ensured Carillion meltdown went unchecked
The murky world of the 'Big Four' accountancy firms
Haringey: Hands off our GP practices
Social care: End privatisation and let workers decide how it's run
NHS white paper: no solution to failed Tory policies
United action needed to defeat fire and rehire
Norwich City Council workers vote for strike action over broken promises on pay and conditions
Starmer moves against Unite - No to the attack on Beckett
Bobby Sands - Nothing but an Unfinished Song
Cumberland hospital workers fight for stolen pay
Tories keep bailing out bosses, while piling pain on workers and public services
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