Hundreds join Manc RMT picket line in solidarity after far right attack

Socialist Party members join other trade unionists and supporters at the RMT picket line 12 January 2019, photo Jackie Grunsell

Socialist Party members join other trade unionists and supporters at the RMT picket line 12 January 2019, photo Jackie Grunsell   (Click to enlarge: opens in new window)

Jackie Grunsell Manchester and Trafford Socialist Party

On their 44th day of strike action RMT members were joined outside Manchester Victoria Station on 12 January by hundreds of other trade unionists and supporters in solidarity with the strike to keep guards on trains.

This followed the recent attack on pickets by a far-right group accusing the RMT of unlawful action and singling out a Sikh picketer for particularly disgusting abuse.

Overwhelming support

Steve Notts, national executive committee member for Manchester and North West RMT, said: “We are overwhelmed by the trade union turnout in support. This is a dispute not over money, but the safety of the travelling public.

“The strike has been rock solid and the union has actually gained members as a result of the dispute. We have also maintained the support of the public throughout the strike.”

The strikers are calling for keeping guards on trains while Arriva Rail North are still refusing talks with the union, intent on putting profits before safety.

Tory transport secretary Chris Grayling has disgracefully failed to force the company to the table in a thinly veiled attempt to break the union.

Michelle Rodgers, newly elected RMT president, called for this level of solidarity to be maintained in the coming weeks. She pointed out that the working class need to unite to get rid of the Tories.

Socialist Party members have supported the strike for the past year and will continue to mobilise support for the picket lines. We sold 18 copies of the Socialist on the picket line in Hull.

We call for the trade union movement as a whole to lead a fight against the far right but also for all unions to take action against the austerity, cuts and privatisation of public services which leads to the growth in support for these groups.

Needless to say, despite their threats, the far right failed to show their faces on the day, showing what can be achieved when we fight back.