PCS union conference stripped of powers by NEC

PCS members on strike, photo Paul Mattsson

PCS members on strike, photo Paul Mattsson   (Click to enlarge: opens in new window)

Dave Semple, PCS national executive committee member (personal capacity)

At a scheduled meeting on 10 December, the national executive committee (NEC) of the Public and Commercial Services (PCS) union, which covers civil servants and those on private sector government contracts, decided to remove key powers from the union’s Annual Delegate Conference for 2021. Strenuous objections from Socialist Party and Broad Left Network (BLN) supporters on the NEC were ignored.

Where is member control?

General Secretary Mark Serwotka and the ‘Left Unity’ majority on the NEC proposed that branches lose the ability to decide the subjects and running order of the conference. This will pass control of the conference to the NEC and the National Standing Orders Committee (NSOC). Branches will also be restricted in terms of the motions they put forward. Each branch will be allowed four motions; three will have to be on subjects predetermined by the NEC and the fourth can be on anything – but making it on to the agenda will now be down to NSOC.

Previously, all decisions by the NSOC had to be ratified by conference itself, and branches had the right to dispute with the NSOC. This is now gone, opening the door for a stage-managed conference led by Left Unity majorities on the NEC and NSOC.

Key issues face the union, including on the unfolding Tory Brexit disaster and the union’s attitude to the Labour Party. On both of these questions, the NEC flatly broke conference policy, backing a second European Union referendum at the TUC in 2019, and indiscriminately backing Labour MPs at the general election in 2019, including those leading the charge against policies we support.

The result has been the total wreckage of the union’s political strategy. In ordinary times, conference might very well wish to correct and criticise the NEC for disregarding conference policy.

Mark Serwotka, who likes to pose as a champion of equality, was left scrabbling to reassure NEC members who asked why equality issues weren’t listed as part of the three key issues he suggested for the NEC-determined sessions. Serwotka wanted these sessions to be on pay, Covid-19, and his strategy for the future of the union.

A recent finance paper to the NEC has shown that, with a modest increase in the recruitment of members – in a civil service that has grown by tens of thousands of new jobs, not an insurmountable task, if the union is doing the basics – the future of the union would be secured. This can only add to the feeling amongst reps that, at a time when PCS is trying to build a national campaign on pay and to defend members’ health and safety at work, Serwotka’s threat of voluntary redundancies for PCS staff, and huge structural changes for the union’s branches and groups, is just bizarre.

Significant union resources have been dedicated to producing reams of documents ‘proving’ the need for changes in the union (they do no such thing) and addressing consultation meetings across the union about the two alternatives Serwotka is trying to foist on reps – merger or restructuring – at a time when Chancellor Rishi Sunak has announced a pay freeze for 2021.

Meanwhile, the union’s national pay campaign for the last six months has been a petition on Parliament’s website, to try and trigger a debate in the House of Commons. When confronted at the NEC with the reality that a petition on its own was going to do absolutely nothing, the Left Unity majority responded in outraged tones that building for the petition would help union organising.

Reality

The reality? Of 104,000 signatures at the time of writing, the union knows that 20% of these were union members and has no idea about the other 80%. This means there’s little usable data to tell us where the union’s organisation is weak, even from such a task as getting a petition signed.

Socialist Party members on the NEC have from the beginning pushed for a robust strategy on pay, for a serious response to Covid-19 that mobilised the weight of those members still stuck in offices, and have flatly opposed inroads into the democracy of the Annual Delegate Conference. Inside the PCS, we participate in the Broad Left Network with activists and reps who seek to build a fighting, democratic union, and we call on all those with similar aims to attend the BLN conference on 16 January, on Zoom.