Unity! TUC 2006 Tuesday

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unity Tuesday 12 September 2006

Communist Party TUC daily

French trade unions have no limitations on their freedom to take any form of strike action.

‘Sack workers in Britain: it’s cheaper’ John Foster

John Foster is a member of the Communist Party’s economic committee. He was a contri b u t o r to the Red Paper on Scotland 1975 edited by Gordon Brow n

S

o said the president of General Motors Euro p e announcing job losses at E l l e s m e re Port this May. The previous month Gordon Brown published his ‘Case for Open Markets’ holding up Britain’s flexible labour market as a model for E u rope. He called for the

r i g o rous enforcement of the framework for labour market re f o rmset out in the EU’s Lisbon agenda in 2000: ‘The EU needs a process in which all sectors which fail to liberalise and open up to competition are subject to independent investigation and e n f o rcement free from

national political interf e re n c e . ’ What the EU re q u i red to stimulate its economic growth and competitiveness, said Mr B rown, was ‘structural reform to strengthen labour market flexibility rather than re v e rting to protectionism and s u p p o rt for declining industries’. continued overleaf

Repealing the anti-union laws is only a first step C a r o lyn Jones The repeal of anti trade union l aws has been the agreed policy of the TUC for some years. It’s telling therefore that this year, the FBU feels it’s necessary to call on the General Council to l o bby the gove rnment to ensure that no further anti-trade union laws are placed before Parliament.Their amendment is based on experiences during the firefighters dispute. And the FBU are not alone in feeling the hard hand of government and

the courts when in dispute.The fact that hostile laws are still being introduced reminds us that repealing the anti union l aws is only a first step.Turning the tide aw ay from anti union rhetoric and recognising the role unions play in the wo rkplace, the economy and the wo rld is a much bigger step. That is why the RMT motion on the Trade Union Freedom Bill together with the positive amendments from FBU, POA and ASLEF are so welcome. It reiterates the call for repeal and

updates us on the successful campaign over the last year. It also suggests how to maintain the momentum by taking the campaign into Parliament, into unions and into workplaces.The TUFB shouldn’t be seen as a one year wo n d e r. It is a matter of principle. Many of the issues covered by motions on the TUC agenda – from effective organisation and wo rkplace democracy to the use of agency worke rs and migrant labour - depend on free and effective trade unions.

We should learn from our past. In the eight years after the introduction of the Trade Disputes Act in 1906, trade union membership doubled ( m a i n ly amongst women and low paid workers). By 1920 it had doubled again. One hundred years on, wo rkers and unions need the freedom to operate enshrined in i n t e rnational laws and envisaged in the proposed Trade Union Freedom Bill. Carolyn Jones is director of the Institute of Employment Rights


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