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Home   |   The Socialist 12 May 2009   |   Join the Socialist Party

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Fight all job cuts

Industrial action to stop bosses' attacks

Four million jobless by 2012. That's the stark prediction for the current 'free-market' recession by a group of former Bank of England economists. Rather than Gordon Brown's boast that 'Britain is well placed to weather the economic storm', research by the European Union said that almost a third of all jobs lost in Europe in the first three months of this year were lost in Britain.

Dave Nellist, who is standing as a candidate for the No2EU - Yes to Democracy list in the Euro elections, took only the average workers

Dave Nellist, who is standing as a candidate for the No2EU - Yes to Democracy list in the Euro elections, took only the average workers, photo Coventry Socialist Party

Dave Nellist, Socialist Party councillor, Coventry

Tens of thousands of jobs continue to go in car manufacturing, retail, finance and machinery manufacturing. But statistics only tell half the story. Each one of those figures is a family, fearing for paying the mortgage or the rent, weighing up whether a holiday can be afforded this year or not.

While MPs are caught lining their pockets with 'creative' expense claims, hundreds of thousands of families face the threat of redundancy with all the financial pain that will involve. MPs insulated by salaries two and a half times the average wage and with over-generous expenses on top, seem to care little for the anguish of working-class families. They appear to spend more time maximising their expenses claims than saving their constituents from penury.

Some economists claim the worst of the recession may be over, even believing they are seeing the first 'green shoots'. But the European Commission has just changed its view of only three months ago and doubled - to 4% - the amount by which it expects the EU's economy to shrink this year. That will make this recession the worst of our lifetimes. And such an economic tsunami will have political and social costs, such as increasing support for the far right, unless working people find a new political vehicle and voice.

Demonstrations such as that of Unite, on 16 May in Birmingham, are essential to bring together all those who want to fight the spectre of unemployment. But if they are to be more than the grand old Duke of York marching his men to the top of the hill and down again, we need a more serious resistance to rising unemployment.

Unfortunately that is unlikely to come from the Birmingham rally's platform of 'senior business, academic and political figures', nor from appeals to companies' better nature.

600 sacked Visteon workers in Basildon, Enfield and Belfast showed the degree of determination which trade union leaders should encourage and support in all their members.

Given six minutes notice of redundancy, Visteon workers occupied their factories and picketed outside them until their managements conceded a substantial financial package. But too many trade union leaders, mesmerised by anti-trade union laws still in place after 12 years of Labour government, limit their action to 'urging' companies to protect jobs, or calling for government subsidies for short time working and 'measures to restore confidence'.

New Labour has found hundreds of billions of pounds for the banks, to shore up the free market economy to which they are wedded.

Demonstrations like Birmingham's need building upon to force the government to take urgent action to stop the haemorrhage of jobs. Rather than wider programmes of taxpayers' money being used to subsidise private companies, threats to sack workers or close factories should be met by the government taking the relevant companies into public ownership and then investing public money into them, but under public control, to guarantee jobs and living conditions.

Perhaps if the Visteon convenors, or the Lindsey refinery strike leaders, were on the demonstration platform instead of ex-CBI leaders - that's the message we would get!


In this issue

Fight all job cuts


Thieving MPs

MPs live it up at our expense !


Socialist Party editorial

Sweep away the thieves and their system


Socialist Party news and analysis

Renationalise the railways

Sri Lanka's killing zone

Corus jobs slaughter - fight the closure

News in brief


Linamar and Visteon

Linamar sack Swansea trade union leader

A victory at Linamar would be a victory for all workers

Visteon workers discuss socialism


Socialist Party election campaign

No2EU - Yes to Democracy campaign news

No to the EU gravy train


Youth fight for jobs

Youth Fight for Jobs Launch conference


International socialist news and analysis

Gaza: the nightmare continues

Imperialism sucked deeper into Afghan quagmire


Socialist Party workplace news

Defending jobs and conditions at the Olympics site

Defending jobs and conditions at Fiddlers Ferry

Wales TUC: For trade union democracy and for trade union rights!

Socialist methods tested

Workplace news in brief

PCS conference: A fighting union that defends its members

NSSN - fight the bosses' offensive

NSSN Conference: Saturday 27 June


Marxist analysis: history

Defeating the poll tax


Education

Save our schools Weston Favell, Northampton

Lewisham Bridge primary school

Threat of academies


 

Home   |   The Socialist 12 May 2009   |   Join the Socialist Party

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Related links:

Jobs:

Youth Fight for Jobs national demonstration

1 million unemployed young people: Demonstrate this saturday!

Youth Fight For Jobs - Young People Fighting For a Future

Fighting for a future

Youth march for jobs

Visteon:

Ex Ford/Visteon pensioners protest in Swansea

Swansea Socialist Party meeting

New pamphlet: Lindsey, Visteon, Linamar - lessons from the disputes of Spring 2009

Birmingham:

Postal strike reports: Defending the service

Anti-fascist demo in Birmingham

Recession:

Darling you're talking rubbish!

Capitalist market prescribes diet of cuts