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Home   |   The Socialist 10 June 2009   |   Join the Socialist Party

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CWU conference backs Youth Fight for Jobs campaign

THE COMMUNICATION Workers Union (CWU) conference is meeting with its members facing huge threats of mass job losses, pension cuts and post office privatisation. Many of these issues will come up at industrial group conferences later this week.

Dave Griffiths

Conference voted congratulations to the unofficial strike of Lindsey Oil Refinery workers. Peter Keenlyside, supporting for the NEC, asked: "What happened to the workers for their illegal action? Nothing". Pointing out they achieved in days what had taken CWU members years not to achieve, and given the threat communication workers faced, he added there are lessons we should learn from that.

A resolution claiming that a recession is "better managed by a Labour government" and a resolution opposing Tory public expenditure cuts whose mover claimed that a Labour government is '100 times better than a Tory one' went by virtually without opposition.

Leadership opposition

But conference clearly felt the union leadership went too far when they tried to oppose a motion calling for CWU support for the Youth Fight for Jobs (YFJ) campaign. Kyly Wilson, Coventry branch, moving support, explained the campaign's demands of real apprenticeships and training, an £8 an hour minimum wage and opposition to university tuition fees.

She explained that because youth are the most vulnerable to job cuts, are often not unionised and rarely know their rights, the trade union movement has to do something and YFJ has started on this.

Earlier the deputy general secretary of telecoms had argued it is 'unrealistic' to call for nationalisation of the telecom industry. CWU general secretary Billy Hayes came forward to oppose support for YFJ, again arguing its demands are 'unrealistic'.

As the debate moved on, conference swung away from the executive and for a much more combative position and overwhelmingly supported the proposal.

Immediately after this debate, conference gave sacked Linamar convenor Rob Williams a warm welcome. Rob praised the CWU for support and his members for defending him when management tried to throw him out of the factory and police were called in to remove him.

Bosses' law

Management broke the law in sacking him. So, it is illegal for trade union members to take action to defend him and legal for management to sack him illegally. Rob pointed out, to sustained applause, that after "twelve years of a Labour government, sometimes with a parliamentary majority of 150, it is still legal for employers to act in this way".

Following government attacks on postal workers in their dispute and the threat of privatisation, 2008 conference threatened to ballot over the CWU's continued link to Labour. Some hope that postal privatisation will not go through parliament but patience is running out with the Labour government and Labour MPs who fail to back the CWU.

Billy Hayes assured conference: "We won't support people who don't support us. We will carry out last year's policy. Anyone who hasn't signed our EDM (opposing privatisation), we won't help. There's something wrong, rotten, with the policies the government has enacted. The trade unions built the Labour movement. When you stop supporting labour values, we stop supporting you."


In this issue

Step up the fight for a new workers' party

A socialist MEP Joe Higgins elected in Ireland

'The best fighter that money can't buy'

STOP PRESS: BNP feel the anger

Youth Fight against Racism


Socialist Party election campaign analysis

No2EU: a step towards a workers' political voice


Socialist Party workplace news

Reinstate Rob Williams now! Support Linamar strikers

London Underground: Solidarity with strike over jobs and pay

Glasgow council street cleaners start workers' fightback

Bristol bins strike threat brings new conditions offer

Unison NEC elections bring gains for Socialist Party

Another DWP minister resigns

Engineering construction workers ballot: End 'race to the bottom'

Come to NSSN conference

News in brief


Socialist Party publication

The Masses Arise: The French revolution and today's struggles


International socialist news and analysis

European parliament elections 2009: Europe on the edge

General strike in Basque country

Brazil: "Liberty, Socialism and Revolution" is born


Youth fight for jobs

CWU conference backs Youth Fight for Jobs campaign

No to cuts at Kings

Liverpool Community College strike


 

Home   |   The Socialist 10 June 2009   |   Join the Socialist Party

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Related links:

CWU:

Postal workers force management back

Time to plan for all-out postal strike

Reports from the postal workers' picket lines

Support postal workers

Postal strike reports: Defending the service

Youth:

Youth Fight for Jobs national demonstration

Fighting for a future

Youth march for jobs

Jobs:

Youth Fight For Jobs - Young People Fighting For a Future

Young people

Labour:

Labour pushes nuclear plants

Glasgow North East by-election: Mass abstentions in Labour's 'surprise win'

Privatisation:

Another stepping stone towards health privatisation

National Express goes off the rails

YFJ:

Big business fights for fees: Students must fight back