|
WSWS : News
& Analysis : Europe
: Britain
Britain: government threatens anti-strike laws following fuel
tax protests
By Chris Marsden
21 September 2000
Use
this version to print
Britain's Labour government is proposing legislation to effectively
illegalise strike action in broad sectors of the economy, following
fuel tax protests by road-hauliers and farmers last week.
For almost a week, tanker drivers who normally deliver supplies
of petrol, diesel and heating oil refused to take their lorries
out of the depots and refineries past the protesters. Within days,
over 90 percent of Britain's filling stations had run dry and
the blockade threatened to bring large parts of industry and the
public service to a halt.
The government's Fuel Task Forcemade up of ministers,
oil company executives and the policewas asked to consider
legislation to be introduced after the Queen's Speech in November
opening the next session of parliament, making oil tanker supplies
an "essential service". Similar legislation already
covers water, gas and electricity supplies.
An Essential Services Act could be passed to make it a criminal
offence to refuse to deliver fuel. The move would seriously undermine
the democratic rights of broad layers of working people. The emergency
law is expected to bring changes in the way that tanker drivers
are hired, forcing them to accept an obligation to deliver fuel
in the face of protests. The legislation would outlaw any strike
action they took.
The deregulation of Britain's transport sector has led to a
significant growth of self-employed owner-drivers, who are sub-contracted
to the major haulage companies. It would be difficult to draft
a law that would apply to this group, but the proposals seek to
offset this by empowering the government to commandeer tankers
and by training hundreds of additional soldiers to act as a strikebreaking
force.
Oil companies will have a legal duty to maintain suppliesa
move prompted by suspicions regarding their collusion with the
hauliers and farmers in paralysing Britain's oil and petrol supply
network due to their sympathy with demands for cuts in taxation.
The broadening of what constitutes an essential service under
emergency powers legislation to include fuel sets a precedent
for its extension throughout the public sector. Many other goods
and services could henceforth be defined as essentialfrom
foodstuffs to the health and education servicesand a ban
on industrial action imposed.
A further indication of how the government has responded to
the fuel-tax protests by trampling on workers' rights was its
decision last week to abandon European safety legislation covering
driving hours. This allows lorry drivers to stay at the wheel
seven days a week, 10 hours a day for up to 70 hours a week for
the next month. The rule change was meant to cover petrol tankers
and lorries delivering foodstuffs but applies to all haulage firms,
including companies delivering chemicals. One in five road deaths
are due to driver fatigue, with an estimated 1,000 deaths a year
caused by lorry drivers falling asleep. Tanker drivers must presently
receive special training to qualify them to transport their potentially
hazardous loads, often carrying 30,000 to 50,000 litres of petrol.
The leaders of some of the major trade unions have made statements
opposing the proposed legislation. Bill Morris, general secretary
of the Transport and General Workers Union (TGWU), argued against
measures, that would impinge on the rights of union members
to take legitimate lawful action." John Edmonds of the GMB
said he could hardly believe the government contemplated banning
industrial action in essential services. Even Conservative Prime
Minister Margaret Thatcher had decided against it.
Such expression of surprise notwithstanding, the blame for
the Blair government's threat to introduce legislation that even
Thatcher balked at rests with the Trades Union Congress (TUC)
and its affiliated unions. Of these, moreover, Morris and the
TGWU played the most insidious role in the government's campaign
against the protests.
Last week's fuel tax protests were carried out by various ad-hoc
organisations of small businessmen and farmers. They proved so
successful largely due to the massive public support they received
from working people who face crippling fuel costs due to the 75
percent rate of tax on every litre bought. Blair and the media
believed that their denunciation of similar protests in France
as undemocratic and un-British would swing
public opinion in their favour. Instead the actions of the French
hauliers and farmers were emulated, becoming a focus of a popular
backlash against a government that has slashed taxes for the employers
and the rich at workers' expense.
Blair was shown to be lacking a broad social base for his pro-business
politics and incapable of any political response other than to
threaten state repression against the protests. On Monday September
11 he announced the imminent declaration of a state of national
emergency, demanded that police move against the demonstrators
and put the army on standby. The press supported Blair's stance,
while urging that concessions on fuel taxes be announced at the
same time. In contrast, there was almost universal opposition
to these measures in the general population.
It was left to the TUC to come to the government's rescue,
by providing a political apologia for the threat to break-up the
supply depot protests; cajoling tanker drivers into crossing the
hauliers and farmers' picket lines.
Morris officially instructed his members to cross the protesters'
picket lines and TGWU regional officials were dispatched to enforce
this. Union representatives including Morris demanded the arrest
of demonstrators. TUC General Secretary John Monks moved a motion
at the organisation's conference in Glasgow denouncing the protests
as unconstitutional, unlawful and a
challenge to democracy. He falsely compared the hauliers
and farmers action to the CIA-financed lorry owners' strike in
Chile that destabilised the Allende regime and prepared the way
for General Pinochet's 1973 coup.
This week, coinciding with the government's announcement of
proposed legislation, the TGWU called for a public inquiry to
examine whether there had been collusion between the oil companies
and protesters during the fuel crisis. It is drawing up a dossier
to send to the Prime Minister, which also criticises the police
for not moving against the hauliers and farmers. "My members
are keen to know why the police failed to use their considerable
public order powers to restore safety to the roads," Morris
declared. "Why did the companies not invoke their contractual
rights in getting deliveries out? Why didn't they take out injunctions?
Why did the police not invoke the law of obstruction? Why was
a convoy of trucks allowed to occupy all three lanes of the M11
travelling at less than 10mph?"
Such statements express the real position of the TUC regarding
Labour's anti-democratic proposals to outlaw strikes and protests.
It is the refusal of the TUC to mobilise working people against
Labour's attacks that has allowed a popular protest against the
government to be dominated by hauliers and farmers in the first
place. Morris and his cohorts then used this to justify calls
for state repression against a legitimate and popular protest,
denouncing it as a bosses blockade. Now every measure
they have endorsed is to be drafted into law and used against
the working class. Despite their muted statements of concern,
moreover, the trade union leaders would be more hostile to a mass
movement of workers against Blair than they were towards the fuel
tax protests. They have shown they are just as willing for the
full force of the law to be brought down on their own members,
to prop up the Labour government.
See Also:
Fuel tax protests throughout Scandinavia
[19 September 2000]
Fuel tax protests hit Spain
[18 September 2000]
Britain's Labour government and trade
union leaders unite to crush fuel tax protest
[15 September 2000]
Top of page
The WSWS invites your comments.
Copyright 1998-2008
World Socialist Web Site
All rights reserved |