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: Britain
Britain: opposition mounts to Labours privatisation
policies
By Julie Hyland
8 February 2002
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Prime Minister Blair has spent the last several days attempting
to dampen down an escalating row with Britains trade union
leaders, after a speech in which he had accused them of wrecking
Labours plans to modernise public services.
Blairs remarks to a Labour Party conference in Wales
were intended to make clear his governments determination
to press ahead with the introduction of private capital into the
health, education and public transport sectors.
Such a speech was always going to meet with opposition. Whilst
the Conservatives had privatised vast swathes of formerly nationalised
industry, public hostility towards any erosion of essential public
services such as health and education had placed them off limits.
Labour only came to power in 1997 after having promised to
reverse the decades of social destruction wrought by the Tories,
with pledges to make education and health a top spending priority.
But it had won the backing of big business by promising that it
would open the state sector up to private investment. Corporate
access to transport, education and, above all, health service
provision was seen as the great unpicked cherryan arena
that offered potentially vast and hitherto untapped profits. So
as far as Labours backers in the City of London were concerned,
the Blair government would to no small extent be judged by whether
it succeeded in accomplishing that which the outgoing Conservatives
had largely failed to doreplacing the welfare state model
of public provision with private, for profit, services.
Labours Third Way policy was supposed to
reconcile these conflicting demands by arguing that a continued
commitment to universal public provision was compatible with private
capital funding. Indeed, Labour argued, the old method of state
provision paid for through taxes was unaffordable and inefficient.
Therefore a new relationship with the private sector would bring
with it greater efficiency while lowering the burden on the public
purse and therefore the taxpayer. Within its first years in office,
the Blair government had pressed ahead with the Private Finance
Initiative (PFI), in which private sector corporations design,
build, own and operate public services in return for an annual
fee. Labour claimed that this was not the same as privatisation,
but marked a new partnership between essential services
and private capital, which would provide the funds government
could not.
Blairs difficulty is that his paean to the wonders of
the free market now has a hollow ring. In the last
months, Labour has announced a new round of privatisation initiatives,
including the London Underground subway network and measures for
the private sector to take over failing public hospitals.
But whilst holding out the City as a guarantor of decent social
provision, the government has continued to slash public spendingwith
overall spending in 1999/00 and 2000/01 more than £9 billion
short of initial plans.
Across the country, in virtually every area of life, working
people are confronted daily by the damage caused by the governments
gutting of public provision to satiate corporate demands. Britains
rail network, privatised under the Tories, barely functions. Years
of severe under-investment on infrastructure have left the country
with a rail service more usually found in an underdeveloped country,
subject to frequent delays and fatal accidents.
Anger and concern at the constant delays and rising cost of
simply getting to work pales in comparison to public sentiment
when it comes to the life and death issue of deteriorating healthcare.
Thousands of patients are forced to wait years for treatment.
The lack of beds means some patients must be treated on trolleys
in hospital corridors, whilst life-saving operations are cancelled
due to a shortage of staff or resources. So bad has the situation
become that the government has had to temporarily agree to pay
France and Greece to treat British patients abroad.
Rising discontent and opposition amongst public sector workers
has been expressed in a series of strikes, and pending disputes.
Rail workers throughout the country are involved in rolling strike
action to protest low wages and safety breaches as are Jobcentre
staff and airport workers. Tens of thousands of postal workers,
are to ballot for strike action, as are London Underground staff.
Although by no means on the scale of the strike activity that
took place throughout the 1970s, the upturn in disputes has caused
apoplexy in the political establishment and the media who fear
that it will derail the governments plans for further privatisations
and act as a focus for more generalised social and political discontent.
The Conservative Party demanded Blair intervene directly to
stop the rail strikes, by outlawing strikes in the public sector,
whilst the City has warned that labour unrest will jeopardise
the governments hopes for private capital investment.
The media have been especially concerned at signs of a shift
to the left within the trade unions. Recently Mark Serwotka, a
member of Socialist Alliance, an amalgam of middle class radical
groups, was elected general secretary of the Public and Commercial
Services Union, whose members are currently involved in strike
action at Jobcentres. Socialist Alliance member Bob Crow is expected
to win election as general secretary of the Rail and Maritime
Trade union, also in dispute, and another Socialist Alliance member,
Greg Tucker, is tipped to become its assistant general secretary.
The Socialist Alliance hopes to resuscitate the bankrupt programme
of social reformism by persuading workers that the trade unions
can be relied upon to fight for their interests. It hopes that
through militant action it will be able to build up enough pressure
on the Labour and trade union bureaucracy that they will be convinced
to change their right wing course.
After decades in which the trade unions have functioned as
the principal means through which successive governments
have ensured the implementation of their big business agenda,
and having presided over an historic decline in industrial unrest,
the media have interpreted the changes as a signal of growing
rank and file discontent. The Scotsman commented, Until
now, Mr Blair has had to deal with relatively genteel trade union
opponents, such as Bill Morris, of the TGWU, and Sir Ken Jackson,
joint chairman of Amicas, the merged AEEU and MSF unions. They,
however, are retiring soon. In their stead come unfamiliar names:
Bob Crow, Mick Rix, Mark Serwotka and Billy Hayes. They represent
a new generation of trade unionists who are hungry for battle.
The Times expressed similar anxiety at the possible
marginalisation of moderate trade union leaders. It
praised the TUC for its hard work to modernise trade unions
and rejects industrial and political fundamentalism,
before warning that there were signs that those who challenge
the TUCs conciliatory stance are getting increasingly restless.
The government has so far resisted direct intervention, but
a series of ministerial speeches at the weekend were aimed at
assuaging the demands of the right wing press and big business
for a hardline against the disputes.
Announcing government plans to attract private sector bids
for the London Underground at the weekend, Transport Secretary
Stephen Byers described opponents of the proposal as wreckers.
People have a choice, Byers said, either to block the modernisation
proposals, and theyll be the wreckers; or there will be
the reformers who want to go ahead with modernisation and change.
Blairs speech to the Welsh conference was meant to underscore
this stance. So anxious was Blair to reassure the City, that according
to the Financial Times, the prime minister surprised his
own advisers when he departed from his prepared text on
wreckers in the Conservative party, and widened his
attack to include critics within Labour ranks.
Not only would his government take on and defeat big
C Conservatives who want to undermine public servicesa
reference to Tory proposals to slash government spending by £60
billionbut we must defeat the small c
conservatives who believe the old ways will do and resist reform.
Blair deliberately parodied the red baiting articles that had
appeared in the press on the public sector disputeslikening
his governments attitude towards them with the expulsion
of the leftwing Militant group from Labour.
In the 1980s, he said, the Labour Party had faced far
left wreckers, opposed to crucial reformsi.e.
the ditching of any social reformist policies and the partys
refashioning openly as a big business party. It had taken the
courage of former Labour leader Neil Kinnock to see
off that challenge, Blair continued, referring to the Labour leaders
witchhunt and mass expulsion of Militant supporters. It
was a fight every single inch of the way and people said we were
betraying our principles, he said, implying that he intended
to carry out similar measures into the public sector.
Blairs speech brought accolades from much of the media,
but the trade union bureaucracy responded furiously.
TUC general secretary John Monks described the speech as juvenile
and absolutely destructive. Transport and General
Workers Union leader Bill Morris complained There are plenty
of wreckers around but they are not to be found in the trade union
movement.
The wreckers I think are the people who have brought
Railtrack to where it is, I think also the Enron activities within
government, right at the heart of government, and of course those
who thought that September 11 was a good day to bury bad news.
Unless the Prime Minister reins in these people, then they will
ultimately wreck his government, Morris warned.
The GMB union took out newspaper advertisements showing a picture
of a nurse alongside the headline: Is She One Of The Wreckers
Tony? GMB general secretary John Edmonds had earlier been
insistent that the unions should not break their links with Labour.
After Blairs speech, he urged the prime minister to apologise
for his wreckers comments. It is quite clear
that the majority of the public and certainly the majority of
those who work in public services are genuinely opposed to the
reform proposals put forward over the past few months. To accuse
those who work in our public services of being wreckers is the
sort of attack we would expect from the leader of the opposition,
not a Labour Prime Minister.
Within days of Blairs conference diatribe, a draft government
policy document was leaked that replaces Labours commitment
to a universal [health] service for all based on clinical
need, not ability to pay, with an NHS model overwhelmingly
free at the point of use. This clear signal of intent to
charge for some services prompted Edmonds to complain, We
cant believe that the document being presented to the national
policy forum tomorrow contains these words.
For Blairs loyal allies in the trade union bureaucracy
to make such comments must indicate their belief that they are
sitting on a powderkeg of political hostility to the government.
They have consistently made clear that they support the general
thrust of the governments PPP proposals, and have been responsible
for creating the conditions in which they can be implemented.
But they have also urged Blair to be more aware of the extent
of public distrust over the measures and to proceed with a greater
degree of caution. When the prime minister arrogantly brushes
aside their friendly advice, he makes their efforts to contain
the anger of their members far more difficult and heightens the
danger of a confrontation between the working class and the government.
See Also:
Britains general
election: The Socialist Alliance and Socialist Labour PartyNo
alternative to Blairs New Labour
Statement by the Socialist Equality Party of Britain
[29 May 2001]
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