|
WSWS : News
& Analysis : Europe
: Britain
As bosses pay soars
Britain: Government and media rail against selfish
strikes
By Julie Hyland
8 September 2007
Use
this version to print
| Send this
link by email | Email
the author
A number of industrial disputes in recent weeks have provided
an invaluable insight into the tense state of class relations
in Britain.
A strike by maintenance workers on the London Underground earlier
this week met with overwhelming hostility from the government
and the media.
Prime Minister Gordon Brown condemned the action as wholly
unjustified, demanding that the strikers get back
to work as quickly as possible. There is nothing that can be any
excuse for this action, which is disrupting the life of London,
he said.
His attack was backed by Londons Labour Mayor Ken Livingstone
who said the dispute was bizarre and inexplicable.
Not to be outdone, Conservative Transport Secretary Theresa Villiers
repeated Browns insistence that the strike was wholly
unjustified, stating that the Rail, Maritime and Transport
(RMT) unionof which the maintenance workers are memberswere
holding London to ransom and just trying to
throw their weight around.
The media too depicted the maintenance workers as little more
than greedy, undeserving wastrels. Whilst some lamented that it
was not possible to just sack all 2,300 strikers, the Times
attacked the dispute as an example of selfishness and brinkmanship
that had inflicted terrible disruption on millions of people
and cost the capital huge sums in lost business.
In reality, it is Labours big business agendawhich
is shared by all the official partiesthat is responsible
for the terrible disruption of the capital.
The strike was caused by the collapse of Metronet, which was
awarded the multibillion contract to maintain and renew track,
tunnels and signalling just one year after Labour came to power.
The deal was part of Labours Public Private Partnership
(PPP) initiative, aimed at the backdoor privatization of essential
public services.
Through such schemes, billions in public funds were handed
over to private capital as Labour claimed this was the only way
to maintain vital infrastructure such as the London Underground.
Subsequent developments have confirmed that it is impossible to
sustain a decent, universal transport system on the basis of private
profitability. Just six years before, Railtrack plcthe infrastructure
company formed by the Conservatives out of the privatization of
the national rail networkwas forced into administration,
with billions in debt.
Metronet likewise had built up debts of at least £2 billion,
threatening the effective collapse of a transport network on which
millions depend. With no guarantee for the future of their jobs,
conditions and pension rights, maintenance workers voted overwhelmingly
for strike action.
The idea that they should seek any such securities is considered
outrageous by the ruling elite. Writing in the Evening Standard,
Dick Murray denounced the RMT for misleading its members
in making them think they have any more right to future guarantees
of their income and job security than anyone else who has worked
for a company which went bust. Its brutal, but its
capitalism.
While workers are meant to meekly resign themselves to the
catastrophic consequences of this brutal ... capitalism
and be damned, the banks and major corporations are under no such
obligation. As the government and the media insisted London Underground
maintenance workers should accept the possible loss of their jobs,
conditions and even the pension funds they had paid into for years,
Livingstone and Transport for London (TfL) were at pains to reassure
the City that £750 million would be made available to the
administrator until new private contracts were in place.
Public sector pay
The invective deployed against the maintenance workers
strike is by no means unique. Just one week before, the very conservative
Prison Officers Association (POA) became the target of similar
vitriol when it organized a 24-hour wildcat strike.
The fact that this was the first strike in the unions
history did not stop the Daily Telegraph denouncing the
POA as one of the last of the old-fashioned, unreconstructed
militant trade unions.
Within hours of the surprise walkout, the government sought
and obtained a court injunction against the strike, as the Times
demanded that Brown Talk Tough and Mean It.
The prime minister faces a winter of mounting discontent,
it warnedwith reference to the industrial strike action
that brought down the Labour government in 1978/1979from
public sector unions that are furious that the pay rises
they had come to expect as their birthright are now in decline.
It insisted that the country cannot afford to concede....
This is a time for confrontation, not appeasement.
The Timess war-like rhetoric and its references
to the winter of discontent are significant.
The POA walkout was caused by the governments decision
to ignore the recommendation of the independent pay review body
for a 2.5 percent increase in prison officers salaries,
imposing instead a staged increase of 1.5 percent in April and
the remaining 1 percent from November (a total of 1.9 percent).
The government has imposed similar pay awards across the public
sectorwhich employs almost 6 million people, approximately
20 percent of the UK workforce. National Health Service workers,
civil servants and local government employees have all been told
they must accept staged pay rises, amounting in most instances
to less than 2.5 percent over two years.
With the retail price index currently running at an annual
rate of 4.2 percent, this amounts to a significant pay cut in
real terms. Nevertheless, the Times sister paper, the Sun,
editorialized that the public sector has never had it so
good, demanding that it was time to show responsibility
and restraint.
Richard Lambert, director-general of the Confederation of British
Industry, warned Brown not to recant in his forceful
insistence on public sector pay restraint.
On queue, Brown denounced the prison officers action,
arguing that disciplined pay awards are an essential
part of maintaining economic stability, and we will do nothingnothingto
put that at risk.
The stipulation that millions of workers must accept cuts in
pay in the national interest comes against the backdrop of soaring
salaries for Britains top bosses, which have risen by 37
percent this year, 10 times the national average. One report pointed
out that the top chief executives now earn some 98 times more
than their employees and 276 times the national minimum wage.
More than half of Britains 50-plus billionaires pay little
or no tax on their wealth, while almost one-third of the countrys
leading businesses paid no corporation tax in the year 2005-2006.
In contrast, wages grew at an average of just 3.6 percent over
the last yearthe slowest in more than five yearswhile
the incomes of the poorest 20 percent of the population have fallen
by 0.4 percent.
This is under conditions in which house prices now average
£200,000 (£300,000 plus in London), with the consequence
that mortgage repayments take up more than 50 percent of take-home
pay. As working people find it increasingly difficult to make
ends meet, indebtedness has spiralled. With five increases in
interest rates in the last year alone, the total stock of consumer
debt owed by British families now outstrips Britains gross
domestic product at £1,345 billion to £1,330 billion.
The ratio of household debt to personal income is 1.62 in the
UK, compared with 1.42 in the US, 1.36 in Japan and 1.09 in Germany.
At first glance, the Timess reference to
a winter of discontent might seem incongruous. In
the winter of 1978/1979, millions of workers were on strike against
the imposition of a wage freeze, in a militant movement that paralysed
the country. In contrast, the recent strikes have all been separate
and have involved several thousand workers.
But the political mouthpieces of big business sense that a
sea change is under way. They recognize in the recent strikes
a challenge to the prevailing orthodoxy that growing social inequality
is a natural and inevitable state of affairs, about which nothing
can, or must, be done. They know that such a challenge, if not
suppressed, can rapidly escalate.
The trade union bureaucracy
The trade union bureaucracy is equally aware of this development
and unequivocally hostile to it.
The crucial difference between today and 1979 is that the Winter
of Discontent came at the beginning of a process in which the
traditional organizations of the working classthe Labour
Party and the trade unionsbegan to shed any connection with
the class interests of working people. Labour Prime Minister James
Callaghans imposition of austerity measures dictated by
the International Monetary Fund and his insistence that it was
no longer possible to spend your way out of a recession
and increase employment by cutting taxes and boosting government
spending met with mass opposition that could still find
limited expression within the trade unions.
Over the last three decades not only has the Labour Party completed
its transformation into a right-wing, big business party, but
this process has been matched by the trade unions, which today
act as a straitjacket on their members in order to impose the
dictates of the major corporations.
In the case of the maintenance workers dispute, the RMT
suspended the strike less than halfway through its intended 72-hour
course, despite having secured no firm guarantees as to their
members jobs and security. The POA suspended its own strike
just hours after its commencement in return for meaningful
discussions and the Communication Workers Union also suspended
further 24-hour postal strikes without explanation.
These events have served to expose the unbridgeable chasm between
official political circlesincluding the trade union bureaucracyand
the essential social interests of working people.
The defence of jobs, conditions, pay and pensions can only
be conducted as part of a mass social movement, independent of
and in rebellion against both the Labour Party and the trade unions.
Such a movement requires above all a political strategy based
on the recognition that the class interests of working people
are objectively in conflict with the interests and requirements
of the profit system, and can only be pursued on this basis.
The new forms of organization and the elaboration of such a
strategy cannot be arrived at spontaneously. They require the
building of a new socialist leadership in the working classthe
perspective fought for by the World Socialist Web Site.
See Also:
Britains bosses take record £26.4
billion in bonuses: City takes lions share
[6 September 2007]
RMT union suspends strike by London Underground
maintenance workers
[5 September 2007]
Top of page
The WSWS invites your comments.
Copyright 1998-2008
World Socialist Web Site
All rights reserved |