The views in this piece are my own. They express an impatience with the glacial pace of the movement towards strike action and my view that while the subsequent actions proposed are unobjectionable they seemed a bit of an anti-climax to the strike and the demo.

Manc Are we seeing the rebirth of militancy? It’s too early to say though it has been a while since the leading news stories on two consecutive days have been about strikes. Yesterday it was civil servants in the PCS, members of the National Union of Teachers and the University and College Union. Today it has been oil refinery workers who will be taking action to defend their pension scheme.

Many of the young teachers who marched through London yesterday were still at nursery school the last time the National Union of Teachers called a national strike twenty one years ago.

The issue this time was New Labour’s below inflation 2.4% pay settlement which can more accurately be called a pay cut in real terms. The London march was bigger, livelier and younger than anyone could have expected. Ten thousand protestors is a realistic guess and for many of them it would have been their first ever strike and their introduction to trade union militancy and solidarity. The march and rally brought together NUT members and striking UCU members. Mark Serwotka’s presence on the platform and his explicit linking of the public sectors pay battles reminded all the strikers that they had to fight the government together to win.

Rally Brendan Barber is the General Secretary of the Trades Union Congress. Not a lot of people know that. He could be called the titular head of the British working class but even readers of this site would be hard pushed to recognise him if he were sitting on the bus beside them. He was dreadful. His rhetorical flourishes exhorted strikers to “win change by pooling resources” and something about “building capacity to rise to the skills challenge”.

In fact leadership has been a problem with the teachers’ pay campaign. Everything was put on hold until the Teachers’ Salary Review Board made its  recommendation. That’s the outfit that makes the awkward pay cutting decisions for New Labour. The strike ballot only gave a mandate for one day’s action so that further action requires another ballot and that is unlikely to happen before the summer. The momentum that could have been developed from yesterday is to be dissipated.

Kevin Courtney, one of the union’s leading left figures, admitted as much. Outlining the next steps he began with the dreaded “lobby of parliament” next week. That’s every union leadership’s favourite excuse for doing nothing. Then he asked strikers to take copies of the petition at the back of the hall. You can get your scabs to sign it. He did say that there will be a ballot for more discontinuous action and as any PCS activist will tell you, after their 20+ days in recent years that does not butter any parsnips.

 Our Manchester correspondent writes…

About half of the schools in Greater Manchester were either fully or partially closed by the teachers’ strike on Thursday.  This is probably fewer than in other parts of the country, and reflects the right wing domination of the two biggest associations – Manchester and Salford.  However, it was very apparent on Thursday that a new layer of young radical teaching are emerging through this campaign.

Over 500 attended the strike rally in Manchester, far more than had been expected by the officials who booked the room.  The Friends Meeting House was packed to the rafters, with over a hundred unable to squeeze in.  Most of those who did get in were young women teachers, lecturers and civil servants.  Unfortunately, the radicalism of the young strikers wasn’t reflected by the platform speakers – who spoke about sending postcards to MPs and the TUC lobby of parliament but didn’t issue a clear call for further discontinuous strike action. 

The rally was followed by a fantastic, noisy and militant march through the city centre, which had been called by Manchester Trades Council, and which featured banners from a range of unions, both public and private sector.  The response of the general public and motorists was noticeably supportive.

Members of the STA and UCU Left have called an Education Activists Meeting for Saturday 10th May at 12 noon in the Friends Meeting House in order to discuss the next steps in the campaign.

13 responses to “Strikes! Hurray!”

  1. “He did say that there will be a ballot for more discontinuous action and as any PCS activist will tell you, after their 20+ days in recent years that does not butter any parsnips.”

    Apart from we need a ballot to even begin to build for the necessary action and of course teachers have a certain amount of capacity to bring the whole system if not ground to a halt seriously seriously disrupted because of the knock on effect on child care arrangments- which is why it is very important we don’t say we’re for all workers getting decent pay rises, for uniting the public sector pay strikes and taking action inconcert with any other workers such as the oil workers.

    I said as much to Granada reports- unbroadcast of course.

    Manchester correspondent- curiously downbeat-

    sure Manchester itself has a rightw-ing union leadership but sachools in Bolton for example were 16/17 closed down amongst the secondaries, and a very good proportion of primaries.

    There were at least a 1000 on the demo, 1500 probably- I counted (roughly but it was def over 1000).

    The 10th May meeting will be important but even before that- NEXT WEEK- let’s get together and plan for how we’re going to bombard the exec with demands for action- from school groups in 1st place- and get in contact with one another.

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  2. Its clear the teachers strike boosted turnout for the PCS DWP strike – in East London PCS reps have reported a better turnout than the last strike day – however one day strikes are only part of a strategy. In the DWP, we really need targeted action, a permanent overtime ban and increasing numbers of public sector workers challenging the Government’s pay cuts alongside us (including all PCS members). The PCS needs a party political fund so we can divert money to election candidates backing our interests. Also, we need a new leadership – PCS members should vote Independent Left. The current leadership has failed to stop tens of thousands of jobs being lost in the Civil Service and has made no progress towards national pay or equal pay for Civil Servants.

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  3. QUESTIONS OF LEADERSHIP.. as true now as ever.

    Trade unions and trade unionists have so much potential and power but are seriously let down again and again by sycophantic, pusillanimous and double crossing leaders.One day strike action, post cards to MP’s …pissing in the fucking wind.

    Grangemouth is however another kettle of fish altogether , strike with immediate effect……….hits the oil supply…hits the economy…hits the profits margins…..directly affecting ‘thepublic’.

    Which side are you on?

    With solidarity and support the Grangemouth strikers can win! No sell out!

    In respect to public sector workers nothing is likely to change one iota and we will continue to suffer defeat after defeat and further demoralisation until this suffocating ever conciliatory right wing hold is broken alomng with the numerous undemocratic constraints and restraints both internal and external l (anti trade union legislation) to allow for the development and growth of coordinated mass militant strike action.

    Break with New Labour !
    Victory to the Grangemouth strikers!
    Unite the Public sector workers!

    New Labour are now in freefall after the scandalous introduction of the scrapping of the 10p in the £ rate of tax affecting millions of low paid workers and pensionners while at the same time redjusting corporation tax and inheritance to suit the comfort and luxury of the rich and very wealthy.

    Closures, jobs layoffs,rising unemployment are coming thick and fast as the price of food rises as the much hyped global capitalist ‘recession’ starts to take effect both here and internationally.

    A united and democratic broad left alternative has to be ready and prepared to give support and clear leadership to the growing resistence to this onslaught .

    Solidarity and international solidarity are vital.

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  4. Good points, Rat. Certainly the Grangmouth strike has the possibility of electrifying the union movement if they win.

    We should pour in messages of solidarity.

    You are very pessimistic about th epublic secotro strikes- I can fully understand why but if, and yes it’s a bloody big if, some of the rank and file get organised we can begin to run this around.

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  5. 2.4 percent seems to be the internationally agreed less-than-Cost-of-Living pay “rise” for teachers in 2007-08… both Oakland and my district were offered the same, just about. Less than the cost of our health benefits rose this year, thus doubly a pay cut. Oakland accepted it, having no muscle to do anything else after the past few years of vainglorious talk. My tiny district reacted to our protests at their public school board meetings by upping the offer to COLA, which is a kind-of-break-even deal. We’ll take it, I suspect. But, oh, for a national union that acted nationally….

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  6. only 1 candidate for Mayor in London went to the picket line, demo or rally and it wasn’t the one supported by the ISG. It was Lindsey German, as Ms Sian Berry the ISG backed candidate couldn’t dseem to be bothered to support public sector workers on strike.. come to mention it the best pal of GG one KL couldn’t be bothered to support workers fighting a pay cut.. ah well whats workers struggle when there a bit of cosying up to new labour.. The ISG….what are u playing at backing a candidate that can’t support workers on strike against a socialist candidate.. pathetic

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  7. It would be really good if we could start sharing info on how to get a network of activstws going on the demand for a further ballot.

    Bolton NUT has already passed a motion- I’m trying to get my school group to send one (shldn’t be too hard but I’m new there )

    any other news?

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  8. Leading RR member over on the SUN site is argiuing workers shouldn’t go on strike!!! whats worse no RR member seems to say anything to counter this nonsense..
    I think the campaign to put pressue on NUT to nname anothjer date is vital.. I understand in parts of London this starting to happen.. I think the strike realy boosted confidence.

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  9. Get off your high horse JJ.
    It wasn’t so long ago that a leading member of the SWP was arguing that lesbian and gay rights were an inconvienience that shouldn’t be allowed to get in the way of elections and that there should be no limits on MPs gluttony.
    What goes around.

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  10. JJ, thats a lie and you know it- you only post it here because you have just been put right over on SU.

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  11. Leading RR member over on the SUN site is argiuing workers shouldn’t go on strike!!! whats worse no RR member seems to say anything to counter this nonsense..

    Another lie. Stop it jj. If you think this impresses people or wins an arguement you are sadly deluded.

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  12. Hmmm. Having been largely inactive although hanging on to my Unite membership for many years, I thought I might have nothing to say on the subject of union struggle. But Liam’s italized comment about “… the glacial pace …” got me thinking. In another life a obtained a degree in Geology – I don’t think there are many on the left with one of those. But it did get me thinking about glaciers in general and that analogy in particular. Glaciers are immensely powerful. Just look a the great valleys in the Scottish Highlands for examples. In such a way, the glacial workers movement could be just as powerful. I think that Grangemouth must have rattled the government and bosses. One 2 day strike shuts down an entire refinery for what looks like several weeks and entire North Sea oil production for days. No wonder they were so quick to bring in those tankers.

    But most of the discontinuous strikes have the “erosive power” of feather dusters. Serious industrial militancy seems a long way away. But life can change suddenly and in unexpected ways. The workers movement should look to the effect of Grangemouth and what the effect of flexing one small muscle could do.

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