CampaignsFighting Austerity

Fight to defend jobs and services

Defend Glasgow’s services campaign meeting 

Saturday 23 January @ 11am
UNISON Branch, 4th Floor (lift)
18 Albion Street, Candleriggs

A meeting for Trades Unions, public service workers, community
organisations and the citizens of Glasgow 

Speakers from Unison, FBU, PCS and the local community

 We won’t pay for this crisis

It is estimated that Scotland ’s councils could face a loss of income of up to 15% over the next three years. Glasgow City Council has indicated that it intends to cut it’s workforce by at least 10% over the next few years, make cuts in grants to community and voluntary sectors organisations of 20% and force its arms length organisations to implement “efficiencies”.

Brian Smith – Glasgow Unison branch secretary (personal capacity)

Overall, this will mean the loss of thousands of jobs in the city and less services for local people. If one in ten council jobs in Scotland were lost then that could mean a cut of around 20,000 jobs across the country. Jobs cuts in the community and voluntary sector would be on top of this figure. So much for the warm words of the pro – capitalist politicians to fight unemployment!

The four main parties are not going to defend jobs and services with all seeking mandates at the forthcoming general election to make cuts in public spending. It is therefore left to the trade unions and local communities to lead the fightback.

UNISON at a UK level has made the case for an “alternative no cuts budget” that includes increasing taxes on the rich, introducing a Tobin Tax on financial speculation transactions, cancelling trident, etc. These reformist calls, whilst limited in many respects, do at least represent an alternative voice from the trade unions. The problem of course is that words are easy. The UNISON leadership and that of the other council trade unions are so wedded to the illusion that the Labour Party can protect workers and their families that no action will be taken at a UK level to push for this “alternative budget”.

In Scotland , a section of the UNISON leadership has even argued that Labour is not going to make any cuts as it is not Labour Party conference policy – a surreal position apparently based on the notion that the transformation of the Labour Party into a full blown, capitalist party did not take place over the last twenty years.

Local trade union branches, activists and local communities must therefore lead the way. Local broad based “defend our services” campaigns should be initiated by branches that bring together all those who want to fightback.

These networks can be the driver for local lobbying against cuts, assist in building support for community campaigns and raise the confidence of council workers to resist cuts including through the use of industrial action if necessary. Branches should also push their trade union leaders to adopt a national strategy across the public sector.

As a first step an all Scotland demonstration should be organised under a banner such as “Defend Scotland’s Services”. The STUC has said that it intends to call a trade union and communities conference to discuss such matters. Branches must do all they can ensure that the leaders of Scotland ’s trade union movement agree a credible strategy including the use of national strike action if necessary.

Within local government a first step could demanding from the SNP Scottish Government a no compulsory redundancies commitment across all of the 32 local councils. This could be framed within the concordat between the SNP Government and CoSLA and would represent a meaningful concession to the trade unions and an important protection for council workers across Scotland . It could also force more money out of the SNP Government for local councils and thus protect some jobs and services.

If the SNP Government and CoSLA refused to agree to no compulsory redundancies then the trade unions should campaign amongst their members for strike action across Scotland in the event of any council moving towards compulsory redundancies. We must also push for the strongest possible support from the national trade union leaders to those branches where members are willing to fight cuts in services, attacks on conditions, wages cuts, etc with industrial action. Finally, we must raise with members now the possibilitiy of the need for national action over pay freezes and attacks on local governement pensions

The battle to protect Scotland ’s council services will increase in intensity in 2010. We must do all we can to ensure that the trade unions are ready to fight.

  • No to cuts in jobs and services. No to a wage freeze.  The public sector should not be made to pay for a crisis we did not create
  • Organise united action by public sector workers and local communities to defeat the cuts
  • Build for united strike action across the public sector
  • Make the rich and big business pay for their crisis- Nationalise the big corporations under democratic working class control and invest in jobs and services,     

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