4
Beware of regional pay! by Liz Payne The Coalition has made no secret over recent months of its intention to introduce regional pay in the public sector whenever it can get away with it. The idea is to con everyone that there’s already huge regional variation in the cost of living and that pay in the private sector is based on local market conditions. Yet, research shows this to be a complete fabrication. There’s little regional variation outside London and the majority of larger private firms pay national not regional rates. The truth is this is a thinly disguised attempt to impose further massive wage cuts on the public sector, enhancing its attractiveness to profit-seekers, as jobs and services are privatised. The whole thing is designed to cause maximum division and conflict between groups of workers and break trade union power in national pay bargaining. It won’t be only public sector workers who suffer. Wage cuts in so-called ‘low- cost’ areas (for which read ‘already poor’) will increase skills shortages and hit services to the most vulnerable. Slashing spending-power will in turn further depress struggling economies. Private sector businesses will close with further job losses and misery in a spiral of decline. It’s all part of the age-old ruling class strategy of ‘divide and rule’. Stand together against regional pay! Always say ‘Never’! H Liz Payne is a Unison activist in the South West and the Communist Party’s national women’s organiser Communists at the 2012 Tolpuddle Rally by John Foster The public sector cuts being imposed by George Osborne are doing irreparable damage. The Institute for Fiscal Studies says that the 2012 budget cuts were ‘twice as big’ as those inflicted on the public sector between 1975 and 1982 and their extension to 2017 would mean ‘the longest sustained cuts in public spending since the Second World War’. Since present government took office and December 2011, 232,000 jobs were lost in local government alone. And this is only the beginning. Osborne’s cuts are scheduled to continue at a real rate of 3.7 per cent annually for five more years. For the economy as a whole these cuts are crazy. The only gainers are Osborne’s pals in the City who want spare state to cash to bail them out. The cuts are killing the productive economy and increasing long-term debt. Britain’s economy is now over 4 per cent smaller than it was in 2007 – the only major economy to have contracted to such an extent apart from Spain. It is still contracting. This is why alternative economic policies, based on active state intervention, are needed. The last couple of years have seen a transformation in attitudes to such intervention. In 2010 the TUC backed the People’s Charter. In 2011 it additionally called for alternative economic policies based on expanding the public sector. What we need now are specific demands that can unite trade unions and communities to campaign politically and add up to a coherent strategy that can rescue our economy. The first demand is obvious: stop the cuts. This is the quickest way of restoring consumer demand: end the insecurity of imminent job loss, halt the new pensions levy, reverse the benefit cuts and end a wage freeze that is currently cutting real incomes by up to 3 per cent a year. The second is for the government to create real, well-paid jobs and hence boost tax income as well as demand for goods. Council housing is one obvious area. There is desperate need and the private sector has failed – house building has collapsed from 180,000 in 2006 to 120,000 last year, the lowest since the 1920s. Building houses under local democratic control also makes it possible to introduce comprehensive energy saving with green technology – another key area for investment. Equally essential is the demand to take water, energy and transport back into public ownership, end extortionate pricing and stop the state subsidies to monopolist owners. There must be action to stop closures in the productive economy, to take over failing manufacturing enterprises and to penalise companies that shift production overseas – even if this means defying the EU directives. Can this be paid for? Yes, easily – by imposing a tax on the City’s financial transactions, reclaiming the £100 billion lost through tax evasion, closing down Britain’s many tax havens and reversing Osborne’s tax cuts for the rich and on company profits. What we can’t afford is austerity. This is actively destroying national wealth by shrinking the economy – with between £50 billion to £100 billion lost every year compared to 2007. What’s needed is a mass movement that can remove this government of financial speculators and ensure the Labour Party adopts the alternative policies needed save our productive economy – in the interests of the vast majority of the population.H John Foster is a member of the Communist Party’s economic commission Unity ! Why we need an alternative economic strategy

Unity! Tolpuddle Martyrs' Festival 2012

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  • Beware ofregional pay!by Liz Payne

    The Coalition has made no secret

    over recent months of its intention to

    introduce regional pay in the public

    sector whenever it can get away with

    it.

    The idea is to con everyone thattheres already huge regional variationin the cost of living and that pay in theprivate sector is based on local marketconditions. Yet, research shows this tobe a complete fabrication.

    Theres little regional variation outsideLondon and the majority of largerprivate firms pay national not regionalrates.

    The truth is this is a thinly disguisedattempt to impose further massive wagecuts on the public sector, enhancing itsattractiveness to profit-seekers, as jobsand services are privatised. The wholething is designed to cause maximumdivision and conflict between groups ofworkers and break trade union power innational pay bargaining.

    It wont be only public sector workerswho suffer. Wage cuts in so-called low-cost areas (for which read alreadypoor) will increase skills shortages andhit services to the most vulnerable.

    Slashing spending-power will in turnfurther depress struggling economies.Private sector businesses will close withfurther job losses and misery in a spiralof decline.

    Its all part of the age-old ruling classstrategy of divide and rule.

    Stand together against regional pay!Always say Never! H

    Liz Payne is a Unison activist in the SouthWest and the Communist Partys nationalwomens organiser

    Communists at the 2012

    Tolpuddle Rally

    by John Foster

    The public sector cuts being imposed

    by George Osborne are doing

    irreparable damage.

    The Institute for Fiscal Studies says that the2012 budget cuts were twice as big as thoseinflicted on the public sector between 1975and 1982 and their extension to 2017 wouldmean the longest sustained cuts in publicspending since the Second World War.Since present government took office and

    December 2011, 232,000 jobs were lost inlocal government alone. And this is only thebeginning. Osbornes cuts are scheduled tocontinue at a real rate of 3.7 per cent annuallyfor five more years. For the economy as a whole these cuts are

    crazy. The only gainers are Osbornes pals inthe City who want spare state to cash to bailthem out. The cuts are killing the productiveeconomy and increasing long-term debt. Britains economy is now over 4 per cent

    smaller than it was in 2007 the only majoreconomy to have contracted to such an extentapart from Spain. It is still contracting. This iswhy alternative economic policies, based onactive state intervention, are needed.The last couple of years have seen a

    transformation in attitudes to suchintervention. In 2010 the TUC backed thePeoples Charter. In 2011 it additionally calledfor alternative economic policies based onexpanding the public sector. What we need now are specific demands that

    can unite trade unions and communities tocampaign politically and add up to a coherentstrategy that can rescue our economy.The first demand is obvious: stop the cuts.

    This is the quickest way of restoring consumerdemand: end the insecurity of imminent jobloss, halt the new pensions levy, reverse the

    benefit cuts and end a wage freeze that iscurrently cutting real incomes by up to 3 percent a year. The second is for the governmentto create real, well-paid jobs and hence boosttax income as well as demand for goods.Council housing is one obvious area. There isdesperate need and the private sector hasfailed house building has collapsed from180,000 in 2006 to 120,000 last year, thelowest since the 1920s.Building houses under local democratic

    control also makes it possible to introducecomprehensive energy saving with greentechnology another key area for investment.Equally essential is the demand to take

    water, energy and transport back into publicownership, end extortionate pricing and stopthe state subsidies to monopolist owners.There must be action to stop closures in the

    productive economy, to take over failingmanufacturing enterprises and to penalisecompanies that shift production overseas even if this means defying the EU directives.Can this be paid for? Yes, easily by

    imposing a tax on the Citys financialtransactions, reclaiming the 100 billion lostthrough tax evasion, closing down Britainsmany tax havens and reversing Osbornes taxcuts for the rich and on company profits. What we cant afford is austerity. This is

    actively destroying national wealth byshrinking the economy with between 50billion to 100 billion lost every yearcompared to 2007. Whats needed is a mass movement that can

    remove this government of financialspeculators and ensure the Labour Partyadopts the alternative policies needed save ourproductive economy in the interests of thevast majority of the population.HJohn Foster is a member of the CommunistPartys economic commission

    Unity!

    Why we need an alternativeeconomic strategy

  • First launched in 1935 the Country Standard journalis now run by an editorial collective of Communist andLabour Party members, environmentalists and tradeunionists. Get your copy from the Communist Party stall

    The SouthWest of England and

    Cornwall District of the Communist

    Party of Britain was re-established in

    early 2011.

    Like other districts of the Communist

    Party, we cover the same geographical

    area as that of the regional TUC:

    Bristol, Cornwall, Devon, Dorset,

    Gloucestershire, Somerset and

    Wiltshire.

    We have an active branch network

    and members involved in local trade

    union, community, anti-racist, anticuts,

    Stop the War, Cuban and Palestinian

    Solidarity Campaigns and other

    progressive organisations.

    Most branches in the district also

    work with Morning Star Readers and

    Supporters groups, raising funds for

    the paper and selling it at trade union

    events and on street stalls.

    The Communist Party presence at the

    Tolpuddle Martyrs' Festival is growing

    every year, as is our commitment to

    promote the Morning Star to festival

    goers.

    Cornwall

    The Communist Party also recognises

    the special position of Cornwall in

    relation to England. Our partys

    programme, Britains Road to

    Socialism, notes that: The distinctive

    cultural and social characteristics of

    Cornwall should be expressed through

    a directly elected Cornish Assembly,

    with powers that match local

    aspirations and that: The national

    movements in Scotland, Wales and

    Cornwall also contain substantial

    progressive and left-wing elements

    that oppose reactionary policies of

    monopoly capital and the British

    state.

    Party Kesunyans a Vreten Vur - Randyr

    Soth-West Pow Saws ha Kernow! H

    Find out more on our district website:

    www.southwestcommunists.org.uk/

    21st Century Marxism Festival

    21-22 July 2012Bishopsgate Institute 230 Bishopsgate London EC2M 4QH

    www.communist-party.org.uk

    The People's Charter for Change is

    supported by the TUC, 16 trade

    unions and many trades unions

    councils up and down the country and

    it is included in the TUC's plan of

    work for the trades councils.

    It promotes a progressive alternative set ofpolicies not only as an antidote to ConDemcuts, but also for the expansion of theeconomy through a programme of directedinvestment, control over the export of capital,public ownership, the development ofsustainable industries, a reduction in workinghours, and a programme of skills training andretraining. The Charters 6-point programme demands: HA fairer economy for a fairer Britain HMore and better jobs HDecent homes for all HProtect and improve our public services no cuts HFairness and justice HA secure and sustainable future for all Impossible? Far from it! The Charter shows how these could be

    brought about through the implementation ofan alternative economic strategy to bringabout a fundamental shift in wealth and powerin favour of the working class. The Peoples Charter deals with the whole of

    society and aims to promote a positivealternative instead of just saying Stop theCuts. The Charter six points are aspirations which

    any political party purporting to representworking people should be proud to putforward and demands that the Labour Partymust adopt it as a winning alternative politicalstrategy. Visit www.thepeoplescharter.org formore information and affiliation details orwrite to The Peoples Charter, PO Box 53091,London E12 9DA H

    Its time for the PeoplesCharter

  • by Anita Halpin

    As the capitalist crisis deepens the

    myth of the social chapter, the reason

    so many trades unionists loyally

    backed the EU, lies shattered. Britains

    withdrawal from the EU is the only

    way to recover democratic control

    over the economy, save

    manufacturing, restore employment

    rights and rescue our welfare state.

    The EU serves the interests of big businessand the banks. No wonder Cameron, Cleggand Cable support the Single Market as itenables the City of London to continue todominate EU finance and banking. The anti-democratic and pro-big business

    character of the EU is now fully exposed as itreplaces elected governments and theEuropean Central Bank with its partners incrime the International Monetary Fund and theWorld Central Bank impose drasticdeflationary policies. In the USA, even Obamas economic

    stimulus package creates some new jobs butsuch investment programmes are outlawed inthe EU. So it is highly unlikely that the ECBwould be able or willing to replicate this forFrance or any other member state.The peoples of France and Greece have

    expressed their clear opposition to EUausterity and privatisation policies in theirvotes for socialist, Communist and other leftcandidates. Yet both Franois Hollande and

    the Greek Euro-leftist Syrzia coalition remaincommitted to the EU and the single currency.It is impossible to separate rejection of the

    austerity programme from the institutions thatcrafted it or to discard policies created solelyto sustain those same institutions.The Communist Party believes that a

    commitment by left and progressive forces inthis country to withdraw from the EU willstrengthen the position of all those in Europefighting to preserve and defend theirdemocracies and halt a race to the bottom.That is why trades unionists have a duty to sayenough is enough: we want to get out.The message is getting across. In March

    the ETUC unequivocally condemned theTreaty on Stability, Coordination andGovernance, which imposes even moredeflationary budget controls and directlyabrogates the democracy of debtor states. In April the STUC annual conference

    accepted a motion condemning the anti-democratic and deflationary character of theEU and calling for national powers to again beable to invest in the productive economy andprovide public services.Most significant was the call to negotiate a

    new relationship with the EU based on a mostfavoured nation trade agreement on the samebasis as Norway but outside the provisions ofthe Single Market. While the STUC executivedid not endorse the call for withdrawal itstressed the critical threat the EU now posedto democracy and trade union rights. A threat that is all too evident. At the end of

    last month the EU Commission report on theUK economy called for reinforced austerity. Aweek later, and following the ECBs line, theBank of England monetary policy committeeplayed it safe (in bankers terms) and keptinterest rates at 0.5 per cent. H

    Anita Halpin is the Communist Partys tradeunion coordinator

    I want to join the Communist Party oPlease send me more information o

    Name

    Address

    e mail

    phone

    return to CPB Ruskin House

    23 Coombe Road Croydon CR0 1BD

    Join Britains party ofworking class power

    and liberation

    Stop the European Union, we want to get off

    Morning Stardaily paper of the left 1 from your newsagent

    www.morningstaronline.co.ukH

  • by Gerrard Sables

    The Tolpuddle Martyrs' Friendly

    Society of Agricultural Labourers was

    not the beginning of trade unionism in

    Britain even of agricultural trade

    unionism.

    The Lovelesss Friendly Society ofAgricultural Labourers emulated and used therites of the Grand National Consolidated TradeUnion set up by the Chartists. Sidney andBeatrice Webb describes the six as simple-minded Methodists. This Fabianpatronisation was to be repeated by GeorgeBernard Shaw in the TUC Tolpuddle centenarybook published in 1934. The six were dedicated, courageous and

    articulate members of their community as is

    normal for trade union activists. But lets putit in context. Three years prior to theindictment England had been racked by riotboth urban and rural and there had beenrevolutions throughout Europe. The judiciary reacted harshly. A seventeen

    year old Dorset lad was hanged for knocking aJPs hat off his head. But by 1832 the Duke of Wellington was

    complaining to Lord Melbourne that half theagricultural workers in Hampshire werepaying contributions to a trade union. Thesentence of seven years was ordered by anewly-appointed judge and the Tories backedhim up. The Grand National went into action. It was

    a trade union centre - an early version of theTUC which had rivals in the North of England.However the rivals joined forces in the

    campaign for the overturning of thejudgement. The Builders' Union; the Leeds,Huddersfield and Bradford District Union;the Clothiers Union; the Cotton-spinnersUnion and the Potters Union all sentdelegates to meet with the Grand National tohelp in the campaign. A quarter of a millionsignatures were collected. The Times put themarch in London (pictured) at 30,000 led byDr Arthur Wade Chaplain to the MetropolitanTrades Unions. It was the solidarity that we celebrate today.

    In 1834 despite their differences the tradeunion movement understood that they wereall in it together. Today we salute both theTolpuddle six and the solidarity of their fellowtrade unionists up and down the country. Gerrard Sables is the secretary of the NorthDevon Communist Party

    The roots of the Tolpuddle union

    by Carolyn Jones

    Earlier this year there was a Mudoch-

    led media furore when Len McCluskey

    raised the spectre of civil

    disobedience at the Olympics. Why?

    A cursory glance at the state of employmentrights and trade union freedoms highlights theextent to which these freedoms and access tojustice is systematically being shut down. Cuts to the legal aid system of 350 million;

    increasing the qualifying period for unfairdismissal from one year to two; proposals to endfacility time for trade union reps; exemptingsmall firms from dismissal regulation;compulsory conciliation before an ET can belodged; the introduction of protectedconversations and now proposals to chargeworkers for taking a case to tribunal. Workers are being systematically regulated

    out of the justice system and denied a collective

    voice at work. All at a time when they mostneed protection. So how exactly do those inpower (including Murdoch) expect workers andtheir unions to respond when failed austeritymeasures are eating away at jobs, pensions,standards of living and workplace rights? Cameron and his chums in the Cabinet may

    be sitting happy on their combined wealth ofnearly 70 million, with the Minister in chargeof the Olympics Jeremy Hunt sittingparticularly comfy on his reported 4.8 millionfortune. But for the rest of us, waving the flagat the Olympics wont pay the rent. Nor will itreverse the rush into economic policies thatmake the vulnerable pay for the arrogance ofthe rich and the misdeeds of the bankers.Workers need a legal framework that offers

    fairness at work, social justice and economicopportunities. If not, civil disobedience willgrow. We saw it during the Lindsey oil refinerydispute. We saw it again during the electricians

    dispute. We are seeing it daily throughoutEurope as workers resist failed austeritymeasures. Insecurity at work and fear of poverty may

    demoralise workers. But as Jack London wrotein Iron Heel there is a greater strength thanwealth....our strength, the strength of theproletariat....it is in our muscles, in our hands tocast ballots, in our fingers to pull triggers..... astrength stronger than wealth and that wealthcannot take away. We should heed the words of Joe Hill: .Workers of the world awaken; break your

    chains, demand your rights. All the wealth youmake is taken, by exploiting parasites.Shall you kneel in deep submission from your

    cradle to your grave?Is the height of your ambition to be a good

    and willing slave?Another world is possible and belongs to the

    many, not the few. HCarolyn Jones is director of the Institute forEmployment Rights

    Demand our rights at workOur History Tolpuddle special 1.50