Is that they are not strong enough. As Seamus Milne explains:
There's nothing that quite so reliably tips the British press into
paroxysms of abuse and class contempt as workers having the gall to
withdraw their own labour. Or even talking about going on strike, as has been happening at the Trades Union Congress in Brighton this week. All
the old tropes have been wheeled out in the last couple of days. These
are "mindless militants" and "professional whingers", according to the
Mail, the Sun and the Telegraph, determined to "drag Britain back into
the dark ages" and holding the public "hostage" as they "squeal like
stuck pigs".
You might imagine that years of pay freezes and real
pay cuts, attacks on pension entitlements and the loss of hundreds of
thousands of jobs – which is what the government has imposed on the
public sector – would be a reasonable basis for an industrial dispute
for any workforce. Add to that the fact that these cuts are being
made as part of an austerity programme opposed by most of the population
and spectacularly failing to revive the economy – and industrial action
is also an obvious mechanism to intensify the pressure for a change
of economic direction.
But as unions voted to back co-ordinated
strikes and explore the practicalities of a general strike – industrial
routine in other parts of Europe – the most polite criticism was they
were "out of touch". For the rest, these were union "boneheaded barons",
"pygmies" and "sullen" union "bosses" defending an outrageous (and
fictional) public sector largesse. Nearly 200 years after the repeal of the Combination Acts, Britain's corporate media and political class still struggle in practice to accept the right to strike. The
focus of the industrial campaign against austerity has now shifted from
pensions to pay, with teachers launching a work-to-rule and the
likelihood of wider action across public services in the spring. Whether
that will prove to be on the scale necessary to force a government
retreat is another question. But what is certain is that if workforces
don't resist, cuts in pay and jobs will be driven through.
Contrary
to the fantasies of anti-union propagandists, the real problem for the
British economy is not that unions are too strong, but that they have
long been far too weak. Between 1975 and 2007, the share of wages in
national income fell from 65% to 54%, while escalating inequality within
that smaller share has meant stagnating real wages for low and average
earners. A central factor in the shrinking slice of the economic
cake going to workers – which helped lay the ground for the crisis of
2007-8 by fuelling personal debt – has been the weakening of trade
unions, whose membership halved over the same period.
In fact, the fall in union numbers since the 1970s is an almost exact
mirror image of the increase in the share of income taken by the top
1% over the same period.
The shadow chancellor Ed Balls was heckled in Brighton
today for backing the coalition's public sector pay cap as a trade-off
for jobs and a token of Labour's fiscal discipline. But just as stronger
unions are essential for greater equality and a better balanced
economy, pay restraint now can only further deepen recession. If
unions are successful in resisting pay and job cuts, that would boost
demand and aid recovery – though it would also need the shift to a
public investment and growth strategy the government remains resolutely
opposed to. But public sector workers can't be expected to wait for a
Labour government or for the coalition to "understand why working people
are so unhappy", as Ed Miliband put it in Brighton.
And however
welcome the business secretary Vince Cable's conversion to an industrial
strategy for the sectors of the future, the half-baked business bank
George Osborne has allowed him doesn't begin to reflect the demands or
scale of such an investment programme. Meanwhile his scrapping of
health and safety regulations for small firms, as Tory leaders chafe at
the bit to dump more employment and union rights, is a warning of
threats to come. As the struggle over pay builds up, the government will
again try to isolate public service from private sector employees, who
are of course also suffering real terms pay cuts and large-scale job
losses.
Union weakness in the private sector – where only one in
seven workers is now a member, compared with the majority in the public
sector – is the product of decades of industrial change, fragmentation
and anti-union legislation. But a string of private sector strikes this
year – including on the buses, in construction and at Honda – has given a
taste of how that can be turned round. Success has depended on
bolstering industrial action with campaigns targeted at suppliers and
executives, as well as working with protest groups such as UK Uncut and
the Occupy movement. That is now likely to be extended to occupations
and other forms of direct action, if Unite's leader Len McCluskey has
his way. Such calls are regarded with horror by the
political and media class. But the business unionism and supine "social
partnership" they favour failed to protect jobs and living standards.
Employers and politicians trampled all over it. Which is why the trade
union movement now has its most radical leadership in modern times – and
its most progressive general secretary, Frances O'Grady.
A
generation after Thatcher's assault on the trade unions, they are still
treated as dangerous or embarrassing outsiders. In reality, they are
not only far and away the largest voluntary organisations in the
country, but now the only major area of public life where working class
people are properly represented. Their agenda on recovery, jobs,
services, inequality, privatisation, public ownership and the
democratisation of economic life is closer to where public opinion is
than the main parties' front benches – as Bill Clinton's former pollster
Stan Greenberg underlined this week with his finding that voters want "fundamental change" in the way the economy and country works. And
contrary to the way they are portrayed, unions are popular – as often
are the strikes they call. Last November's public service walkouts were
backed by almost 80% of young people.
As the Tories prepare a new legal straitjacket and Labour frets about
being seen as too close to the unions, their members will be at the
heart of the battle over who pays the cost of this crisis.
Great post. Was it Chesterton who said that capitalists pay workers like paupers but expect them to spend like princes? Unions help to solve that problem.
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