Ellie Mae O'Hagan writes:
I went to the biggest event on the trade union calendar, the Durham Miners' Gala, last weekend [I met her, and she was very impressive]. Notably absent among the brass
bands, ale and working-class politics were the columnists furnishing us with
their opinions on unions just a week earlier.
These commentators were also
lacking during last year's GMB, PCS and Unite conferences (and I should know –
I went to all three), where general union policy is decided. I am also informed
that not a single pundit has requested an invitation to any union's forthcoming
regional, national or area activist committee.
I've always been mystified by the media's willingness to publish commentary
on the labour movement by people who have barely been to so much as a branch
meeting. When I've queried this troubling practice to journalist friends, they
often lament that it can't be helped because union structures are just
"too complicated" to try to get to grips with.
That's interesting,
because I've never seen a Financial Times reporter write a shoddy article about
the markets and then justify it by saying, "it's not my fault, it's the
FTSE 100 – it's just too hard!". We don't see articles on morning sickness
by Will Hutton;
Liz Jones doesn't get commissioned to talk about EU trade
agreements, so why is it acceptable for columnists to opine about trade unions
when they don't show the slightest interest in understanding them?
Now that Len McCluskey (full disclosure – I work for Unite) has given an interview to Patrick Wintour in the Guardian, I am sure these
writers will once again leap towards giving us the benefit of their latest
thoughts on the matter. I can summarise every article right here: "Of
course we all like unions in principle, but isn't it uncouth when they actually
try to do something?"
See, I'm not writing this because I want to talk about the Falkirk row. Enough has been said about that and I am sure you,
dear reader, have formed your own opinion already. But I do want to talk about
how said row has brought up certain hostilities towards trade unions in the
public sphere, which are by no means restricted to the right wing.
Anyone who
has any involvement with trade unions knows that their lifeblood is the
millions of members and activists that keep the movement going, but all we ever
hear about in the press, and from many politicians, are the "bosses"
and "barons" at the top (and I must say it is highly amusing to hear
Tories, whose party contains actual barons, using that word pejoratively).
The purpose of these words is not just to imply that union leaders are
controlling; it's to make what little power unions do have (and believe me,
it's a lot less than David Cameron suggests) seem illegitimate. "Bosses" and
"barons" are both words that suggest unaccountable autocratic power,
not democratically elected leaders. The phrase "union bosses"
conjures up images of mafioso bruisers: self-made men who have come to power
through nefarious means and can't be trusted.
In a way, the Falkirk row became
so prominent because it fitted a narrative the press already likes to push when
it comes to trade unions: they're full of dodgy geezers. When trade unions are
being quiet, there's room for a ceasefire between them and the media, but as
soon as they try to exert influence, the old clichés of dinosaurs, bosses and
barons swiftly reassert themselves. Aren't these union bosses lacking in
decorum? It's all very well that they want more rights, but shouldn't they
leave grown-up politics to the PPE graduates?
At the end of the day, trade unions aren't interesting to the media because
working-class politics aren't interesting to the media – largely because so few
people in the media are actually working class. The lack of interest, bordering
on contempt, towards unions simply reflects the wider marginalisation of
working-class issues in the public sphere.
Of course, you'll find commentators and politicians agreeing that there
should be legislative changes to protect working-class people (ie, that
working-class people should be dependent on the goodwill of the elite), but you
can forget any support for the working class as soon as it starts standing up
and demanding rights; as soon as it refuses to be totally deferential to a
professional class that thinks it knows best.
Whatever the ins and outs of the
Falkirk row, it started with Unite's belief that there were not enough
working-class people in public life. How funny that the fallout has only served
to underline how unwelcome those people actually are.
You've omitted the biggest story about Unite this week.
ReplyDeleteLen McCluskey's revelation that, were his members to be asked to individually "opt-in" to financing Labour (as Miliband proposes) rather than being automatically taxed, he says fewer than 10% would take up the offer!
As he put it..."our members are not queuing to join, or be associated with the Labour party".
The political levy is, as Peter Hitchens writes, pure robbery to keep alive a Labour corpse (which Thatcher rescued from death in 1983) and which would have died long ago without this scandalous 'opt-out' tax.
Oh and, of course, the media's critical reportage of the unions has nothing to do with hatred of the working class (this sounds like the delusional rants of one of those poor Marxist Media Studies 'lecturers').
If Red Len gets his estimated £63 billion shopping list, who would be paying for it?
Certainly not the rich with their professional accountants.
It would be the working-class taxpayer, that's who.
Red Len is a reverse Robin Hood, planning to rob the poor so as to fund his friends.
Oh, and the allegation is that Unite paid for people to join Labour without their knowledge to influence candidate selection.
That's rather alot more than "seeking to involve themselves in the political process".
Drop the mealy-mouthed stuff Lindsay, it doesn't suit you.
That's not a story at all, never mind a big one. What next, the existence of Short Money? Oh, do grow up!
ReplyDeleteThere have been eight Tory Prime Ministers since the move to opting out, and none of them, beginning with Churchill, has ever attempted to change it, even though in the first seven cases that would have bankrupted the Labour Party outright, while the persistence of opting in has prevented the emergence of a Labour Party in Northern Ireland.
There is something about this that just cannot be done. I cannot quite see what that is. But it obviously exists. Forget about it. It is never going to happen.
The story was that Thatchers manifesto promised to change it and, with a big majority and Labour at its weakest, she had her best chance.
ReplyDeleteThe Tories wanted to save Labour, for the same reason famous pollster Peter Kellner told Peter Hitchens Labour wants to keep the Tories alive.
Because both parties fear what would replace the collapse of their opponent-in Labour's case, Kellner said the Tories continued existence is essential as a bulwark against a truly conservative party that would steal Labours votes and wipe it into the sea.
You call that a story? The tiny number of people who might not have known it implicitly could nevertheless have worked it out without difficulty.
ReplyDeleteAnd it still doesn't account for Churchill, Eden, Macmillan, Douglas-Home, Heath, Major or Cameron.
There is something about this that just cannot be done. I am not yet quite sure what that something is. I am not even saying that this is a good thing, necessarily. But it is perfectly obvious that such is the case.
It can be done but the British people have to make it happen.
ReplyDeleteBack when the expenses scandal broke, there was revolution in the air for a brief moment.
Everyone could see we were ruled by a corrupt money-grabbing political class.
We need something similar to turn the few remaining voters against these parties.
Eight Tory Prime Ministers have found some reason not to attempt this, even though it would have bankrupted the Labour Party more or less overnight.
ReplyDeleteSo that reason is obviously there. Meaning that even if Miliband wants this, then Cameron won't let him have it. And after 2015, why bother?
I am not necessarily saying that opting in is a bad idea. But there is clearly something about it that just cannot happen. Ask the Tories, going all the way back over 60 years and more, to Churchill.
Opting in is a bad idea for you-since you are a member of the Labour Party, and presumably (for some reason I can't possibly imagine) want to save it.
ReplyDeleteI agree it's hot air from Miliband-of course he won't do it.
Why doesn't Cameron do it for him?
ReplyDeleteWell, there you are, then.
If this could be done at all, then it would have been done 60 years ago.