Royal Mail declares war on the CWU

30,000 scabs: Royal Mail declares war on the CWU
Workers Power statement on postal strike – 18 October 2009

Royal Mail has announced its intention to hire 30,000 temps to work through the strike, refuse to talk seriously and even derecognise the CWU. But an all-out indefinite strike, backed up with solidarity action, can halt the bosses and the Labour government in their tracks more…

Labour to the rescue!!

Billy Hayes has led a last ditch attempt to defend the Labour link, submitting a CWU motion to Labour’s September conference for the government to take “immediate steps to take responsibility for” the Royal Mail pension deficit, possibly as high as £20 billion thanks to the government’s 13 year pension holiday in the 1990′s and the fact it was all invested on the stock market!

The resolution was unanimously supported, while Brown in an earlier speech gave (pretty vague) support to the idea of a Post Office People’s Bank.

While Billy and the other Labourites in the party are toasting each other over this great victory for our union, there is a problem. The unions have for a few years now put resolutions to Labour Party conference on worthwhile working class issues – privatisation, council housing and last year what would have been a popular windfall tax on utilities. Labour ministers are then wheeled out to inform journalists that the government will ignore the vote and continue with its current policies!

This reached a low point when the 2008 Labour Party conference passed a statement that it supported “a vision of a wholly publicly-owned, integrated Royal Mail Group”. Only four months later Brown and Mandy were gunning for privatisation before the ink was even dry on the Hooper report! It’s clear that Labour promises are not worth the paper they are printed on.

The government is unlikely to take on the huge pension deficit, when it is trying to outcompete the Tories in cuts. But hard-hitting industrial action that defeats Royal Mail would directly threaten the government with such a crisis that it could be forced to follow through on the pension “commitment”. Founding a new anti-capitalist party could pile on the pressure too – then Labour couldn’t take the workers’ vote for granted!

Glasgow and Scotland stand up to management bullies again

For the last two weeks unofficial strikes have swept through Scotland as drivers have refused to cross picketlines – guess they didn’t get the ten letters from Billy Hayes instructing us not to do exactly that. Management’s attempts to punish them, sending them home and suspending pay, saw the Glasgow mail centre walkout first with up to 14 offices following suit on Friday 18 September, and again on the Monday. Then the action spread to Edinburgh as workers walked out in the South East delivery office last Friday over managers sending a driver home for…refusing to cross the Sighthill Mail Centre’s official picketlines (when will they ever learn).

Then again on this Monday Sighthill walked out over management’s unagreed changes.  Managers tried to force drivers to cross their picketlines for missorts!!  As one worker said “There was only maybe 1,000 pieces of mis-sorted mail to be collected. The managers could’ve collected it themselves but they were trying to force the drivers to cross the picket line and they wouldn’t do it.”

Serves these pumped up little dictators right for throwing their weight around.  After all if they’re so desperate to keep up their quality stats why don’t they just fiddle the books like a normal Royal Mail manager!

Glasgow refused to obey instructions to cross picketlines in 2007 too, sparking mass walkouts down to the North of England in their defence, forcing Royal Mail to back down on victimisations.   Posties everywhere should take a line out of the Glasgow play book, and refuse to “work normally”, whether on strike or no, if it means handling strike mail or crossing picketlines.