Having a few miles on the clock, sadly I can remember the winter of discontent in 1978 plus all the industrial strife of the 1960's through to the middle 80's. In the end the Unions were largely tamed, much legislation was introduced to curtail strike action.
I don't like seeing living standards reduced, pensions being eroded. On the other hand many if not most in the private sector will have experienced both. When I read of Union bosses claiming they have widespread public support, I wonder if they aren't making the same mistake that Scargill and co made in the 70's and 80's. In the end public sympathy was undermined by the affect the strikes had on peoples day oto day lives.
I can remember countless rail strikes and walk outs. They had the opposite affect to perhaps what the Unions planned and the general public to a large degree became unsympathetic - voted for Thatcher and the Tories in greater numbers.
I am absolutely in favour of working groups striking if they have to, but the co-ordination of indefinite strikes that is being suggested is a huge gamble which may not pay off.
Any thoughts?
Comments
Like many people I sympathise with the argument that public sector workers are being penalised while the banks who caused much of the economic problem get tax-payer bail outs and still manage to pay themselves huge bonuses.
It is unfair but striking will not help and it will not obtain public support.
Unions can strike all they like but it won't alter the fact that the public sector is too big and too expensive and that UK plc is skint and there is no money left in the kitty to pay for it.
We often think of the public sector as over-worked and dedicated nurses, doctors, police officers, firemen and teachers but what about all the nappy co-ordinators, stake-holder liason managers, diversity co-odinators, strategy champions, climate change officers and the rest of the jobsworths having meetings with each other and sending emails justifying their existence?
Not to mention pompous senior managers on vast salaries and gold plated pensions building bureacratic empires at our expense.
The NHS is the largest public sector organisation in the world behind the Chinese PLA. Not everyone is employed as a front line medical worker. Anyone who uses it knows that too often it is characterised by superb front line medical staff surrounded by an army of cretins with clipboards. The inefficiency and waste is just breathtaking.
When Greece and Ireland have defaulted on their sovereign debts, the Euro implodes and your mortgage payments have just doubled overnight and your house halved in value a few strikes from bolshy train unions still in 1960's time warp will be pretty irrelevent anyway.
The private sector "ordinary workers" as opposed to "fat cats" are often worse off than "ordinary" public sector workers in that they do not have company pensions of any sort and have to work longer than their equivalents in the public sector.
They will be the people inconvenienced by strike action so are unlikely to be too sympathetic.
On the other hand public sector worker will no doubt sympathise with fellow public sector worker.
Why should the Unions seek public support? The public have voted in the Condems and thats that. Surely the point of a strike is to show what happens if those particular workers are not working.
Maybe the real issue is about public services, and if they can be paid for at the going rate, or if they are desired by society.
Many will say 'easy, privatise everything', especially when refuse workers don't work and rubbish piles high on street corners. Then again, the privatised Southern Cross organisation, and indeed the financial institutions who recklessly threw money about in previous years are not good examples of privatisation are they?
On a moral level, unless we have slavery nobody can be forced to work can they? If somebody withdraws their labour that is their choice, and they have to deal with any consequences.
Back to the public services issue and how much they cost, someone once said 'if motorways cost a million pounds a mile to make, then you get half a mile for half a million squids'.
The PCS action is not about asking for anything more it is about protecting what is already in place.
If any employee has their terms and conditions changed they have a right to disagree. Just because other people have their employment messed with and have to accept it, it does not make it right.
One way to show you are unhappy is to strike . This is a legal right (as far as I am aware) and is a democratic method to get your point across.
Support your public services otherwise you will all be paying extra for things you now take for granted.
They have because staff have been made redundant or pay freezes have been imposed or, the most recent "reason", is that a tube driver has been sacked for being abusive! This has happened in the private sector and there have been plenty of individuals on this site who have spoken about it.
Both governments have been guilty of spending on undeserving areas but the banking collapse would have been bailed out by both sides as we have no manufacturing base to fall back on. Unlike the nineties. There is precious little to be privatised to boost the economy and too severe cuts will plunge us into long recession. Grovel to keep your jobs and keep doing the lottery, pray for trickle-down.
striking against the wrong government, the reason the country is in this shit state was caused by the party which was meant to represent the unions, we all need tro cut back we all need to work harder for longer hours, i had a final salary pension that i have paid into for 18 years and it was going to be my nest egg that al got frozen and changed to an index linked, i didnt like it but i understood, i didnt want it to happen, but i tollerated it.
its up to me to look after me and mine no one else
going on strike aint going to help fix this mess
and i am a fully paid up member of unite and have been my whole working life i just feel at this time it aint about what they are saying it is, its about forcing an election and uising the strikes as a way to gain public opinion.
if it works this is a more gullable country than i ever imagined
I'm in the public sector and have paid into a pension for 25 years, I've had a pay freeze for the last 2 years and pay in 11% a month of my salary into a public sector pension scheme to which i have planned my life and retirement around. some public sector workers and our lovely friend from Westminster pay in zero or alot less than me. if they up everyones to 11% then i'll be happy as thats fair to me, if they now want me to pay in more, work longer and earn the same as i have for the last 2 years they can sit on it.
If they wish to take on all the public sector workers ie, prison officers, teachers, dustmen, firefighters, ambulance, HSE and NHS just to name a few good luck to them. a winter of discontent.......you bet !!!
The only thing that will cause strikes are touching pensions, leave them alone and dont send 600 million a year overseas if you need to save money !!
The problem bein g Ken that they are not striking over the welfare state its a sham a front, their striking because the tories got in nothing more nothing less,
when i was at school i was constantly told by my grandfather, get a pension as soon as you leave school, work hard no matter what job you get, find happiness in taking pride in what you do then no matter what job you get youll be able to walk with your head held high.
i work in the private sector i am paid for 37 hours aweek and i do 50 -60 in return i earn less than some may think that a company the size of the one i work for offers its mgmt,
i do feel sorry for those like VM above its not a nice place to find yourself and believe me if i lost my job i wouldnt have a hope of getting another one, i did shit at school havent got a real grade to my name, in the pool of unemployed i wouldnt even get to the surface in any real role that interested me.
but i would clean shit out of toilets and off kerbs if that was all that was on offer and id doit for as many hours a day as needed, get the shit scum back into work doing jobs that pays them the same as what they get for sitting in the park, in their 100 quid trainers and their designer tops,
and then see where the countries at
all of you that are working hard to pay for scum that have never lifted a finger in their lives, strike against those tossers and every single right minded person would be 100% behind you
the countries fukd lets all try to help by working our way out of it
I don't have a lot of sympathy for these people I'm afraid. I'm self employed and I don't have ANY pension at all, yet my business has shrunk by around 25% since the recession, and I didn't cause the banking crisis either. Unfortunately we all have to pay for what's happened in some way, and some people will pay more than others and of course it won't always be fair.
The financial sector propped up this country for too long, and instead of looking at ways to boost private enterprise, the last government just threw money into the public sector and created jobs that we didn't need and benefits that people didn't deserve to make their unemployment figures look better.
I also get the distinct feeling that the unions are just as interested in making the Conservatives look bad as they are in representing the best interests of their members.
my brother in law works in the public sector on more than 65K a year he is in charge of a department, has the same budget as me looks after the same amount of people, with similar respoinsibilites, he used to work in the private sector and doubled his salary when he left to join the council. he cant believe the wastage, yet rightly so is happy enough to take his cut (looking after him and his family first priority).
this wastage was bought in by labour, the banks absolutely ruined the country with its risk taking, we have uncontrolled imagration which has resluted in numerous people being allowed in and poncing off of us, we have 3rd and now 4th genertaions of english people that feel it is their right never to work, and yet not one union has ever done anything to stop this and help us all
And to think Gordon Brown was known as the frugal chancellor. He has a lot to answer for with regard to the absolute chaos and mayhem he's left behind for the encumbent administration to try and clear up.
It's always the poor mugs 'in the middle' that suffer the most. And that's not going to change over the next two or three years.
Some good points raised on this issue, some absolute tosh.
How people live with such awful narrow views which in their minds are 100% accurate is beyond me.
I am in the sh*t and so then should you be is a strange attitude in my opinion.
Neither is it true that pensions are going to get more expensive, recent reforms are now kicking in making them considerably cheaper. Again, according to the Hutton Report the projected cost of public sector pensions as a percentage of GDP is now on a downward trend and is on course to drop from 1.9% now to 1.4% by 2060. So what is the cost of public sector pensions? Currently it stands at about £32bn per year. This might seem a lot, until you consider that according to The Treasury paper Tackling Tax Avoidance published in March this year the Tax Gap stands at around £40bn per annum. It is also a spit in the ocean compared to the £1.3trillion (yes TRILLION) bail out of UK banks whilst the biggest banker of them all, Fred Goodwin, gets an annual pension of £700k+.