Forthcoming events

Every Saturday - Noon - 2pm - Bedford Square, Exeter - Socialist Party stall - Campaigning and there for discussion. We also have a range of literature ranging from this weeks 'The Socialist' to this month's 'Socialism Today', as well as books on Marxism, history, science, and international issues.

Every Tuesday - 7.30pm - Exeter branch meeting - email us for venue details - Organisational matters and planning ahead as well as discussion and debate.

Monday 19th January - Friday 13th February - USDAW Presidential election - Socialist Party member Robbie Segal is standing, and campaigning for a campaigning, democratic union. See www.robbiesegal.org for more details.

Tuesday 10th February - 7.00pm - North Devon Socialist Party branch meeting - G2 room, Barnstaple Library - Discussion of organisational issues, and debate on Darwin and evolution, introduced by JL.

Wednesday 11th February - 7.00pm - Fight For Jobs public meeting - Exeter Community Centre, St Davids Hill, Exeter - Called by Devon Socialist Party and Exeter Socialist Students, this meeting will be a chance to discuss the current economic crisis and how workers and youth can organise to protect jobs and living standards.

A more extensive calendar of events over 2009 will follow at the bottom of the page.

Thursday, 5 February 2009

Lindsey refinery: workers show their strength

Strikes repel attacks on jobs and conditions
Alistair Tice, Yorkshire Socialist Party, reporting from the Lindsey refinery strike

Shades of the miners' strike - mass protests, car park meetings, loud hailers that don't work. Not so much flying pickets as flying texts and emails leading to spontaneous unofficial walkouts and 'illegal' strike action. The anti-trade union laws have been brushed aside without a thought.

Each day brings news of more power plants and construction sites walking out. There's a feeling of: "We must strike while the iron's hot. Enough is enough. If we don't win this we'll be signing on for the rest of our lives."

Out of the frenzy of activity comes improvisation and initiative. National trade union leaders who were secretly holed up in a four-star hotel were tracked down and forced to accept strike committee representation in any negotiations.

So far we can't make direct contact with the Italian workers that have been bussed in and accommodated on a barge in Grimsby dock, rumoured to be a prison ship. They are fenced in by security. The strikers need to reach these workers and leaflets have been produced in Italian.

But an Italian TV station did an interview with strike committee members which will go out in Italy and be seen by the Italian workers on the ship.

There's massive anger against the companies like Total and subcontractors Jacobs and IREM. There's anger against the EU and their directives and court rulings but mostly against Gordon "Thatcher" and "On yer bike" Mandelson.

There's a real sense of betrayal by Labour. The BNP have been bounced off from this site and not been back. Yes, there are one or two union jacks and Brown's promise of "British jobs for British workers" is reflected in some home-made hand bills. But nearly all the strikers will tell you it's not about the foreign workers, it's about the national agreement. It's about jobs, pay and conditions, about trade union strength and stopping this race to the bottom.

The Lindsey oil refinery strike committee issued a call on Monday 2 February to spread the strike into an all-out strike to force the government and employers to concede the demands.

In the first meeting with the strike committee, Total said there would be no negotiations until the strike was called off and the workers returned to work. 48 hours later, on 4 February, they capitulated.

They initially conceded that UK workers could have 60 (40 skilled, 20 unskilled) workers on the IREM contract.

In addition some other concessions were promised. Socialist Party member Keith Gibson recommended rejection of the company's proposals to a mass meeting on behalf of the strike committee. The meeting discussed them for half an hour and overwhelmingly rejected them as not enough.

The company then made an offer which means half the jobs will be filled by UK workers, parity with IREM's own workforce. They have also agreed that all the workers will be paid according to the national agreement. The unions will be able to see the details, so they can ensure that national agreements are being complied with.

No Italian workers will be laid off, only 100 of whom are in Lindsey as yet. All the Italian workers are a core workforce for IREM so will still be employed by them.

So, as The Socialist goes to press, the strikers could be on the verge of a significant victory. The new proposals will be recommended by the strike committee to a mass meeting on 5 February.

But the strike committee know this is only the beginning of the campaign nationally. There's a meeting of the national shop stewards forum on 9 February to plan where to go from here. There's already a big demand for at least a march on parliament.

Socialist Party members and supporters have influenced the strike around a clear set of demands:

  • No victimisation of workers taking solidarity action.
  • All workers in UK to be covered by the NAECI agreement.
  • Union-controlled registering of unemployed and local skilled union members with nominating rights as work becomes available.
  • Government and employer investment in proper training/apprenticeships for the new generation of construction workers. Fight for a future for young people
  • All immigrant labour to be unionised.
  • Trade union assistance for immigrant workers, via interpreters, to give right of access to trade union advice - to promote active integrated trade union members.
  • Build links with construction trade unions on the continent
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Since this article was written, the workers at the site have agreed to a huge climbdown by the bosses, and as a result an extra 102 jobs will be created at the site, with the jobs for the migrant workers also secured. This victory is a testament to the action taken by the strikers, and also the impact of the solidarity of refinery and power station workers up and down Britain, including by Polish migrant workers at Langage Power Station.

This strike was about trying to undermine unionised labour with non-union labour, an employers dirty trick, aided by legislation put in place (and preserved) by neo-liberal governments in Britain and from the bosses representatives in the European Commission.

The only answer to these insults is workers unity, between workers at different sites, and between workers in different countries. We call for a socialist Europe, emphasising cooperation and collaboration between workers, and not used as a way of dividing workers as part of the 'race to the bottom'.

The Socialist Party, most notably Keith Gibson, a member of the strike committee, have at all times insisted that this was not about 'British Jobs for British Workers', a slogan used by many workers to point out the hypocrisy of Brown and Mandelson, but about 'Trade Union Jobs and Conditions For All'. The BNP sensed an opportunity, but were turned away with their tail between their legs.

When Keith Gibson ended an address to a mass meeting with 'Workers of the world unite' he was greeted with a big round of applause. However the media and other groups like to present this, this strike was a victory for the working class, in Britain and across Europe.

Across Europe, workers are standing up and saying 'Enough!'. Workers in Britain this past week have done the same, and set a tremendous example by smashing through the anti-trade union laws prohibiting secondary picketing in the process.

It doesn't end here!

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