Fight-back!
The only antidote to painful public-sector
cuts
The Con-Dem coalition
government is gearing up for a massive onslaught against the
public-sector in the autumn. Meanwhile, local councils are pushing
through harsh cutbacks in local services. This has to be met by
determined action by workers and working-class communities. HANNAH SELL
reports on preparations for the fight-back – with lessons drawn from the
struggle of Liverpool city council and the anti-poll tax campaign.
THERE IS NO alternative to
pain. This is the deafening drumbeat of the capitalist politicians and
media across Europe. In Britain the threatened cuts of 25% have not been
seen for over 80 years. If this government gets away with it, the clock
of history will be unwound with levels of poverty returning to those in
the 1930s.
But they will not get away
with it. This government is deluded if it imagines it will be able to
carry out its programme without meeting a tsunami of opposition. At the
moment, it is true that many workers feel petrified by what is coming,
and are hoping that, if they keep their heads down, they can avoid being
personally affected by the cuts. Opinion polls even show that a large
section of the population accepts the need for cuts. This is inevitable,
given the endless torrent of propaganda from the media and politicians
saying that cuts are vital. However, it is one thing to accept cuts in
the abstract – when it is your job, pension, school or hospital it is a
completely different matter. It will be when the reality of cuts bites
that mass opposition develops.
Similarly, in Greece, when
cuts were first announced the response of the working class was a
stunned silence but, very quickly, workers realised that there would be
no escape unless they succeeded in stopping the cuts programme. So far
in 2010 there have been six 24-hour general strikes as the Greek working
class tries to stop the government from carrying out its brutal cuts
package. This massive strike movement is only a beginning in Greece. The
government has not yet retreated but the working class is determined to
step up the struggle to stop the onslaught. If the movement continues to
grow it can win a significant victory, giving confidence to workers
throughout Europe, including Britain. In Spain, Portugal, Italy and
Ireland we have also seen mass strike movements. The governments of
Europe are currently united in their campaign to make the working class
pay for the economic crisis via vicious cuts. But, faced with a united
movement, they could all be forced to retreat.
Southern Europe will spread
to Britain. Understandably, many people at the moment can see the need
to fight back, but do not believe that others will join in. ‘We should
be more like the French or the Greeks’ is a common refrain. But workers
in Britain also have a proud tradition of struggle. Last time cuts were
carried out on this scale – with the infamous Geddes Report of 1922 – it
was an important factor in bringing about the nine-day long 1926 general
strike.
Militant struggle
TWENTY YEARS AGO, the Tory
prime minister, Maggie Thatcher – the Iron Lady – was reduced to iron
filings by a mass movement as 18 million people refused to pay the flat
rate tax (poll tax) that the Tories had introduced. That movement ended
the tax and brought down Thatcher. It was led by the Socialist Party
(then called Militant). Such was the burning anger at the tax that, even
if we had not existed, a mighty movement would have taken place against
it. Our role was to play a critical part in organising and giving
direction to the movement – which resulted in it being victorious. Today
again, despite the seeming calm at the moment, mass struggle is
inevitable and, with the right strategy, can be successful.
While it was the anti-poll
tax movement which is most remembered by the labour movement – not least
for claiming Thatcher’s scalp – it was not the only serious defeat that
was inflicted on her government by the working class. Essential
preparation for the poll tax was the struggle of Liverpool city council
– in which Militant also played the key part – and again showed the
power of the working class once it is mobilised in defence of its
interests.
From 1983-87 the Labour-led
Liverpool council fought against Tory government cuts. Militant
supporters, then the Marxist wing of the Labour Party, played a leading
role. For having the temerity to stand up to Thatcher we were vilified
by the leadership of the Labour Party. Yet, even if another dozen or so
Labour councils had taken the same stand, not only would the Tory
government have had to abandon its cuts packages, it would have been
swept from office.
Even though Liverpool was
isolated alongside Lambeth council, and under attack from all sides, it
was able to secure a major victory. In 1984 it won a ‘95% victory’ when
it extracted an extra £30 million in funding from the government. This
was not just a battle of the council but a struggle that engulfed the
entire city with demonstrations of 50,000 and more and city-wide
public-sector general strikes. Millions of workers across the country
supported the movement. The results of the Liverpool battle still stand
in bricks and mortar and include the building of over 5,000 council
houses, six new nurseries, six sports centres and four colleges.
Today, some have raised that
Labour councillors need to be involved in the anti-cuts campaigns. We
want the broadest possible campaign of those that are opposed to cuts,
not just in words but in deeds. Where this includes Labour councillors
we welcome their involvement. If any council was prepared to take the
‘Liverpool road’ and set a needs budget we would mobilise the biggest
possible movement in their support. This has always been our approach.
During the Liverpool battle we were prepared to carry out a major
compromise on the tactics of the struggle (by agreeing to set ‘no rate’)
in order to create a united front with other Labour councils led by such
figures as David Blunkett, Ken Livingstone and Margaret Hodge. In the
event, despite our united approach, they left the field of battle one
after the other.
Unfortunately today, the
chances of a Labour council being prepared to talk a good fight, never
mind conduct one, seem extremely remote. So far there is no Labour
council that has sided with the population and opposed the cuts. On the
contrary the axe-men in the government have handed out little axes to
Labour councillors and they are willingly wielding them.
Coventry’s Labour council is
typical, except that there is one Socialist Party councillor, Dave
Nellist, who is the lone voice against the cuts. Citing their ‘legal
obligation’, the council responded to the Tory/Lib Dem government’s
demand for £3.7 million worth of ‘mid-year savings’ by proposing cuts of
£4.5 million. This was the start of a gigantic £146 million in cutbacks
due over the next four years. Labour, Tory and Liberal Democrat
councillors all voted for the cuts package. To give another example, in
Waltham Forest, the Labour council put forward £37 million worth of cuts
over the next two and a half years. Cynically, the Liberal Democrats and
Tories voted against the cuts, leaving Labour to force the cuts through.
The contrast with the heroic stance of Liverpool council could not be
greater.
Role of a national demonstration
EVERY STRUGGLE HAS its own
characteristics. Neither the poll tax nor Liverpool is an exact model
for the battle against cuts that needs to be waged today. But the
lessons of those struggles will need to be learnt if we are to succeed
again.
The most basic lesson is also
the most important. Working-class people potentially have enormous
power. The seven million workers organised in trade unions represent a
potentially very powerful force to stop the cuts. By taking strike
action they could bring the country to a standstill. What is more, if a
political campaign to oppose the cuts was conducted – explaining how the
trade union movement was spearheading a campaign to defend public
services for the whole population – the trade unions could inspire and
mobilise much wider sections of the population.
The 20th century was full of
demonstrations of the power of the working class to win victories.
Unfortunately, they have not always been successful, in large part
because of failures of leadership. There was one general strike in
Britain in the 20th century – 1926. It failed only because of the
cowardice of the TUC leadership. The difference with the poll tax and
Liverpool was that the movements had a determined leadership armed with
a correct programme.
We argue for the first step
in the campaign against cuts to be a giant national demonstration,
mobilising hundreds of thousands or more against the cuts. This would
immediately raise the confidence of everyone who participated, preparing
the ground for the next stage of the struggle. There is no doubt that
the trade union movement could mobilise these kinds of numbers on this
issue. However, to do so would mean remembering the most basic lessons
of the poll tax, of Liverpool and of innumerable other struggles.
Organising a demonstration is not a matter of sending out an email and a
press release. A massive campaign is necessary, with millions of
leaflets, mass postering, workplace or gate meetings organised by every
trade union branch, coaches booked from every town and village.
Unfortunately, these most basic methods of building up a movement need
to be relearned in big sections of the trade union movement.
Of course, a demonstration is
only the beginning. For us it would act as a springboard for a one-day
public-sector strike followed by a 24-hour general strike if the
government does not retreat. However, an important aspect of
successfully prosecuting a struggle is to be able to recognise what
stage the movement is at, and what next step is therefore appropriate.
In Greece, our sister section is raising the need to extend the general
strikes. In Britain, where the cuts have not yet hit home, and battle is
not yet engaged, a massive national demonstration is an important first
step. Another factor is that different countries have different
traditions. General strikes, for example, are far more frequent in
Southern Europe than in most countries of Northern Europe, including
Britain. Given Britain’s history, even a 24-hour public-sector general
strike would terrify the government and the capitalist class and
enormously raise the confidence of the working class.

A programme for unity
ULTIMATELY EVEN MORE
important than the organisational measures required, is the programme
around which the struggle should be organised. Unity is strength, and
the role of Marxists is always to develop a programme which aims to
bring the working class – and those, numerous, sections of the middle
class who will also be hit – together into one powerful movement. This
was relatively straightforward in the campaign against the poll tax,
because the whole working class and many middle class families were
affected in the same way. Nonetheless, our programme strengthened and
consolidated the natural tendency to unity linking, for example, the
defence of public services to fighting the tax. Similarly in Liverpool
the council fought for extra money for services while opposing big rises
in the rates. The council also dramatically improved the pay and
conditions of its workforce explaining clearly to the wider working
class that high quality public services require decently paid staff.
Only this approach – showing different sections of the working class and
middle class their common interest – enabled both struggles to be
successful.
The coming movement will be
bigger in scope even than the poll tax. But the potential for greater
divisions exists – between public- and private-sector workers, old and
young, unemployed and employed. To cut across those potential divisions
it is essential that the movement does not allow one section to be
played off against another. We have to explain to private-sector workers
that ‘cushy’ public-sector pensions are a myth. For example, excluding
the very highest earners, the average civil service pension is £4,200 a
year – hardly cushy! Nor are public-service workers on fat salaries: 80%
of civil servants earn less than £30,000 a year and admin officers are
paid 21% less than people doing comparable jobs in the private sector.
We have to explain that cuts
in so-called ‘backroom staff’ will lead to devastating cuts in the
‘frontline’ services delivered. For example, civil service cuts over the
last five years have led to 2,000 offices closing. It is a myth that
excessive bureaucracy, rather than underfunding, is the main cause of
inadequate public services. If the cuts are carried out services will
not be ‘leaner and meaner’, they will be starved virtually out of
existence.
We have to argue for
opposition to all cuts in public services. We do not favour saving one
hospital over another or cutting wages in order to save a local library.
Down this road defeat lies. Only a determined and united movement will
be able to stave off the onslaught that is coming. Weakness invites
aggression. The ‘concession bargaining’ of the majority of the trade
union leaders over the last 20 years – accepting some pain in the hope
of staving off another attack – has never worked and will be disastrous
over the coming years.
Of course, that does not mean
that there is no waste in public services. After 30 years of cuts,
privatisation and marketisation the public sector is already in a pretty
sorry state. We favour kicking the profit-hungry private companies out
of our public services. We oppose council and health trust chief
executives taking home £200,000 plus salaries. But this money should not
be cut from the public sector but be redistributed to help fund our
overstretched public services. The best way to prevent bureaucracy is
not to make cuts but to take control of public services out of the hands
of overpaid unelected chief executives and give it to democratically
elected committees that include representatives of the workforce and
service users. The central slogans for the struggle need to be: ‘We will
not pay for the crisis’; ‘No to all cuts: Defend all jobs and services’.
Build ‘anti-cuts unions’
UNITING THE MOVEMENT will
need to have an organisational, as well as a political form. In both
Liverpool and the poll tax Militant played a key political role.
Contrary to the slurs against us by the capitalist media, however, our
political leadership was not imposed on the movement or carried out by
sleight of hand. On the contrary, we won the political arguments in the
democratic organisations which were organising the struggle, within
which we were in a minority. Both in the anti-poll tax unions and the
Liverpool District Labour Party (which would be attended by 500 plus
delegates – unimaginable in today’s moribund New Labour) tactics and
strategy were discussed and debated at every stage of the struggle.
Such democratic workers’
organisations take different forms in different struggles. They reached
their highest level in history in the workers’ councils (soviets) that
led the Russian revolution of 1917. While not on that level, in any mass
struggle there is a tendency for democratic organising bodies to develop
that can play a vital role in leading the struggle.
Today, the Socialist Party is
at the forefront of establishing ‘anti-cuts unions’ which are
mushrooming up around the country. In most areas they involve
representatives from local trade unions, tenants’ associations,
pensioners’ organisations, Youth Fight for Jobs groups and others.
Currently, these campaigns are disparate, with different names and
different structures in different towns. This is an inevitable first
stage of the campaign but, before long, it will be necessary to bring
them together into some kind of national structure.
The same process took place
during the building of the anti-poll tax movement. At first, the local
campaigns in Scotland, where the poll tax was first introduced and the
campaign began, were disparate without any central co-ordination. Then,
at our initiative, in the West of Scotland 96 community organisations
and anti-poll tax campaigns were brought together to found the
Strathclyde Anti-Poll Tax Federation, under the slogan ‘can’t pay –
won’t pay’. Later the same idea was repeated across Britain. There were
2,000 delegates at the conference which founded the All-Britain
Anti-Poll Tax Federation in November 1989.
To take on and defeat a
government requires a nationally co-ordinated movement. However, it will
not work for a few individuals to declare that they have founded the
national anti-cuts movement. What will be necessary, again as in the
poll tax, will be the coming together of the struggles on the ground to
form a democratic national body with weight and authority.
The priority in the immediate
period is to build the authority and roots of the local campaigns. The
issues they will concentrate on campaigning on will vary. For many the
immediate issue is the huge cuts being carried out by local councils,
often Labour-led. In London, compulsory redundancies in the fire service
are going to be a huge issue unless management retreats. The anti-cuts
unions will need to take up each individual campaign, including
mobilising support for industrial action by the public-sector trade
unions – fire-fighters, transport workers, teachers, civil servants
and/or local authority workers. At the same time, they will need to link
the individual campaigns to the slogan ‘no to all cuts’. Many of the
methods of the anti-poll tax unions and of Liverpool council will apply.
Regular public meetings, protests, demonstrations, window bills and
badges declaring membership of the anti-cuts unions, all these methods
and more will be used.
The PCS civil service union
is currently having a campaign of lobbying Liberal MPs to demand that
they oppose the ripping up of civil servants’ redundancy rights. This
kind of actions, appealing not so much to MPs’ better nature as to their
fear of losing their seats, can also be an important aspect in general
mass campaigning.
The anti-cuts campaigns will
need to exert particular pressure on the ‘little axe-men and women’ to
whom the government has given the task of implementing cuts. Every
council meeting that is implementing cuts should face mass lobbies from
local anti-cuts bodies demanding that they refuse to carry out the cuts
and instead put forward a ‘needs budget’. This demand does not only
apply to councils but also, for example, to school governors who are
proposing that their school becomes an academy, or the vice-chancellors
executive groups of universities that are planning to close departments.
In every case we should aim to conduct mass campaigns explaining the
alternative to accepting the role of butchering public services.
Solidarity should be offered to those who are prepared to stand firm
against the cuts, while making it clear that they will face a determined
mass opposition if they take on the role of butcher.
Political representation
GIVEN ALL THE capitalist
politicians’ support for cuts, the question of a political alternative
to the axe-men is bound to emerge during the anti-cuts campaigns. For
some, the question of achieving political representation for the working
class may be seen as a problem for a later day. Nonetheless, there will
be a growing demand for workers to have their own anti-cuts, socialist
candidates. Closely following the poll tax victory, Tommy Sheridan stood
in Glasgow Pollok in the 1992 general election as Scottish Militant
Labour (then the name of our sister organisation in Scotland). He had
never stood in a general election before and yet received 6,287 votes –
18% of the total. Six Scottish Militant Labour councillors were elected
in the same period. Had we stood candidates in England and Wales during
the anti-poll tax movement, there is no doubt we could have had similar
successes.
It is not possible to predict
exactly how the anti-cuts movement will find a political voice. However,
the ground has already been partially prepared. The Trade Unionist and
Socialist Coalition (TUSC) – involving the Socialist Party, other
socialists and, crucially, an important layer of militant trade
unionists – stood in 41 seats in the general election. Over the next
period we believe that TUSC can come into its own and, as a part of the
anti-cuts movement, can act as a catalyst for the development of a new
mass party of the working class.

Role of the trade unions
THATCHER MADE ANOTHER major
error in the poll tax movement. She confused the lily-livered attitude
of the leadership of the workers’ movement for the attitude of the
working class as a whole. There is no doubt that David Cameron & Co are
making the same mistake again. Before the general election, Tory Philip
Hammond, then shadow treasury secretary, said there would be no mass
trade union protest under a Tory government, as union leaders were only
doing their job when they "came out and rattled their sabres" at the TUC
congress. Behind the scenes, he said, the shadow cabinet had established
"cordial relations" with them.
Unfortunately, it is all too
likely that the majority of trade union leaders see the best way of
defending their members against the government as establishing ‘cordial’
– that is, supine – relations with it. This was also the case when
Thatcher came to power. Her government responded to the trade union
leaders’ friendly overtures by launching an onslaught on the union
movement and workers’ rights.
If the whole of the trade
union movement, from top to bottom, was to launch a serious struggle
against the cuts it would be impossible for the government to implement
its programme. However, the experience of the poll tax demonstrates that
we cannot rely on the trade union leadership to provide such a lead. As
today, trade union activists played a crucial role in the struggle. But,
at national level, opposition to the poll tax remained in words, and was
never translated into action.
This is not explained away
because taxation is not directly a ‘workplace issue’. A large element of
the Tories’ aim in introducing the tax was to undermine democratically
elected local councils and pave the way for the privatisation of public
services. This had hugely detrimental consequences for local authority
workers. It was in the interests of every public-sector trade unionist
to make sure the poll tax was defeated. Unfortunately, however, when it
came to organising mass non-payment, not just as an idea but in
practise, the leadership of the trade union movement ran a mile. Nor was
it prepared to put the case for non-collection of the tax by
public-sector workers. At one stage, the Scottish TUC proposed an
eleven-minute strike but that was the limit of the action it was willing
to call! It was left to the Militant, alongside other trade unionists
and socialists, to lead the struggle for mass non-payment of the poll
tax.
Since that time there has
been an increased tendency in the leadership of the trade union movement
towards accepting the ‘logic of the market’ – that is, the logic of
cutting workers’ pay and conditions! Many trade union leaders have
become used to administering defeat rather than leading a struggle to
defend their members’ interests. This is the role the leadership of the
Irish trade union movement played in the first round of the struggle
against cuts at the end of 2009. Faced with pay cuts for public-sector
workers of between 15% and 19% the Irish TUC was under enormous pressure
to call action, and it did call a 24-hour public-sector general strike
which was fantastically supported.
Far from using it to lead a
serious struggle, however, the ITUC leaders merely hoped to bring the
government back into talks. When that failed they put forward the
treacherous proposal that public-sector workers take two weeks extra
unpaid leave each year – in reality, a major pay cut. Inevitably, this
self-inflicted defeat has led to bitterness and anger, and a certain
temporary demoralisation among Irish trade unionists. But it is not the
end of the story. The cuts are continuing and a second round of struggle
will develop. At the same time, a new generation is beginning to learn
from the experience and draw conclusions about the need to get organised
in the unions to fight for them to act in their interests.
These experiences do not mean
we ignore the official structures of the movement. In the battle against
cuts today the trade unions are likely to play a more central role than
during the poll tax, because the struggle to prevent cuts in the
workplaces will be so central – against job losses, pay freezes, and the
smashing of public sector pensions. But even in the poll tax struggle,
while largely ‘unofficial’ due to the abdication of the trade union
leaders, nonetheless, at every stage, trade unionists did all they could
to pressure their national leaderships to act.
Generalised action
IN ADDITION TO the local and
sectional strikes which are already developing as workers fight to stave
off the particular attacks they face in their sector or locality,
generalised action will also be needed. The anti-trade union laws will
be raised as an obstacle to this. The most repressive in the European
Union, and left intact by New Labour, there is no doubt that they
complicate the situation. However, even with the existence of these
laws, it would be possible to co-ordinate the sectional action that
different unions will be taking in order to create a serious step
towards a public-sector strike. It will be necessary to go further,
however. In reality, if all public-sector unions defied the anti-trade
union laws to take simultaneous strike action, the government would be
powerless to stop them and, in the process, the anti-trade union laws
would be broken asunder.
There are unions which have
fighting left leaderships, such as the RMT and PCS. They have a vital
role to play, not only in leading the struggle of their own members, but
by acting as a poll of attraction to galvanise the trade union movement
as a whole. But, even in the most right-wing led trade unions, in the
end it is the members who are their power source, and whose dues that
pay the leaderships’ wages. Even the most right-wing union leaders have
been forced to lead action under pressure from their members. Feeling
the pressure of his members, Dave Prentis, Unison general secretary, has
promised that the government "won’t know what has hit them" if it
attacks the public sector, and that Unison is "ready to fight". This is
to be welcomed. We need to build the widest possible alliance against
the cuts. However, it will be in practise that the fighting talk of Dave
Prentis will be tested.
The most effective pressure
on the trade union leadership is to show that a mass movement is
possible by starting to build one. Today, initiatives like the National
Shop Stewards Network (NSSN) lobby of the TUC Congress – demanding it
leads a real fight-back against the cuts – play an important role not
only in putting pressure on TUC leaders but also in giving confidence to
workers that a movement is possible. The NSSN, which has been
successfully linking together militant trade unionists for four years,
is likely to come into its own as a means of co-ordinating the workplace
fight against the cuts.
At the same time, there will
be stages where the community campaigns – against cuts and closures in
local services – will lead the way and help to give confidence to the
workforce to fight back.
With a correct strategy it is
possible for the working class to succeed in forcing this brutal Con-Dem
government to retreat from its cuts programme. This would be an historic
victory, which would have an immeasurable impact in lifting confidence
for future battles, including the struggle for working-class political
representation.