Determined BA cabin crew ready to reballot
Industrial action by BA cabin crew is in the final block of five days. BA chief Willie Walsh may have imagined back in November there would be a quick sprint to victory for management. In reality this dispute has turned into a marathon.
Neil Cafferky
Every strike day produces big crowds at the strike HQ at Bedfont football ground. Day after day the efficient picketing rota system means cabin crew are well placed to outlast management.
Despite BA's much hyped contingency plans, it is clear Walsh has underestimated the determination of cabin crew to defend their union.
Another piece of management hype that has taken a beating during the course of this dispute is the idea that Walsh is a skilled negotiator.
Rather than engage in serious negotiations, Walsh has only ever played three cards: intimidate the workforce into scabbing on cabin crew, blame Bassa (the main cabin crew union branch) for a failure to reach an agreement and run to the courts to overturn democratic strike ballots.
Hopefully an agreement that protects the interests of cabin crew can be reached by the end of the current round of strikes. However given the kamikaze determination of Walsh to destroy the union this seems unlikely. Now that the 12 week window of strike action allowed under the anti-trade union laws is closing, Unite are correct to reballot for further strike action. Judging from discussions on the picket lines, another majority in favour of strike action seems very likely.
The demonstration in support of the strike called by Unite at Heathrow on 9 June is a good initiative and will help to spread support.
Cabin crew have shown time and again that they have the stomach for a protracted battle with management. The reballot will give the crew time to consider ways of shortening this dispute. It is of critical importance to campaign to extend it beyond cabin crew to other parts of the company.
The new conditions Walsh has introduced into any new deal, such as changes to the 1948 Redeployment Agreement and renegotiating trade union facility time are changes that will affect every worker and trade unionist at the company.
A call for no changes to the Redeployment Agreement could be the basis for other sections of the BA workforce to move to 'failure to agree' and begin preparing for strike action.
A good start would be for cabin crew to invite all trade union reps across the company to a meeting to discuss defending terms and conditions and combating intimidation of union activists. In this way workers at BA can present a united front in the face of BA management. There is no contingency plan of Willie Walsh's that can deal with that.
Why not click here to join the Socialist Party, or click here to donate to the Socialist Party.
In The Socialist 9 June 2010:
National Shop Stewards Network
Come to the NSSN conference unite the fightback!
Socialist Party Marxist analysis
Why public sector cuts are not inevitable
Socialist Party news and analysis
Marches show opposition to Israeli state terror
Determined BA cabin crew ready to reballot
EDL thugs sent packing from Cardiff
EDL protest stopped in Swansea
Socialist Party workplace news and analysis
CWU ballots BT workers for strike over pay
Unite conference - union at the crossroads
Wales TUC - rank and file delegates support socialist fightback
Socialist Party youth and students
Future of cuts a nightmare for youth
Socialist Students national meeting: Preparing for a student fightback
Youth Fight for Jobs open steering committee
Lobby Iain Duncan Smith at his surgery
Socialist Party youth meeting: ready to build a fightback
Socialist Party feature
Soccer World Cup 2010: South Africa, the ugly backdrop to the beautiful game
Environment and socialism
Oil spill shows hazards of the profit system
Bhopal - little justice 25 years on
News and comment
Will the Lib Dems survive coalition?
Bradford murders and prostitution
Home | The Socialist 9 June 2010 | Join the Socialist Party

Printable version
email to friend

