Barts health strike: Low pay, no way!
Paula Mitchell, London Socialist Party
Serco strikers in Barts health trust in east London have led a magnificent fight so far!
Ten days of strike action with big, bold, noisy picket lines, marches, rallies and dancing in the streets, have been backed up with visits to workplaces seeking solidarity and protests at employment agencies.
A thousand people marched through east London to back the heroic strikers on 15 July. The boldness of the picket lines was brought on to the streets with music, singing and chanting.
Bright red Unite banners were joined with union and community banners from across London. Socialist Party placards were held high demanding 'Serco pay up' and 'low pay no way'.
John McDonnell, Labour shadow chancellor, spoke in support and then appeared on the Andrew Marr Show the next day to put Tory chancellor Philip Hammond on the spot about his scandalous remarks that public sector workers are overpaid.
Later, Mile End hospital cleaner Malgorzata Sacewicz and Unite branch secretary Len Hockey appeared on Channel 4 to say Tory millionaire ministers are living on a different planet.
In the first two days of the strike Serco claimed they were doing fine. But seven days in, photos appeared in the press of the chaos in the hospitals.
No serious offer has been made, so a 14-day strike has now begun. But none of this mess is necessary - Serco should just pay up!
This strike is attracting attention from the national press and trade unionists around the country. Why? Because the heroic battle being waged by these low paid workers speaks for us all.
After years of austerity, being told to tighten our belts, work harder, that there is no choice, working class people are saying no more!
The raw anger that was expressed in the Brexit vote began to find a political voice in Corbyn's election manifesto. In the Barts strike it finds an organised expression in militant trade unionism.
These strikers are fighting the super exploitation of migrant workers by standing up and fighting as a class - black, white, Asian, migrant workers on strike together.
One, Ebrima Sonka, said: "We just have to make our mark. We know they're not going to give up easily, they're a big multinational company. Nothing is going to be given to us on a platter, we have to fight for it. It is our right to fight for what we need. In 20 years to come there will be people who say those are the people who fought for what we are enjoying."
Barts strikers are fighting the reality of decades of privatisation, bullying and intensification of work. The same profit-driven policies that led to the catastrophic fire at Grenfell Tower have led to millions of working class people struggling to get by every day.
Solidarity and donations have been pouring in from trade unionists across London and around the country. These include support from the national executive of the PCS civil service union.
The Socialist Party and National Shop Stewards Network (NSSN) will keep working hard to spread support for the strike. Also workers should do workplace collections. Waltham Forest Trades Council has set up a support group (contact secretary Linda Taaffe [email protected]).
Socialist Party members attended an international meeting in Barcelona from 17-22 July. We made solidarity videos with health workers and trade unionists from six different European countries who will also raise support and protests in their unions. 400 trade unionists and socialists sent a solidarity photo, and Irish socialist Solidarity MPs also sent a message of support.
The British Airways cabin crew strike and workers preparing to strike at the Bank of England have linked up with the Barts Serco strike. On 27 July, nurses in the Royal College of Nursing will be protesting to scrap the public sector pay cap and Barts Serco strikers should join up with them too.
Workers were also delighted to have support from strikers at the University of London and London School of Economics.
Socialist Party members and the NSSN have long campaigned for the TUC to coordinate action and call a 24-hour general strike to defeat Tory austerity. Come to the NSSN lobby of TUC conference on 10 September at 1pm, Arundel Suite, Holiday Inn, 137 King's Road, Brighton, BN1 2JF.
- To support the strike, send a message to [email protected]
- Donations to branch LE/7384L sort code 60-83-01 account number 20344885
- Put pressure on the trust to intervene! Get copies of the protest letter to the CEO of Barts Trust, and to the scrutiny committees of Waltham Forest and Tower Hamlets councils here
- Protest to Serco, send an email to: [email protected] and sign the online petition change.org/p/serco-pay-up
- Let's make sure no agencies supply illegal labour! Protest to Team Support and Selective agencies. Selective: [email protected] 01372 362200 and Team Support: [email protected] 020 8519 6622
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The coronavirus crisis has laid bare the class character of society in numerous ways. It is making clear to many that it is the working class that keeps society running, not the CEOs of major corporations.
The results of austerity have been graphically demonstrated as public services strain to cope with the crisis.
The government has now ripped up its 'austerity' mantra and turned to policies that not long ago were denounced as socialist. But after the corona crisis, it will try to make the working class pay for it, by trying to claw back what has been given.
- The Socialist Party's material is more vital than ever, so we can continue to report from workers who are fighting for better health and safety measures, against layoffs, for adequate staffing levels, etc.
- When the health crisis subsides, we must be ready for the stormy events ahead and the need to arm workers' movements with a socialist programme - one which puts the health and needs of humanity before the profits of a few.
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In The Socialist 26 July 2017:
What we think
Right wing attempts to use single market against Corbyn
Socialist Party workplace news
Barts health strike: Low pay, no way!
Birmingham bin workers stand firm
Bron Afon workers strike against £3,000 pay cut
Court victory for PCS and all trade unions
Tesco's 10% pay increase accompanied by cuts and job losses
Mears workers escalate action to all-out strike
Workers' campaign underway to stop ward closure
International socialist news and analysis
Building workers' struggle and the forces of international socialism
Socialist Party news and analysis
Abolish tuition fees and student debt!
Education cuts: Tories buckling under public pressure
Homelessness and evictions soar under the Tories
Art and the Russian revolution
Russia 1917: how art helped make the revolution
Young Socialists
Young people...fight for a future, fight for socialist policies
Grenfell Tower
Grenfell survivors tell Tories: "Step down and resign"
Tenants' meeting reveals huge anger
Socialist Party reports and campaigns
Corbyn visits Southampton on marginal seat tour
Huddersfield A&E closure referred to Jeremy Hunt
From Militant to the Socialist Party - what you thought
Socialist sales at Salford station
Street cleaners support the Birmingham bin strike
'Freedom riders' lobby against violent policing
Council meeting abandoned after undercover policing protest
Education cuts forced back in Hackney
Southampton councillors faced with angry anti-cuts campaigners
Plans to bring A-levels back to Knowsley abandoned
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01/05/21


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