Wide screen devices may view this page better by clicking here

31 October 2018

Facebook   Twitter

Join the Socialist Party Join us today!

Printable version Printable version

Facebook   Twitter

Film review: The plan that came from the bottom up

'Lucas Plan' film tells story of workers who set out alternative to job losses by creating socially useful products and technology

Lucas Plan workers and developers then and now

Lucas Plan workers and developers then and now   (Click to enlarge)

Bill Mullins, Lewisham and Southwark Socialist Party

'The plan that came from the bottom up' is a new film about the 'Lucas Plan', developed by shop stewards at Lucas Aerospace in the Midlands in 1976, to make socially useful products rather than armaments used to kill people.

In the 1970s, under a Labour government, the first wave of what became the wholesale deindustrialisation of Britain swept hundreds of thousands of jobs away forever.

As the film makes clear, this wasn't the normal result of booms and slumps - which bring periodic unemployment. This was 'structural unemployment'.

Lucas Aerospace had a dozen different factories mainly in the Birmingham area. Its workers faced the prospect of their jobs becoming increasingly deskilled and lost as automation took over.

The shop stewards' committee representing 18,000 workers approached the Labour government for help.

The industry minister at the time was Tony Benn, a leading figure in the Labour left, and he is seen in the film a number of times standing shoulder to shoulder with various groups of workers around the country from different industries.

Benn told the Lucas shop stewards that many other sectors facing closures and redundancies were asking for government aid and, as the film implies, they were also asking for the Labour government to nationalise them.

He suggested to the shop stewards that they come up with a plan that would help him argue their case to the Labour cabinet. That is where the film starts.

Nationalisation

From the beginning, it is clear that it was the normal thing to do at the time - in the face of threats to jobs - for the workers of various industries to ask for nationalisation.

The film features a series of interesting shots of the struggles of workers throughout the 1970s, which give an indication of the volatile atmosphere at the time.

It includes footage from the 'work-in' at the Upper Clyde Shipbuilders in 1971, and from strikes and occupations across the whole of the manufacturing sector, many of which have been forgotten in time.

In my view it would be of enormous benefit to the new generation if these films were made widely available in short segments. The film is 212 minutes long. No doubt the makers could reduce the time to more manageable proportions.

But aside from that the film is tremendously uplifting. It allows the main actors, the Lucas shop stewards themselves, to tell their story.

Former Labour MP Dave Nellist, who features in the film, says: "In one scene about the shipbuilders' occupation a worker says 'economics shouldn't control men, men should control economics'. That's what the Lucas Shop Stewards Combine tried to do.

"Instead of submitting to redundancies, or to a continual deskilling and fragmentation of their work, they tried to take control of how they worked, what they designed and what they built. To take over that power of management's 'right' to manage".

Brian Salisbury, one of the original Lucas shop stewards, says he started out as an ordinary shop steward representing members on the normal things like wages and health and safety but had to rethink how they could make the work that they do more useful to society.

The 'Plan'

They involved all their members in coming up with the Lucas Plan, which included an astounding 129 separate products that could be made for socially useful purposes using the existing machinery and workforce.

They were possibly the first to come up with the idea of a hybrid car using a petrol engine to charge the battery which in turn drove the car.

They proposed using the existing heat exchanges made by Lucas for military aircraft to instead heat blocks of flats.

They conceived of the first known wind turbines to develop electricity using the existing components made for military purposes.

There were other outstanding products. These included a railroad bus that could run on concrete rail which would be more suitable for the developing world. All these ideas they put to the management but were completely ignored. But the Lucas Plan was heard in the wider labour movement.

As one of the workers said in a question and answer session afterwards: "We wanted workers to have as much power as shareholders".

But Dave Nellist comments: "Unfortunately, that was the problem. Shareholders collectively own a company, and can therefore set its direction. The workers at Lucas never collectively owned their company - for that it would have had to be nationalised."

All in all a film definitely worth seeing.

Donate to the Socialist Party

Finance appeal

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.

Inevitably, during the crisis we have not been able to sell the Socialist and raise funds in the ways we normally would.

We therefore urgently appeal to all our viewers to click here to donate to our Fighting Fund.

Please donate here.

All payments are made through a secure server.

My donation £

 

Your message: 

 


In The Socialist 31 October 2018:


What we think

Crisis Tory Budget brings no relief from austerity


News

Save Our Schools

Only a socialist alternative can end austerity

Homelessness, Universal Credit misery, high rents, cramped flats, isolated estates...end the housing crisis!

Philip Green scandal - bring him down like BHS

60% of wildlife wiped out - urgent action needed to save planet


Workplace news

Glasgow's equal pay uprising shows power of working class

CWU conference: Sharpen up our act? Yes. But weaken our democracy? No

Welsh college staff set to strike on pay and workload

UCU: General secretary censured but anti-union laws frustrate strike ballot

Driving London's buses - a laser in the eye and a boot up the bum!

PCS Left Unity election: ballot opens

National Gallery reps endorse Chris Baugh

Precarious workers march against gig economy


Peterloo massacre

Peterloo: "If the people were to rise and smite their enemies, was not this the time?" Samuel Bamford, demonstrator


International socialist news and analysis

Bolsonaro - a threat to workers and all oppressed people

Parliamentary coup in Sri Lanka


Socialist Party reports and campaigns

Call to arms by Southampton council unions

Campaign building to save Scarborough and district hospitals

The Socialist sales successes in Leeds


Opinion

'Lucas Plan' film tells story of workers who set out alternative to job losses

The Socialist inbox


 

Home   |   The Socialist 31 October 2018   |   Join the Socialist Party

Subscribe   |   Donate   |   Audio  |   PDF  |   ebook






Related links:

Lucas Aerospace:

triangleThe 'Lucas Plan'

triangleThe Socialist Inbox

triangleClimate change protest in London on 12.4.19, photo Mary Finch

triangleNationalise to save jobs at BAE Systems

triangleWhen workers planned production: the Lucas Aerospace plan

Workers:

triangleUnited action needed to defeat fire and rehire

triangleReaders' opinion

triangleNorwich City Council workers vote for strike action over broken promises on pay and conditions

triangleThurrock refuse workers strike escalates

Technology:

triangleCryptocurrency bubble: Insanity of capitalism

triangleTechnology and AI response: Capitalists only invest for profit

triangleCan green technology and AI save capitalism?

Film:

triangleFilm Review: Moxie

triangleJudas and the Black Messiah - taste of Fred Hampton's politics, with lessons for fighting oppression today

Review:

triangleFilm Review: The White Tiger

Shop Stewards:

triangleSupport victimised bus driver reps and Socialist Party members Declan and Moe

Labour:

triangleStarmer moves against Unite - No to the attack on Beckett

Dave Nellist:

trianglePreparing to build a working-class force for May's local elections

Clyde:

triangle100 years since the foundation of the Communist Party of Great Britain

Manufacturing:

triangleIndia's health system in meltdown under Modi's misrule

Tony Benn:

triangleMay 1649 - the Last Stand of the Levellers

Birmingham:

trianglePost-election meetings

Article dated 31 October 2018

Join the Socialist Party
Subscribe to Socialist Party publications
Donate to the Socialist Party

MEMBER RESOURCES

Pay in Fighting Fund

Pay in paper and book sales

Leaflets

Bulk book orders

New member submission

WHAT'S ON

triangle15 May Birmingham Socialist Party: How can we fight for socialist change and a new workers' party?

triangle17 May Oxfordshire & Aylesbury Socialist Party: The role of the state

triangle18 May Bristol North Socialist Party: Liverpool - history of socialist struggle

More...


The Socialist, weekly newspaper of the Socialist Party

Election analysis

Ireland

International news

Workplace news

Readers' opinion

Obituary

Subscribespacer|spacerebook / Kindlespacer|spacerPDF versionspacer|spacerText / Printspacer|spacer1133 onlinespacer|spacerBack issuesspacer|spacer Audio files


TUSC 2021 election video

More videos ...

What We Stand For
Socialist Party Facebook page
Socialist Party on Twitter
Visit us on Youtube

Platform setting: =

Desktop version