Staythorpe walkout
Working Class Hero | 05.02.2009 20:38 | Social Struggles | Workers' Movements
On Monday, all 300 British workers at the site walked out for several hours. They returned to work on Tuesday 3rd February, but within an hour, around 60 staged an unofficial walkout in solidarity with others in the construction industry across the country. A ballot held amongst those who had walked out showed a majority in support of staying out on Wednesday, which they duly did. A protest also took place outside the London offices of contractor Alstom on Thursday 5th.
Alstom has been contracted by RWE to build a gas fired power station near Newark. Two companies, Montpressa and FMM, have been subcontracted to carry out construction work on the site. The Unite union alleges, "These two non-UK contracting companies say they have no intention of employing any UK labour to undertake the work." The union "estimates that 600 jobs will be needed to build the power station's turbine and boiler (Montpressa will fit the turbine and FMM will fit the boiler). A further 250 workers will be required to build the pipe connecting the two." Under the current arrangements, they contend that none of these jobs will go to UK workers.
Unite joint general secretary, Derek Simpson, has stated, "Staythorpe is a national scandal. We are seeing thousands of jobs being lost daily but at Staythorpe there is skilled, well-paid work available. It's a disgrace that local workers with years of experience are being locked out of the job." Many of the workers there clearly agree with him.
It is noteworthy, however, that despite Unite's prominent role in campaigning around this issue, the walkout itself has taken place without the support of the union bureaucracy. A clear violation of the Thatcherite anti-union laws (supplemented by legislation introduced under New Labour) the Staythorpe walkout, like others around the country, is unquestionably illegal. The wildcat actions, which appear to have been broadly successful in the instance of the Lindsey refinery dispute, demonstrate how these laws can be surmounted and point towards a potential strategy for working class struggle in this country.
Some commentators have expressed concern about the slogan "British jobs for British workers" which the various wildcat strikes have taken up, echoing Prime Minister Gordon Brown. They fear that this campaign turns British workers against foreign labour and may be fertile recruitment territory for the BNP. In Plymouth, however, strikers have been joined by Polish workers. Indeed, one visitor to Staythorpe, noted the absence of placards bearing the "British workers..." slogans and reported an emphatic rejection of the BNP.
Working Class Hero
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