The Grenfell Tower fire must be a turning point in fire safety across the UK.
We welcome the recommendations from the Grenfell Inquiry, but they must be implemented quickly and efficiently. This can’t wait until after the second phase of the inquiry is completed. As we saw with the fire at student accommodation in Bolton on 15 November, we need a complete overhaul of UK fire safety – and we need it now.
That’s why we’ve called for a forum to drive through these sweeping changes to UK fire safety. We’ve written to all relevant parties – including tenants, government, and fire safety and housing specialists – asking them to work together to ensure that the recommendations aren’t swept under the carpet.
Lessons must be learnt, and we won’t stop fighting until our communities are safe.
In solidarity,
Fire Brigades Union
Friday, 29 November 2019
Friday, 15 November 2019
Monday, 11 November 2019
Helping the PCS General Election Campaign
As a union we recognise that the election of a UK Labour government under the leadership and policies of McDonnell and Corbyn is in the interests of PCS members. Key Labour pledges include a return to national pay bargaining in the civil service and related bodies, and end to job cuts and office closures, the recruitment of 5,000 extra DWP staff, and large scale investment in HMRC.
The North West region are asking for PCS members to support campaigning and join PCS canvassing teams in the following seats: Southport, Blackpool North and Cleveleys, Bolton West and Crewe and Nantwich. Campaign dates for each of these target seats will be publicised shortly.
If you are able to volunteer, please email nwrc@pcs.org.uk with your name, branch and preferred email and telephone number.
How members vote is entirely a matter for them, and whichever party is in government PCS will always be there to fight your corner.
To see BB-73-19 (General election campaign update & guidance for civil service members), click here.
Register to vote and for a postal vote by the 26 November
Make sure you and your colleagues use your voice on the 12 December by registering to vote by 26 November. It takes less than 5 minutes to register online - here. All you need is your national insurance number.
Please also consider registering for a postal vote and encouraging your branch reps and members to do the same for this election, the deadline to request a postal vote is also the 26 November. Register here.
Tuesday, 5 November 2019
Support Coca-Cola workers fighting for their rights
Haiti is a dangerous place to live and to work. Companies should, at a minimum, be alert to this situation and exercise maximum due diligence. In July 2019, a Coca-Cola truck driver was shot in his vehicle while at work. The Coca-Cola Company has made no meaningful independent investigation of this killing, choosing instead to rely on a version of events provided by their local bottler, which sought to shift blame onto the driver. Subsequent IUF investigations into this case have exonerated the driver and exposed a callous disregard for the truth on the part of the Coca-Cola bottler and The Coca-Cola Company.
In Indonesia Coca-Cola bottler Amatil pursues its long running attack on the rights of independent, democratic trade unions.
In Ireland, The Coca-Cola Company closed two of its directly owned concentrate plants, both of which were strongly unionized, and shifted production to the remaining plant in Ballina, where it refuses to engage in collective bargaining with the IUF-affiliated SIPTU.
In the USA the Company's bottler spent more than 330,000.00 US dollars hiring a union-busting consultant firm to persuade workers at its Greenfield bottling plant to not join the RWDSU/UFCW.
Please show your support for these workers and the fight for rights in the Coca-Cola system.
Click here to send a message to Coca-Cola's CEO and Chairman James Quincey, expressing your outrage over these ongoing human rights violations and demanding the Company act to remedy them. Your name will also be added to a petition that will be delivered to The Coca-Cola Company.
Wednesday, 30 October 2019
Mark Serwotka in Liverpool
Mark Serwotka, the incumbent PCS General Secretary, and the Left Unity candidate for the upcoming election, will be in Liverpool on 13 November to meet members and put forward his manifesto.
Left Unity, the socialist grouping in PCS, are giving Mark their full support as the best candidate to take the union forward, building on the organising strategy that has seen the union fight off ten years of Tory attacks, and take on the legal challenges that have seen victories in the High Court on issues such as the unlawful removal of check-off, and the Civil Service Compensation Scheme - the outcome of which has put thousands of pounds back in PCS members' pockets.
PCS members: please come along, meet Mark, and take part in the Q&A.
Details:
- Wednesday 13 November.
- 18.00 to 19.30.
- Quaker Meeting House, 22 School Lane, Liverpool L1 3BT.
- Hosted by Angela Grant and Martin Cavanagh.
- Event page on Facebook here.
Thursday, 24 October 2019
Farewell to Tony Mulhearn
On Monday 21st October we said goodbye to our friend and comrade Tony Mulhearn, known to us in ARMS Mersey as organiser of our group, but that was just one of many roles he played over a long and very active life, most famously as the driving force behind the Liverpool Militant council in the 1980s.
The Unitarian Church in Ullet Road, Liverpool, was packed to capacity for a non-religious service. Thanks were given to the church for opening its doors for a humanist funeral. This impressive Victorian church has been associated with progressive causes, having been built by a group opposed to the slave trade, and they currently have a football team that raises money for refugees. There is a even children's playgroup with a toy named Trotsky!
The proceedings were interspersed with music, as Tony was a keen music lover and singer-guitarist himself. The former Groundpig singer-songwriter John O'Connell played instrumental versions of 'Love Story' by Andy Williams and 'Why Worry' by Dire Straits.
Tony's friend and comrade Peter Taffe gave a comprehensive eulogy, summarising Tony's various jobs and activism over his lifetime, including various setbacks, of which Tony once commented: “It was traumatic to be thrown out of office by (Margaret) Thatcher and the district auditor, out of the party by Kinnock and out of my job by Murdoch. But to upset Thatcher, Kinnock and Murdoch – I must have been doing something right!”
Born to a working class family close to Liverpool city centre, Tony had a hunger for learning which led him in later life to obtain a good degree as a mature student. He was a genuine polymath with a wide range of knowledge.
Derek Hatton also made a heartfelt personal tribute, describing Tony as his mentor and detailing holidays and social activities they had enjoyed together as well as all the political work they had both been engaged in.
Audrey White of the Merseyside Pensioners Association told us that Tony, the group's press officer, had made them proud to be old with lifetimes of experience of activism to draw upon, making the group the effective and active campaigning group that it is. She also read a poem by Robert Burns (below).
Tributes from Tony's children revealed a side of the man that those of us who knew him solely from political and trade union activism rarely glimpsed. One of his sons said how he and his brothers were distressed seeing pictures of their Dad on his wedding day and as a young man in his 20s and 30s because they all realised they'd never be as handsome!
Tony's wife Maureen had died early in 2018, and we learned that he had later commented that he had never realised that missing someone could be so hard. They clearly had a loving relationship and she had supported him in all his activism in more than half a century of marriage. There is no doubt that losing her was a major blow that he struggled to overcome.
On a lighter note, we learned that Tony had a tendency on holiday to get lost or go wandering off as something attracted his attention. On one holiday in Spain, the family wondered where he'd got to; it turned out that he'd spontaneously decided to go by train to Barcelona, well over 100 miles from where they were staying.
The proceedings in the church were concluded by Tony's own version of 'My Way' which segued into the Frank Sinatra recording, followed by 'Non, Je Ne Regrette Rien' (No Regrets) by Edith Piaf.
Daughter Lisa later at Springwood Crematorium struggled not to break down during her tribute. She and her sister Vicki described how Tony rarely told them off, and on the odd occasion when he did, he got over his anger almost immediately and would later apologise to them.
The service at Springwood ended with the singing of 'The International'; most of us joined in with raised clenched fists. The final event of the day was a reception in the beautiful surroundings of the Palm House in Sefton Park, surely one of the finest urban parks in the country.
PCS was represented on the day by PCS Deputy President Martin Cavanagh and several members of staff from the PCS North West regional office. From ARMS: national chair - Phil Green; ARMS Merseyside - Ray Beeton, Keith Hebron, Steve Ion and myself, and ARMS Manchester - John Hadfield, Jacquie Hadfield and Barry Fuge. The PCS North West Regional banner was prominently displayed.
Thus did we say farewell to a comrade who, although he was probably the most famous member of our union, was unassuming and respectful even in disagreement. There are lessons for us all in how to debate without rancour, how to listen courteously to opposing views and how to conduct oneself with integrity and natural dignity.
The Unitarian Church in Ullet Road, Liverpool, was packed to capacity for a non-religious service. Thanks were given to the church for opening its doors for a humanist funeral. This impressive Victorian church has been associated with progressive causes, having been built by a group opposed to the slave trade, and they currently have a football team that raises money for refugees. There is a even children's playgroup with a toy named Trotsky!
The proceedings were interspersed with music, as Tony was a keen music lover and singer-guitarist himself. The former Groundpig singer-songwriter John O'Connell played instrumental versions of 'Love Story' by Andy Williams and 'Why Worry' by Dire Straits.
Tony's friend and comrade Peter Taffe gave a comprehensive eulogy, summarising Tony's various jobs and activism over his lifetime, including various setbacks, of which Tony once commented: “It was traumatic to be thrown out of office by (Margaret) Thatcher and the district auditor, out of the party by Kinnock and out of my job by Murdoch. But to upset Thatcher, Kinnock and Murdoch – I must have been doing something right!”
Born to a working class family close to Liverpool city centre, Tony had a hunger for learning which led him in later life to obtain a good degree as a mature student. He was a genuine polymath with a wide range of knowledge.
Derek Hatton also made a heartfelt personal tribute, describing Tony as his mentor and detailing holidays and social activities they had enjoyed together as well as all the political work they had both been engaged in.
Audrey White of the Merseyside Pensioners Association told us that Tony, the group's press officer, had made them proud to be old with lifetimes of experience of activism to draw upon, making the group the effective and active campaigning group that it is. She also read a poem by Robert Burns (below).
Tributes from Tony's children revealed a side of the man that those of us who knew him solely from political and trade union activism rarely glimpsed. One of his sons said how he and his brothers were distressed seeing pictures of their Dad on his wedding day and as a young man in his 20s and 30s because they all realised they'd never be as handsome!
Tony's wife Maureen had died early in 2018, and we learned that he had later commented that he had never realised that missing someone could be so hard. They clearly had a loving relationship and she had supported him in all his activism in more than half a century of marriage. There is no doubt that losing her was a major blow that he struggled to overcome.
On a lighter note, we learned that Tony had a tendency on holiday to get lost or go wandering off as something attracted his attention. On one holiday in Spain, the family wondered where he'd got to; it turned out that he'd spontaneously decided to go by train to Barcelona, well over 100 miles from where they were staying.
The proceedings in the church were concluded by Tony's own version of 'My Way' which segued into the Frank Sinatra recording, followed by 'Non, Je Ne Regrette Rien' (No Regrets) by Edith Piaf.
Daughter Lisa later at Springwood Crematorium struggled not to break down during her tribute. She and her sister Vicki described how Tony rarely told them off, and on the odd occasion when he did, he got over his anger almost immediately and would later apologise to them.
The service at Springwood ended with the singing of 'The International'; most of us joined in with raised clenched fists. The final event of the day was a reception in the beautiful surroundings of the Palm House in Sefton Park, surely one of the finest urban parks in the country.
PCS was represented on the day by PCS Deputy President Martin Cavanagh and several members of staff from the PCS North West regional office. From ARMS: national chair - Phil Green; ARMS Merseyside - Ray Beeton, Keith Hebron, Steve Ion and myself, and ARMS Manchester - John Hadfield, Jacquie Hadfield and Barry Fuge. The PCS North West Regional banner was prominently displayed.
Thus did we say farewell to a comrade who, although he was probably the most famous member of our union, was unassuming and respectful even in disagreement. There are lessons for us all in how to debate without rancour, how to listen courteously to opposing views and how to conduct oneself with integrity and natural dignity.
Epitaph on my own friend - Robert Burns
An honest man here lies at rest,
As e’er God with His image blest:
The friend of man, the friend of truth;
The friend of age, and guide of youth:
Few hearts like his, with virtue warm’d,
Few heads with knowledge so inform’d:
If there’s another world, he lives in bliss;
If there is none, he made the best of this.
Tony (left) with the North West ARMS banner in the PCS office in Liverpool |
Wednesday, 23 October 2019
International solidarity - Cambodia
Union President suspended at Cambodia's giant Naga World Hotel Casino for defending her members' right to bargain their wages!
The 5-star Naga World Hotel Casino in Phnom Penh has 1,685 rooms and suites - but no room for the right of its thousands of employees to collectively negotiate their wages through collective bargaining - a universally-recognized human right.
For nearly two decades, the Labour Rights Supported Union of Khmer Employees of Naga Hotel (NHW) has struggled for rights and recognition against a hostile management. In May, 2019 the union launched a campaign to bargain wages for the first time and now faces a management backlash. Union president Chhim Sithar, who is also a member of the IUF Asia/Pacific Regional Youth Committee and IUF Women's Committee, was suspended on September 20 for allegedly breaching company rules after she assisted a union member being harassed by security over union materials in her bag.
On October 15-16, mass membership meetings of the union's more than 4,400 members unanimously confirmed their commitment to fighting Sithar's suspension and continuing their struggle for wage bargaining rights.
You can support their struggle - click here to send a message to Naga World corporate management demanding the company rescind the union leader's suspension and bargain wages in good faith with NHW!
The 5-star Naga World Hotel Casino in Phnom Penh has 1,685 rooms and suites - but no room for the right of its thousands of employees to collectively negotiate their wages through collective bargaining - a universally-recognized human right.
For nearly two decades, the Labour Rights Supported Union of Khmer Employees of Naga Hotel (NHW) has struggled for rights and recognition against a hostile management. In May, 2019 the union launched a campaign to bargain wages for the first time and now faces a management backlash. Union president Chhim Sithar, who is also a member of the IUF Asia/Pacific Regional Youth Committee and IUF Women's Committee, was suspended on September 20 for allegedly breaching company rules after she assisted a union member being harassed by security over union materials in her bag.
On October 15-16, mass membership meetings of the union's more than 4,400 members unanimously confirmed their commitment to fighting Sithar's suspension and continuing their struggle for wage bargaining rights.
You can support their struggle - click here to send a message to Naga World corporate management demanding the company rescind the union leader's suspension and bargain wages in good faith with NHW!
Monday, 14 October 2019
Tony Mulhearn funeral arrangements
Tony Mulhearn’s family have now announced Tony's funeral arrangements. It will be on Monday 21st October.
Family, friends and comrades, please arrive by 12.30pm for the service to start at 1.00pm.
- Unitarian Church, 57 Ullet Road, Liverpool L17 2AA.
- 2.30pm Springwood Crematorium, Rosemary Chapel, Springwood Avenue, Liverpool L25 7UN.
- Then on to the Palm House, Sefton Park, Liverpool L17 1AP.
There is a tribute to Tony on the ARMS national blog here.
Wednesday, 9 October 2019
NPC's Campaign! bulletin - October issue
Please find a link to the October 2019 issue of the NPC's Campaign! bulletin here (colour version).
It is also available in a print friendly version which reduces the amount of ink needed when the document is printed out. This can be found here.
It is also available in a print friendly version which reduces the amount of ink needed when the document is printed out. This can be found here.
Monday, 7 October 2019
Mr Robeson Sings, with Tayo Aluko
Tayo Aluko |
• 6.00 pm.
• Corner of Paradise St and Church St, L1.
• Free event for Black History Month.
Tayo Aluko, actor, writer and baritone recreates the iconic moment 70 years on from 1949 when Paul Robeson, world famous singer, actor and activist, gave an impromptu performance from the back of truck to 10,000 people in bomb-damaged Lord Street. The world renowned African American singer, who sold out venues across the world, regularly performed for free in outdoor spaces so 'working people' could enjoy his voice. Join Tayo Aluko, whose one man Show Call Me Mr Robeson has thrilled audiences across continents, to be part of this unique event.
Further details of the event can be found here.
• Free event for Black History Month.
Tayo Aluko, actor, writer and baritone recreates the iconic moment 70 years on from 1949 when Paul Robeson, world famous singer, actor and activist, gave an impromptu performance from the back of truck to 10,000 people in bomb-damaged Lord Street. The world renowned African American singer, who sold out venues across the world, regularly performed for free in outdoor spaces so 'working people' could enjoy his voice. Join Tayo Aluko, whose one man Show Call Me Mr Robeson has thrilled audiences across continents, to be part of this unique event.
Further details of the event can be found here.
Friday, 4 October 2019
Tony Mulhearn Book Launch
Liverpool socialist legend, Tony Mulhearn, has completed his long awaited memoirs. You are invited to the launch of his book 'The Making Of A Liverpool Militant'.
Len McCluskey and others will be speaking at the launch. Len says "This book is a must read to gain an understanding of the author’s experience in forging his industrial and political perspective."
Meet old and new comrades and watch a short film about Tony.
• Food will be provided.
Thursday, 26 September 2019
Celebrate Black History - October 2019
- 9 October 2019
- The Brain Charity, Norton Street, L3 8LR.
This is an open day to all members and reps to celebrate and learn about black history and to see examples of what you might be able to run in your workplace! The day will include:
- Why black members should get more involved in our union - a video presentation by Ian Manborde, Equality Office for Equity and former Ruskin Lecturer.
- A talk about the effect of Windrush on her family by Diane Ebanks, Learning Project Equality Lead.
- Music of the Windrush generation.
- Photographs displaying the Striking Women of The Grunwick Dispute.
- A food stall to celebrate diversity.
- Buffet lunch
Anna Rothery, Liverpool’s first black Lord Mayor will be in attendance in the afternoon.
Members are welcome to attend more than one unique session and should complete a PCS learning project enrolment form confirming which session(s) and time you wish to attend. If you would like to attend this course, please complete a learning project enrolment form and send it direct to the PCS North West office (NWTUED@pcs.org.uk) or by post to PCS, Jack Jones House, 1 Islington, Liverpool, L3 8EG.
Wednesday, 11 September 2019
AGS update on pension overpayments
Within the Civil Service Pension Scheme two different pensions reviews were undertaken which resulted in the recalculation of some pensions, the rectification of Guaranteed Minimum Pension (GMP) and an Internal Control Framework Review.
Civil Service Pensions agreed to waive all overpayments identified by GMP Rectification.
MyCSP failed to act on information supplied by employers some years ago which has caused approximately 13,000 pensions to be recalculated. MyCSP made adjustments to pensions and in around 2,000 cases are seeking recovery of overpayments.
Civil Service unions were not consulted in advance about this review.
PCS’s view is that the circumstances giving rise to the revision exercise amounts to maladministration. We have pressed for consistency with the way GMP cases were treated i.e. all overpayments are written off.
Civil Service Pensions acknowledged the failure to consult unions which raises serious issues of concern. It is important that enough information is provided to enable scheme members to have a reasonable level of assurance that it is correct. This applies to changes which increase as well as decrease pensions.
Advice can be obtained from ARMs Region/Nation Secretaries or from your nearest PCS Hub, details on the PCS website.
John Moloney
Civil Service Pensions agreed to waive all overpayments identified by GMP Rectification.
MyCSP failed to act on information supplied by employers some years ago which has caused approximately 13,000 pensions to be recalculated. MyCSP made adjustments to pensions and in around 2,000 cases are seeking recovery of overpayments.
Civil Service unions were not consulted in advance about this review.
PCS’s view is that the circumstances giving rise to the revision exercise amounts to maladministration. We have pressed for consistency with the way GMP cases were treated i.e. all overpayments are written off.
Civil Service Pensions acknowledged the failure to consult unions which raises serious issues of concern. It is important that enough information is provided to enable scheme members to have a reasonable level of assurance that it is correct. This applies to changes which increase as well as decrease pensions.
Advice can be obtained from ARMs Region/Nation Secretaries or from your nearest PCS Hub, details on the PCS website.
John Moloney
Assistant General Secretary
Sunday, 1 September 2019
Friday, 16 August 2019
Peterloo: 200 years ago today
It is 200 years ago today since the Peterloo Massacre in St Peters Fields in Manchester when cavalry charged into a crowd of 60,000 to 80,000 who were demanding political reform. 18 died, including 4 women, and hundreds were injured.
As this was only four years after the Battle of Waterloo, the event was sarcastically referred to as Peterloo. John Lees, a cloth worker from Oldham who died from his wounds on 9 September, had been present at the Battle of Waterloo. Shortly before his death he told a friend that he had never been in such danger as at Peterloo: "At Waterloo there was man to man, but there it was downright murder."
How far have we progressed since then? While the Peterloo Massacre has been called one of the defining moments of its age, the Miners' Strike of 1984-1985 showed that official attitudes to ordinary people standing up for themselves haven't changed significantly, demonstrated by the prime minister in the 1980s describing trade unions as "the enemy within".
Friday, 9 August 2019
2nd A-bomb dropped - but not the last.
At 3:49 am on the morning of August 9, 1945, the crew of the Bockscar, a United States Army Air Forces plane set off. It carried the 'Fat Man' atomic bomb towards its primary target, the city of Kokura in Japan. Clouds and smoke obscured Kokura so the Bockscar headed for its second target, the city of Nagasaki. At 11.01 am the target was sighted and the Fat Man bomb was dropped.
The bomb was devastating. 22% of Nagasaki’s buildings were consumed by flames. The death toll and destruction was less than in Hiroshima because of Nagasaki's hilly geography, but as many as 50,000 to 100,000 died instantly and others died slowly and agonisingly as a result of burns and radiation. A staggering 340,000 were killed by the bombs on Hiroshima and Nagasaki.
The bomb on Nagasaki won't be the last unless nuclear bombs are eradicated. That's why CND campaigns tirelessly to see them abolished, so the world can be free from the fear of nuclear annihilation.
There is hope. The international momentum behind the UN's nuclear ban treaty is enormous. We must do all we can to support these efforts and to strengthen the consensus against Trident here in Britain.
Find out more about how CND has marked the 74th anniversary of Hiroshima and Nagasaki.
Wednesday, 31 July 2019
Liverpool WASPI rally - 3 August
Hungry For Justice
- Saturday 3 August 2019.
- 1.00 pm to 3.00 pm.
- Chavasse Park, Liverpool.
Tuesday, 30 July 2019
Hiroshima and Nagasaki Day
Speeches, poems and music to mark the 74th anniversary of the bombing of Hiroshima and Nagasaki.
• Tuesday 6th August 2019.
• 10.45am.
• St John’s Gardens, Liverpool.
• Tuesday 6th August 2019.
• 10.45am.
• St John’s Gardens, Liverpool.
All welcome. The commemoration will last around 30 minutes.
Thursday, 25 July 2019
John Moloney, new AGS - ARMS Mersey guest speaker
The guest speaker at the next ARMS Mersey meeting is John Moloney, newly elected PCS Assistant General Secretary. John was the only rank-and-file candidate to stand in the AGS election.
Although this is a committee meeting, all members are entitled to attend and speak if they wish, although only committee members may take part in any votes.
Although this is a committee meeting, all members are entitled to attend and speak if they wish, although only committee members may take part in any votes.
- Thursday 8 August.
- 11.30 am - room booked from 11.00 am, so please arrive to ensure a prompt start.
- NW PCS office, Jack Jones House, Liverpool.
We look forward to seeing you there.
Advance notice: at our next all-members meeting on Thursday 10 October, the guest speaker will be barrister and former union activist in the Crown Prosecution Service (CPS), Roland Zollner, to talk about how austerity is damaging the criminal justice system. Click here for more information.
Advance notice: at our next all-members meeting on Thursday 10 October, the guest speaker will be barrister and former union activist in the Crown Prosecution Service (CPS), Roland Zollner, to talk about how austerity is damaging the criminal justice system. Click here for more information.
Tuesday, 23 July 2019
The British Trump prepares for office
So the results are in. We've endured TV hustings for a vote in which the vast majority of us had no role to play. The contest for the Tory Party leadership has been treated like a general election, but it was no more democratic than an internal leadership battle in the old USSR.
Johnson beat Hunt by 92,153 votes to 46,656. As the total number of registered UK voters in December 2018 was 45,775,800 (source: ONS), this means Johnson will become PM with the support of 0.2% of the electorate. To put it another way, 99.8% of the electorate did not vote for him, and 99.65% had no vote at all.
The Daily Mirror has an article "37 lies, gaffes and scandals that make Boris Johnson unfit to be Prime Minister" which you can read here.
I have a comparison which will ring particular bells with former reps in the civil service.
A long time ago when I was a union rep in the DSS/DWP, I represented a member who was facing dismissal having been accused of deliberately misspending public money, a sum of around £200. I managed to save his job only at the second and final level of appeal when it was eventually accepted that it was a genuine error. The first two decision makers had rejected that argument and had recommended dismissal.
Johnson, on the other hand, misspent £53 million of public money for a bridge that was never even begun. He also misspent more than £300,000 on illegal water cannons which were eventually scrapped at a huge loss. Now he stands to be rewarded with the keys to Number 10. I cannot understand why he has not faced prosecution for massive misuse of public funds. If not prosecuted, than at least barred from holding public office.
His 'election' was little more than a coup d'état and his misspending of huge amounts of public money has been shrugged off. He has a privileged immunity that has exempted his incompetence and arrogant profligacy from any kind of scrutiny or disciplinary investigation, and has denied the people any say in who leads the country. This last point is especially galling because Johnson denounced Gordon Brown for succeeding Tony Blair as PM without immediately calling a general election.
He is our next prime minister - finger crossed, not for too long.
Neville Grundy
ARMS Mersey
Johnson beat Hunt by 92,153 votes to 46,656. As the total number of registered UK voters in December 2018 was 45,775,800 (source: ONS), this means Johnson will become PM with the support of 0.2% of the electorate. To put it another way, 99.8% of the electorate did not vote for him, and 99.65% had no vote at all.
The Daily Mirror has an article "37 lies, gaffes and scandals that make Boris Johnson unfit to be Prime Minister" which you can read here.
I have a comparison which will ring particular bells with former reps in the civil service.
A long time ago when I was a union rep in the DSS/DWP, I represented a member who was facing dismissal having been accused of deliberately misspending public money, a sum of around £200. I managed to save his job only at the second and final level of appeal when it was eventually accepted that it was a genuine error. The first two decision makers had rejected that argument and had recommended dismissal.
Johnson, on the other hand, misspent £53 million of public money for a bridge that was never even begun. He also misspent more than £300,000 on illegal water cannons which were eventually scrapped at a huge loss. Now he stands to be rewarded with the keys to Number 10. I cannot understand why he has not faced prosecution for massive misuse of public funds. If not prosecuted, than at least barred from holding public office.
His 'election' was little more than a coup d'état and his misspending of huge amounts of public money has been shrugged off. He has a privileged immunity that has exempted his incompetence and arrogant profligacy from any kind of scrutiny or disciplinary investigation, and has denied the people any say in who leads the country. This last point is especially galling because Johnson denounced Gordon Brown for succeeding Tony Blair as PM without immediately calling a general election.
He is our next prime minister - finger crossed, not for too long.
Neville Grundy
ARMS Mersey
Wednesday, 17 July 2019
HMRC cleaners strike 15 July
And the sun also shone on the righteous!
ARMS Mersey members show solidarity with HMRC cleaners at their meeting on 11 July |
The rally in Queens Square in Liverpool |
Attentively listening to the speeches |
The full line-up of strikers (centre front) and supporters |
ARMS Mersey members (L-R): Keith Hebron, Neville Grundy, Steve Ion and Ray Beeton |
Three resolute strikers |
ARMS' Steve Ion chats with two of the strikers |
ARMS Mersey's Jim Stanway (left) and Neville Grundy with the ARMS banner |
Strikers, PCS HMRC branch officers, Steve Ion of ARMS (left) - and the ARMS banner! |
Saturday, 6 July 2019
HMRC cleaners strike - pickets and rallies
We've now received details of the HMRC cleaners dispute picket lines and rallies:
- Bootle Triad - 7am-11am both days, including rally to close Monday picket 10.30-11am before we head to town.
- Liverpool - 10am-12pm at Imperial Court (Exchange Street East) and Regian House (Derby Square and Strand Street) on Monday. Rally at Derby Square 12-12.30pm when joined by Bootle. Pickets 10am-12.30pm Tuesday.
Fundraising page for strike fund here. Please consider a donation.
Please support some of the lowest-paid PCS members in this important dispute.
Thursday, 4 July 2019
HMRC cleaners strike - support by ARMS
Steve Ion and I have discussed what support we can give to striking PCS members in HMRC on Mon 15 & Tue 16 July. We have decided the following:
As the strike begins in 11 days' time, please would you reply by e-mail (or in 'comments' below if you prefer) by Wed 10.7.19, the day before our meeting? E-mail: Nevillegrundy@aol.com.
- We will ask for a speaker to our own meeting next week (Thu 11.7.19).
- We aim to have the ARMS banner out on both days.
As the strike begins in 11 days' time, please would you reply by e-mail (or in 'comments' below if you prefer) by Wed 10.7.19, the day before our meeting? E-mail: Nevillegrundy@aol.com.
Read more about the dispute here. I'll publish details of times, etc, when I receive them.
Thanks,
Neville Grundy
Chair
Thanks,
Neville Grundy
Chair
Wednesday, 3 July 2019
Another economy is possible with a new Lucas Plan
- Wednesday 17 July.
- 1.00 pm.
- Jack Jones House, Liverpool L3 8EF.
- Guest speaker: John Routley.
John is a former Lucas Aerospace shop steward who helped form the Alternative Corporate Plan in 1976 after the company announced redundancies. The plan advocated the diversification of workers' skills and expertise to make 'socially useful products' that meet people's needs and benefit society.
Joint organisers, Merseyside CND and the Merseyside Pensioners' Association, say:
"All are welcome to join us as we call for a new Lucas Plan, where the knowledge of those manufacturing nuclear weapons and other military technology is used to tackle climate change and to improve the standard of living for everyone."
More information on the New Lucas Plan website here.
Joint organisers, Merseyside CND and the Merseyside Pensioners' Association, say:
"All are welcome to join us as we call for a new Lucas Plan, where the knowledge of those manufacturing nuclear weapons and other military technology is used to tackle climate change and to improve the standard of living for everyone."
More information on the New Lucas Plan website here.
Monday, 1 July 2019
UC protests in Liverpool
Sunday, 30 June 2019
Top civil servants: stay out of politics!
Letter sent to the Times, the Liverpool Echo and the Southport Visiter:
Dear Editor,
It is a disturbing development that senior civil servants are briefing the press with their opinions of the Labour Party leader. All civil servants are required to be politically neutral, as it is their job to implement parliamentary decisions and government policy, not to try to influence the political process. However, like all other citizens they have the right to express their views through the ballot box.
As a former union rep for much more junior staff in the civil service than the mandarins concerned, I know that if any of my members had taken similar actions against elected politicians from any party, they would have at the very least been put on final warnings for gross misconduct, if not actually sacked outright.
Top civil servants should not be be given more favourable treatment than that which the vast majority of their colleagues in the lower grades would have received.
For the record, I am not a Labour Party member and so have no partisan axe to grind here.
Yours sincerely,
Neville Grundy
Chair
Merseyside Associate & Retired Members
Wednesday, 26 June 2019
Colloids Dispute, Kirkby Industrial Estate
From the Knowsley Trades Council website:
At last week’s mass demonstration/picket at the Colloids site, strikers spoke of their gratitude for the support and large turnout on the Wednesday morning. They also said it would be a great moral boost if once a week we could arrange a day whereby all who could would gather together for a few hours.
So, this Friday 28 June, several Knowsley-based community groups are asking all those available to show your solidarity with the strikers, by demonstrating outside the Colloids site from 7.00am to 9.00am. We know it will not be possible for everyone to attend, but if you can or are able to inform others who can, it would be most appreciated.
Thanking you all in advance for your continued support with this matter.
In Solidarity
Steve Murphy
Details:
At last week’s mass demonstration/picket at the Colloids site, strikers spoke of their gratitude for the support and large turnout on the Wednesday morning. They also said it would be a great moral boost if once a week we could arrange a day whereby all who could would gather together for a few hours.
So, this Friday 28 June, several Knowsley-based community groups are asking all those available to show your solidarity with the strikers, by demonstrating outside the Colloids site from 7.00am to 9.00am. We know it will not be possible for everyone to attend, but if you can or are able to inform others who can, it would be most appreciated.
Thanking you all in advance for your continued support with this matter.
In Solidarity
Steve Murphy
Details:
- Friday 28 June 2019
- 7.00am - 9.00am
- 10 Kirkby Bank Road, Liverpool L33 7SY
- Unite press release - here
Sunday, 23 June 2019
Liverpool TV licence demo - report and pictures
PCS Merseyside ARMs members supported a well-attended march through Liverpool to a rally outside BBC Radio Merseyside on Friday 21 June. The protest was against the BBC's decision to charge for TV licences for the over 75s who currently pay nothing. The march went down Bold Street, Church Street, Whitechapel and Manestys Lane to the Radio Merseyside office - with numerous bits of musical accompaniment thrown in! The BBC closed down their reception while the protest was on.
Many speakers addressed the rally from Unite, Unison and PCS ARMs Merseyside in the person of Steve Ion, plus Labour MP Bill Esterson. All spoke of the need to oppose these attacks now as they will clearly try and go for bus passes and winter fuel allowance next. They also spoke of the divide and rule tactics of playing off the young against the old and of the need for maximum unity across generations. This message was reinforced by a youth speaker who gave full support to the campaign.
The Merseyside Pensioners Association who organised the event closed the rally by stating that this was only the start of the campaign. The National Pensioners Convention had called for these protests and similar events were held across the country.
Many speakers addressed the rally from Unite, Unison and PCS ARMs Merseyside in the person of Steve Ion, plus Labour MP Bill Esterson. All spoke of the need to oppose these attacks now as they will clearly try and go for bus passes and winter fuel allowance next. They also spoke of the divide and rule tactics of playing off the young against the old and of the need for maximum unity across generations. This message was reinforced by a youth speaker who gave full support to the campaign.
The Merseyside Pensioners Association who organised the event closed the rally by stating that this was only the start of the campaign. The National Pensioners Convention had called for these protests and similar events were held across the country.
The ARMS NW banner on the move |
The MPA banner |
A musical protest - Mike Hinstridge of ARMS Mersey is on the right |
Leading the chants, plus a Unite flag |
Bill Esterson MP with the banner of the Liverpool Labour Councillors |
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