ChatterBank1 min ago
A Sign Of Things To Come?
//Unite, Labour's biggest trade union backer, has refused to endorse the party's general election manifesto, saying it does not go far enough on protecting workers' rights and jobs in the oil and gas industry.//
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And after listening to Mr Starmer the other day there's me thinking he has a cure for all industrial ills. It seems his pupper masters are not quite as convinced.
Answers
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.Labour are not promising anyone that they will end all industrial action.
I hope they do better than the Tories in finding a solution to the rail and doctors strikes, but they are not promising that either. Still I think actually negotiating honestly and wanting normalcy to return will get some results.
The transition from fossil fuels to renewable will have implications for jobs. No one wants a repeat of the misery when tens of thousands of workers were thrown out of work in the transition away from coal. The unions of fearful of a similar situation whengas and oil are recuced. But it is going to happen. The rest of the world are doing it, we have pledged to reduce our carbon emissions, and our North Sea reserves are diminishing.
I will be very pleased if the Unions do not have their feet under the table at Downing Street.
Gromit, party rules clause 5 - mentioned in the link.
unititled, it's a sign of industrial unrest. The unions are not happy with labour's plans before they take office - although Angela has promised sweeping changes to current legislation so this could simply be leaving the door open for her to go ahead with that. If they agreed now it follows that there would be no requirement for change. Sneaky perhaps? I don't know - but I have my suspicions.
// But party rules, specifically clause five, require the final manifesto to be signed off at a special meeting of the shadow cabinet, the parliamentary committee of Labour MPs, the Scottish and Welsh Labour leaders, the chair and vice-chairs of the National Policy Forum, the national executive committee, and representatives of affiliated trade unions.
Clause five does NOT require ALL stakeholders to agree to the manifesto for it to be valid. //
So it doesn't require any unions to endorse the manifesto.
The Labour party was a creation of the Trade Union movement, a century ago. Today the unions contribute less than a quarter of the Labour party's funding, and have less influence. Labour are no longer dependent on the unions for their survival. Notions of the unions controlling Labour are half a century out of date.