Mass strike action in NSW can stop the Liberals

Just two months after taking office, Barry O’Farrell and the NSW Liberals have shown their real face, launching a savage attack on public sector workers, something they never mentioned before the election.

O’Farrell wants to impose a 2.5 per cent limit on public sector pay rises. This is effectively a pay cut, with inflation currently at 3.33 per cent.

The previous NSW Labor government tried to do the same thing. But strike action taken by a number of unions forced the government to grant higher wage rises. In 2008 train drivers won 4 per cent with no trade-offs after threatening to strike during World Youth Day, and teachers won 4 per cent with limited trade-offs in early 2009.

The Liberals’ legislation would force the Industrial Relations Commission (IRC) to simply enforce government decisions on wages and conditions. Until now it has had the power to make up its own mind on disputes between unions and the government.

This would allow the government, with a sweep of a pen, to cut any condition it sees fit, from annual leave entitlements to holiday pay, even over-riding conditions contained in awards.
The IRC is no friend of the unions, often siding with the government, and has always been used to contain strike action. But the new law could see the government refuse to bargain and simply force the IRC to ban strike action in support of wage claims, effectively stripping the right to collectively bargain.

The legislation will pass this week, with the Shooters and Christian Democrat parties backing the Liberals in the upper house.

We can’t afford to wait four years until the next election to get rid of this. And after Labor’s hiding at the state election, it may well be another two elections before it can regain power. Nor can NSW Labor be trusted after its record in office of privatisation, public sector pay cuts and corruption.

Mass strike action
A campaign of ongoing mass strike action could force the Liberals to back down, and ensure they never use the laws. For any government, whether it can pass legislation through parliament is not the only consideration.

Strikes across the public service can make it impossible for the government to function, by shutting down the operation of government departments, hospitals and schools.
Such action need not put the public off-side. If unions explain how the Liberals’ plans would wreck our services, the public can be won over.

But we cannot rely on Unions NSW to organise the kind of fightback needed. During the Your Rights at Work campaign, it initially resisted the call for mass demonstrations against WorkChoices.

Then Unions NSW Secretary John Robertson argued that strikes and mass protests would alienate public support. It was only after the left unions in Victoria organised successful mass protest and strike action at the beginning of the campaign that they were forced to call mass protests in NSW. It was the mass union protests that won the argument against WorkChoices and sealed John Howard’s fate.

Unions NSW wound down the campaign against power privatisation against then Labor Premier Morris Iemma and Treasurer Michael Costa, refusing to call the kind of serious strike action across the whole union movement that could have stopped privatisation in its tracks. Instead it has put its hopes in “community campaigns” to talk to voters about issues like privatisation and better services, in the hope of getting Labor elected.

Rank-and-file unionists need to organise to put the maximum pressure on their union leaders, and on Unions NSW, to hold mass strike protests against the Liberals’ assault.

The petition produced by union activists calling on Unions NSW to call public sector wide delegates meetings is a great first step. Mass union delegates meetings were what kicked off the Your Rights at Work campaign. They can be used to build towards a massive union strike rally in August. And this needs to be just the start of an ongoing campaign of strike action. United, we can force back the Liberals’ anti-union attacks.

Move this motion in your workplace / branch / union:

This meeting of ___________________ (union /  workplace / branch) calls on Unions NSW and Affiliates to call a 24-hour stop work and rally for all public sector workers in August 2011.

We also call for Unions NSW and affiliates to hold state-wide cross-union delegate meetings in the lead up to this stop work to ensure public-sector wide participation and support.

Email successful motions to sydney [at] solidarity.net.au

Magazine

Solidarity meetings

Latest articles

Read more

End of Assad’s brutal rule opens new space for Syria’s popular...

After decades of bloody and brutal dictatorship, the Assad regime in Syria has been toppled in a matter of days.

‘They didn’t count on how strong we are’: Teanau Tuiono on...

Paddy Gibson from Solidarity interviews Teanau Tuiono, a Māori and Pasifika Greens MP in Aotearoa New Zealand.

Albanese short-changing workers and still backing Israel’s war crimes

Labor’s failure over the cost of living means Albanese could easily follow Kamala Harris and the Democrats out of office.