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UK postal workers speak on fight against Royal Mail and wider strike movement

The WSWS spoke with postal workers attending the Communication Workers Union (CWU) rally in London’s Parliament Square on Friday, the thirteenth day of national strike action since August.

Part of the delegation of postal workers from Wolverhampton Mail Centre, West Midlands [Photo: WSWS]

A postal worker who was part of a large delegation from a Mail Centre in Wolverhampton in the west Midlands said:

“We deserve more than this. It is not fair the way they are treating us. The CEO is to blame but the shareholders are to blame as well. We have come this far and nobody is helping. They want to get rid of us all and bring the casuals in, bring self-employed in and kick us all out.

“They made £750 million last year–£400 million they gave to shareholders. People with 20, 30 years’ service are going to get casuals replacing them. They can’t do the work, but this is what they want.

“That is what we are fighting for, to save our jobs. The youngsters haven’t got a future. It is their future we are fighting for.”

Keith, a CWU area delivery rep at South Central came with a large group from Oxford:

“Everything is at stake, absolutely everything. We haven’t had any industrial action since 2009. I have been with Royal Mail for 28 years and this is the most bitter dispute I have ever known. Royal Mail want to take away all our terms and conditions, take away our good quality jobs and drive us down to gig economy employment models.

CWU rep Keith (left with flag) and postal workers from Oxford [Photo: WSWS]

“I think there is a systemic working-class issue in this country. Greed creates greed. Corporate greed has been around for a while, but corporate greed now is dangerously out of control. Jobs that you can build a life around are going to be extinct if the likes of [Royal Mail CEO Simon] Thompson gets away with what they want. They got away with it at P&O [Ferries]. If they get away with it with us, there will be another massive company around the corner and they will do exactly the same, attack the working class and take us back years and years, back to the Thatcher years. That is what Thompson wants and that is what the government want.

“[Labour Party leader Sir] Keir Starmer has already said he is not going to repeal the 2016 anti-trade union act. It is bizarre that this is coming from a social democratic party that should be standing up for working people.

“I go to quite a few meetings and I speak on platforms, and I always call for coordinated industrial action, a general strike. You are not really allowed to do coordinated action, but with all the people that are on strike—doctors, nurses, teachers, the railall of that tells you that we have an inequality problem in this country. During COVID, the richest people in this country got richer by 10 percent. They say there is not enough money, that is rubbish. The money in this country needs to be distributed in a more equal way.”

Rizwan, a postal worker from Hounslow in west London explained:

“We worked in the pandemic for two years as key workers and now we are striking over terms and conditions. Nurses, rail workers, they were all key workers during the pandemic and now they are all struggling–teachers, everyone, they are all out on strike. So what the government is saying is we will give you two percent or four percent, which is not worth it. Look at the cost of living.

Rizwan (second right) with work colleagues from Hounslow [Photo: WSWS]

“It’s the system and the company. The company is looking after profit not the workers, so that is what we are fighting for.

“We are fighting for our terms and conditions and our pay. What they want is to wipe out all the allowances, sick pay, and bring in Sunday working, flexible hours, zero-hour contracts. And they want to take 10,000 jobs. They want recruitment to be 30 percent less. We don’t want that. We want our terms and conditions up to the minimum level, that is why we are fighting. It is not all about pay.

“I have heard parliament wants to bring in stricter laws against strikes. There should be an investigation. If we are standing here on strike for 13 days, there is something wrong. Same with the nurses. We should organise and investigate, form a committee to look into this matter.”


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