Home / Royal Mail / UK: Royal Mail workers launch third round of strikes

UK: Royal Mail workers launch third round of strikes

150,000 Royal Mail workers began a 48-hour strike on Thursday bringing postal services across the UK to a halt. But Communication Workers Union (CWU) officials cancelled Friday’s strike “out of respect for the Queen”, exposing their deference to a monarchy that is the embodiment of class oppression and hereditary privilege.

Pickets at Aylesbury Delivery Office in Buckinghamshire [Photo: WSWS]

Postal workers voted by nearly 99 percent for strike action. They are demanding a genuine pay raise in line with galloping inflation, against a 2 percent pay award imposed by the company. Royal Mail insists a further below-inflation increase of 3.5 percent is contingent on “productivity” and “workplace reforms” that will set fire to existing employment contracts.

It is demanding new delivery schedules to compete with parcel delivery services such as Amazon that employ a super-exploited gig workforce. Royal Mail wants delivery rounds to start two hours later each day, from 9am, with last post at 7pm or later. It wants compulsory weekend working.

On Monday, CWU officials resumed talks with Royal Mail executives, issuing a statement later that day that “both parties have agreed to reflect on the position in the next 24 hours”.

But the company refused to budge on its restructuring agenda, stating, “any talks must be about both change and pay. Change is the route to higher pay”. It warned that further strikes would place workers on “a perilous path”. Royal Mail has threatened to hive off its profitable international parcel delivery company if its demands are blocked, while new Prime Minister Liz Truss has been at the forefront of plans to use essential services legislation to ban strikes.

An article in the New Statesman, “Nothing can stop the Royal Mail from breaking up”, set out the company’s agenda. Noting its re-branding in July as International Distributions Services, the article explained, “This is a company of two parts: the Royal Mail, which has committed to deliver a letter anywhere in Britain for a fixed price since 1839 and was privatised in 2013, and the less memorable GLS (General Logistics Systems), an international parcel delivery service based in Amsterdam. The rebrand to International Distributions Services implies a commitment to the latter and, almost certainly, the splitting off of the Royal Mail.

“Postal industry analysts I’ve spoken to believe it makes business sense: GLS is a highly profitable international parcel service with opportunities for growth, while the Royal Mail is a public service that is currently losing a million pounds a day.”

Royal Mail, just like the National Health Service, railways, buses, BT and countless other sectors, will be cherry-picked, asset stripped and looted while basic services for the public, especially the elderly and poor, will be gutted. Postal workers will be reduced to minimum wage workers with no protections. As analysts told the New Statesman, Amazon has a “competitive advantage” because they “are able to treat workers as a more disposable resource”.

Royal Mail workers explained on picket lines today that the company and its shareholders reaped record profits with the boom in online sales in the pandemic. Yet the workers who generated those profits are resorting to foodbanks. On September 1, Royal Mail executives awarded themselves shares worth over £2 million. The company has also denied it is in “secret talks” over a private equity buyout, but the vultures are circling, with Vesa Equity having raised its stake to 25 percent.

Royal Mail has no intention of backing down and its agenda. CWU officials, like those at the RMT, ASLEF, Unite and other unions, are working to divide, delay and suppress industrial action. Despite proclamations about a “summer of discontent”, the CWU isolated Royal Mail workers from BT and other striking workers, holding out the illusion of a negotiated settlement. With the government in meltdown following the resignation of Boris Johnson, the unions blocked the growing calls for a general strike. Their policing the class struggle gave the Tories the breathing space they needed to assemble the most right-wing government in British history.

The dispute cannot go forward unless workers take matters into their own hands. The grip of the CWU, which has presided over decades of attacks in partnership with Royal Mail, must be broken. Rank-and-file committees must be elected in every workplace to organise the necessary fightback, placing the needs of the working class over the drive for corporate profit.

At Portsmouth Royal Mail Delivery Office a picket explained, “I’ve been a postman for nearly 35 years. The trust these days has gone between the workers and management. They’re trying to ruin the Royal Mail completely. Years ago, we were proud to work for the company, but these days we just feel they’re taking everything away from us. It’s all about money and greed.

The picket line at Portsmouth Royal Mail Delivery Office [Photo: WSWS]

“I think it’s disgusting what’s happening to all working class families now. They’re getting ruined and forced down. We’ve got posties using food banks, but even food banks these days are struggling because nobody can afford to donate! I really feel for younger families who have just managed to get themselves on the property ladder but can no longer pay their mortgages, so some of them lose their homes.

“We’ve got this stiff upper lip in this country but eventually you realise enough is enough. I think we need to take to the streets like they did in France. Things have got to change, and the only way it’s going to change is if people start to rebel. The powers that be are pushing down on everyone and eventually there’ll be an explosion. I’m hoping there’ll be a general strike soon, and potentially a revolution. I want to see true equality, not all these greedy companies donating massive amounts to the Tory party.


Source link

About admin

Check Also

VIDEO: Why RAF and Royal Navy and helicopters were landing in Barrow

Many who saw them on Monday stopped to film and take photographs of a “sortie” of …

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *