A letter to the Fire Brigades' Union
Dear General Secretary,
At its meeting of 3rd July 2004 our Executive Committee asked me to
write to you to express our welcome of your union's recent decision to
reverse your historic mistake of affiliating to the Labour Party.
For nearly 100 years the Socialist Party has held a clear and
consistent position that trade unions and political parties need to
remain separate. We have considered it bizarre that trade unionists in
public sector unions should hand over their dues money to their,
effective, political employers. Feeding the hand that beat them.
We have observed that trade unions need freedom to manoeuvre and
represent the interests of the membership – distinct groups within the
working class. This freedom of manoeuvre means getting the best
deal for their members within capitalism, often as against the general
policy of a political party, which has to at least attempt to represent
the general interest of its constituency. Political parties and trade
unions only harm each other by shackling themselves to one another.
In the case of the Labour Party in Britain, it is clear that there have
been numerous clashes between themselves and the Unions. The Attlee
government used troops to smash a dock-workers strike. Wilson's
government floundered over the refusal of the unions to accept the 'In
Place of Strife' income controls policy. Your own union members were
branded traitors and threatened with legislation to deprive them of
their freedom to strike in your recent dispute.
This is not caused by individual wickedness of Labour ministers, but by
the hard logic of administering capitalism. The same hard logic
that saw Labour governments tear up railways and close down more pits
than the Tories ever did. Capitalism is founded on the principle of no
profit no production, and if a government is to keep capitalism
running, it must obey this hard and fast law.
We thus wish to express our hope that your union will not seek to
affiliate with any other political party, and most specifically, not
try to recreate the Old Labour disaster that has blighted the workers
movement for more than a hundred years. We hope you will use all your
union's resources and funds to defend your members' interests, rather
than those of your political employers.
We further hope that your members will come to understand that any
resolution of a pay-deal within capitalism means their continued
exploitation by the tiny capitalist class, and that their best interest
lies in joining their fellow workers in a movement with the express and
single aim of "the abolition of the wages system" and its replacement
with common ownership and the free association of producers.
Yours for the World Socialism,
Bill Martin (Acting General Secretary).
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