Above photo: Wikimedia Commons/Roger Blackwell,
A new wave of strikes are underway across the UK. From postal workers to barristers, organised labour is turning out on picket lines against the backdrop of looming energy cost hikes. Workers across the UK are fighting back by withdrawing labour, sharing their experiences and, on one occasion, surfing around ports at high speed!
The strikes come as Don’t Pay, which is campaigning to encourage people to refuse to pay extortionate energy bills, reported an 80% hike had been nodded through by regulator Ofgem:
🚨 BREAKING | Ofgem lifts Britain's energy price cap to £3,549, an increase of 80%!
It's time to rise up and fight in our millions to take direct action – strike! https://t.co/RYOlAVpjfL#dontpayuk
— Don't Pay. (@dontpayuk) August 26, 2022
Read on…
Don’t Pay’s East London branch also announced a protest at Canary Wharf for Saturday 27 August:
📢 London demo 6pm tomorrow outside Ofgem HQ, Canary Wharf ⬇️ https://t.co/iNjo30Gddi
— Dont Pay East London (@dontpayeastLDN) August 25, 2022
The hikes emphasise how important bottom-up resistance is right now. And, a number of unions are taking action as we speak.
Posties for the win
Postal workers are striking as part of the Communication Workers Union over pay. Royal Mail bosses have been paying themselves massive bonuses, even as the cost of living crisis has ramped up:
Royal Mail made a £758 million profit last year
There are 115,000 postal workers on strike today
Royal Mail used to be publicly owned not for profit
That profit would be enough to give every striking worker over £6,500#isupportmypostie #StandByYourPost Solidarity @CWUnews ✊
— Andrew Fisher (@FisherAndrew79) August 26, 2022
CWU general secretary Dave Ward challenged bosses to debate him on the issues live on TV:
Come on then, @RoyalMail – let’s have a live debate #StandByYourPost pic.twitter.com/ZbWtZ9Jpda
— The CWU (@CWUnews) August 26, 2022
Barrister strike
Unusually, barristers have also gone out on strike. Traditionally seen as comfortable professionals, barristers have increasingly been forced to work unsustainable hours. Because their work is, in essence, freelance, the hours mean their pay is extremely poor in some cases:
Barristers who work in our criminal courts have voted for an all out strike on 5 September. This is historic, and necessary.
This strike is about protecting *YOUR* rights, whether you know it or not.
Here is why you should care:
— Rabah Kherbane (@RabahKherbane) August 25, 2022
Barristers in criminal cases represent members of the public from all walks of life, charged with all manner of technical or straightforward offences, and with varying degrees of vulnerability.
Barristers also prosecute these cases.
The work can be harrowing. It is complex.
— Rabah Kherbane (@RabahKherbane) August 25, 2022
barristers are not paid until the *very end* of the case.
Also, these rates should not be confused with what barristers can earn in other areas of practice, or when acting for private rates.
Specialist criminal barristers have not chosen their vocation because it is lucrative.
— Rabah Kherbane (@RabahKherbane) August 25, 2022
One barrister took the time to write this useful thread on working conditions in her profession:
🧵time
A family member asked me the other day about why criminal barristers were on strike. They didn’t understand it but we’re genuinely interested.
I tried to explain it to them and as I thought about it and gave them this example, I felt compelled to write it down.
/1
— Katherine White (@katherine_hw) August 25, 2022
I’m 26, unable to commit to moving out of the house I share with 5 other people out of fear that I will not earn enough money to pay rent living alone with the increasing cost of living.
I’m being told to save for a mortgage, get on the property ladder early – how?
/18
— Katherine White (@katherine_hw) August 25, 2022
Labour’s latest clanger
The Labour Party’s policy proposals for dealing with the economy have been found to be basically useless. Full Fact reported that the party’s energy bill proposals did not account for, of all things, winter:
Labour’s “fully funded” energy bills plan does not pledge enough money to cover a freeze in the price cap.
The party failed to take account of most customers’ higher gas and electricity consumption during the winter in its calculations. https://t.co/mx55C8Sd8c
— Full Fact (@FullFact) August 26, 2022
Another moment of excellence from Keir Starmer and his cronies.
While Labour flaps, the port of Felixstowe was also closed down by a strike this week:
🇬🇧The largest port in the UK has stopped working
Britain's largest container port, Felixstowe, has all but come to a standstill after 1,900 Unite union members walked off the job for eight days following failed wage negotiations
first strike of port workers in the UK since 1989 pic.twitter.com/3GItIVhBFV
— AZ 🛰🌏🌍🌎 (@AZmilitary1) August 25, 2022
And one genius worker decided to do a lap of the port on a powered surfboard while flying the flag of his union Unite:
A striking docker at Felixstowe laps the deserted port with their @unitetheunion flag flying high.
Workers’ power at its best – nothing moves without us.
Brilliant work from the striker who captured this moment and from all those taking a stand for a proper pay rise 👏 pic.twitter.com/s4UFOMA3Qp
— Lauren Townsend (@LaurenJTownsend) August 25, 2022
Workers’ power
Workers are on the move and taking on their bosses directly. As Labour struggles to understand how seasons work, extra-parliamentary campaigns like Don’t Pay and Enough is Enough seem to be gaining traction. This can only be positive moves towards an invigorated workers’ movement.