May Day March and Rally - Saturday 3 May 2014
Assemble 11.30 Johnstone Terrace:
Rally 12.30 Pleasance Theatre
See
the Edinburgh & Lothians May Day website for more
details
Ken Loache's acclaimed film The Spirit
of '45
Thursday
1 May 6pm-9pm City Chambers
To celebrate May Day (International
Workers Day) the joint trade unions have organised
a special showing of the acclaimed Ken Loach documentary
‘The Spirit Of 45’. Following the screening
there will be a group discussion and feedback.
The objective of the evening will be to build a campaign
around ‘Pride in our public services’
Click
for more details of the film
May
Day March & Rally - Saturday May 5th 2012
Edinburgh
and Lothians MayDay website
Celebrating 'Our City's Not For Sale'
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The
Branch banner leads the way down the Royal Mile |
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Greg Philo |
John
Stevenson |
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Songs
from Maggie Holland |
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Kim
Grant from Occupy Edinburgh |
UNISON Edinburgh joined the annual May
Day rally to celebrate the 'Our City's Not For Sale'
victory on 5 May 2012. Branch members joined hundreds
of trade unionists and activists on the march down
the Royal Mile to the Pleasance Theatre.
Speaking at the rally, branch president
John Stevenson said, "There is an alternative
and we need to keep telling them that. We need to
keep telling our members that and we need to keep
organising around that. (see full
speech below)
"And just when we think we’re
hitting a brick wall, let’s remind ourselves.
We won in the privatisation fight in Edinburgh. We
won in Aberdeen. We’ve turned the tide in Southampton.
We’re fighting on in Barnet and councils across
the country. We’ve got a taste of victory and
its tastes good. Let’s do it again!"
The rally came the day after Labour
had won most seats on the council and was already
in talks about the future governance of the city.
John told them, "Councillors should
not be passive administrators of cuts decided at Westminster
or Holyrood but champions of their areas, their authorities
and the services we rely on. They should be in the
forefront of making ‘austerity’ unworkable
- campaigning to protect services with those who use
them and those who deliver them."
Urging them to fight for the alternative
to cuts, he said, "Recession is not an accident.
It is not unavoidable. It is created by the politics
of greed."
The rally heard from Greg Philo, research
director of Glasgow University Media Unit, on "Where
all the money went" as he took the rally through
the evidence that a one-off walth tax could pay off
the national debt on one fell swoop.
The Wealth Tax proposes a one-off tax
of 20% on the wealthiest 10% of the population in
the UK. This would pay off the national debt and avoid
the need for deep and harmful cuts in education, welfare
and public services.
Kim Grant from Occupy Edinburgh called
for unity between campaigning groups to fight for
the alternative.
There were messages from Mark Serwotka
of the PCS rallying suppport for pensions action by
his members this month and a meesage from Palestinian
trade unions.
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Celebrating 'Our City's Not For Sale'
May Day 2012 Rally speech from John
Stevenson, UNISON City of Edinburgh Branch President.
Last year, and the year before, we came
here saying ‘Our City’s Not For Sale’.
Then it was an aspiration, now it’s
a reality. We won. You won. But most of all we won
together.
And the council administration has paid
its price at the polls.
Yes, they went on trying to privatise
by the back door but we won the big battle.
It’s great for us to celebrate
our victory today. It’s even better following
the victory in Aberdeen a few weeks ago.
It’s great to see our colleagues
in Southampton throw out the Tory council that was
cutting their jobs, pay, conditions and services.
It’s great to see the people of
Birmingham turn against the vicious attacks on public
services and public service workers there.
Matthew Crighton told our AGM back in
February that in all his years in the trade union,
it’s the first time he’d ever won something!
Maybe a wee bit unfair but it’s
hard to overestimate the importance of seeing off
this privatisation in Edinburgh.
The sheer scale of what was planned
would have seen Edinburgh’s infrastructure sold
off in contracts running through not just this election
but the next one too.
Condemning future councillors to precious
little influence over services no matter who was elected.
No-one tried to hide the fact that it was a Trojan
Horse for privatisations across Scottish local government.
No matter how they dressed this up -
it was a straight sell-off pretending to be efficiency.
The truth was they threw millions at
the private bid process and only a fraction of that
on the in-house options.
They ignored the fact that some companies
had been fined for rigging public sector contracts.
We exposed that.
Some had failed to reveal they’d
been prosecuted for fatal workplace accidents. We
exposed that.
None of the comparators they had cited
had made any real savings. We exposed that.
We exposed that the council said bidders
didn’t need to apply the Local Government Pension
Scheme to new starts.
That’s not efficiency. That’s
robbing workers’ pensions for profit!
Thanks to our activists, our fellow
unions and to the communities who rose up to back
us, we saw this threat off.
And after yesterday’s election
results we have a message for councillors.
We are still here.
We thank the Labour Group for their
support throughout and we celebrate your success with
you.
And our message to whatever structure
takes over the leadership of the council is that things
have to change.
It has to be a radical, democratic change.
A change that genuinely involves users
and staff directly in service design.
A change that brings real improvement
- not the failed dogma of privatisation and outsourcing.
And a message to all our councillors.
You are not elected to manage local
authorities – our members do that. You are elected
as custodians of Edinburgh’s services.
Services for the most vulnerable. Services
that keep the city safe and healthy. Services that
build for the future. Services that are the only way
to build us out of this recession.
If you just shrug your shoulders and
say there is nothing you can do - then we are entitled
to ask precisely what councillors are for.
Councillors should not be passive administrators
of cuts decided at Westminster or Holyrood but champions
of their areas, their authorities and the services
we rely on.
They should be in the forefront of making
‘austerity’ unworkable - campaigning to
protect services with those who use them and those
who deliver them.
We’ll be asking them to do just
that.
But they can’t do it alone. We
as workers and service users need to work together
to resist the cuts. To stand up for our public services,
our welfare state, our years of struggle for fairness,
equality and justice.
Recession is not an accident. It is
not unavoidable. It is created by the politics of
greed.
We told them austerity wouldn’t
work. And we’ve been proven right.
We told them there would be a double
dip recession and we’ve been proven right.
We told them cutting public service
jobs wouldn’t just slash essential services,
it would cut private sector jobs too – and we’ve
been proven right on that too.
So far, the trade unions have been a
lonely voice putting across that message. Speaking
up not just for our members but for people everywhere
paying the price of poverty in work and poverty in
unemployment while the super-rich keep coining it
in without paying their share.
But now communities have joined us.
Even some mainstream politicians have joined us. People
are waking up to the fact that there is an alternative.
An alternative that invests in services, that taxes
fairly, that uses the wealth we undoubtedly have for
the many, not the few.
There is an alternative, colleagues,
and we need to keep telling them that. We need to
keep telling our members that and we need to keep
organising around that.
And just when we think we’re hitting
a brick wall, let’s remind ourselves….
We won in the privatisation fight in
Edinburgh
We won in Aberdeen
We’ve turned the tide in Southampton
We’re fighting on in Barnet and
councils across the country
We’ve got a taste of victory and
its tastes good.
Let’s do it again!
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