Speaking later today (Monday) at a conference in Madrid,
TUC General Secretary Frances O'Grady, (pictured, above) will appeal for the help of unions across
Europe in persuading their governments to resist David Cameron's attempt to
'repatriate' workers' rights.
The new head of the TUC will tell the audience gathered
at the event, marking 40 years of the European Trade Union Confederation
(ETUC), that if the Prime Minister gets his way over Europe, British workers -
and possibly workers across the continent - will lose out.
Speaking at the ETUC event, Frances O'Grady will say "Last week, the British Prime Minister made a
speech which you may have heard about. To some people outside the UK, the logic
of his argument may not have been entirely clear.
"Like the last Conservative Prime Minister, John
Major, David Cameron has a problem - not so much with Europe as with his own
party. He has now promised - if re-elected in 2015 - to hold a referendum on
British membership of the EU, which he says he wants to win.
"What David Cameron is doing - if putting internal
party management above the national and European interest wasn't bad enough -
is even more sinister.
"As well bringing the prospect of an unprecedented
triple-dip recession even closer, the UK government is making the most
vulnerable pay for a crisis they didn't cause, and is set on a wholesale
scrapping of workers' rights.
"The government has already made it easier for
employers to sack people they don't like and more difficult for workers to get
justice before the courts. Now it is trying to abolish wage protection for farm
workers, and stop people injured at work getting their rightful compensation.
"But there's one set of workers' rights David
Cameron can't touch. Those are the rights provided for by social Europe - paid
holidays, health and safety, equal treatment for part-time workers and women,
protection when a business is sold off, and a voice at work.
"The Prime Minister wants to 'repatriate' those
rights, and not because he thinks he can improve them! David Cameron wants to
make it easier for bad employers to undercut good ones, drive down wages, and
make people who already work some of the longest hours in Europe work even
longer. To do that, he needs agreement from the rest of Europe.
"And when the UK government calls on your government
to give him the chance to undermine British workers' rights, we want your
governments to say no. Not just out of solidarity with us, but in the interests
of your own rights, your own wages, and your own jobs.
"What David Cameron is trying to do isn't just opt
out of Social Europe, he wants to undercut it. When he talks about Europe
becoming more competitive and about going back to the days of the Common
Market, what he means is that he wants to end Social Europe altogether.
"Some of your governments will be tempted to let
David Cameron have what he wants, just to keep Britain in the EU. And some will
be tempted to pull the very same trick and get rid of their own workers'
hard-won rights too.
"British working people are looking to their
colleagues around Europe to work with us. Trade unions are all about
solidarity, about working together in the common interest. We must make common
cause to defeat David Cameron's attack on working people and Social Europe.
"And as if that wasn't enough, the continent-wide
rush towards austerity is destroying jobs, living standards and services. In
Britain and across the EU, the current trajectory of economic policy is leading
us towards disaster.
"Current EU economic governance - such as the rules
on budget deficits - is a recipe for recession, not recovery. And the Fiscal
Compact, which effectively prohibits Keynesian stimulus, could lock us into low
or no growth for a generation.
"Despite not being part of the Fiscal Compact,
everything it involves is already being done in Britain, just as it is in
Greece, or Spain, or Italy. If everyone embraces the cult of austerity, who
will we be able to sell our goods and services too? Even the IMF is ringing the
alarm bells.
"The increasingly tight fiscal straightjacket is
strangling the European economy. It has unleashed a crisis of unemployment
unseen in our continent since the 1930s, nowhere more so than here in Spain. It
is destroying growth and doing little to ease debt problems - indeed in
Britain, debt is rising, not falling. And it is weakening the public services,
welfare provisions and workers' rights that have long been at the heart of the
European project.
"The Troika and the EU establishment need to
understand that putting people out of work, making workers poorer, increasing
insecurity is not the way to get our economy back on track.
"We need a credible, compelling recovery plan that
gives European workers a sense of hope about their future. We need a plan that
gets our continent back to work, gets tax revenues flowing, and living
standards and wages rising again.
"If we can find hundreds of billions of euros to
divert into the black hole of Europe's banking system, then we can invest in
new infrastructure, new low-carbon programmes to make homes and workplaces more
sustainable, and new schemes to give work to our young people.
"As trade unionists, we have a crucial role to play
in winning the argument for an alternative. Our focus must not just be on jobs
but on good jobs that pay a decent wage, that help build sustainable demand,
and that give opportunity to those who need it most. Only collective bargaining
can deliver this.
"Together we must make the case for a worker's and
citizen's Europe, not a banker's and financier's Europe. If the EU is only
about fiscal austerity, open markets and privatisation, then ordinary Europeans
will increasingly question its legitimacy - and rightly so.
"For a generation, Europe prospered by balancing the
interests of business and those of workers. It's time to rediscover that
bargain - and the sense of solidarity that underpins it."
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