'This is an awful result', said Dave Smith
of the Blacklist Support Group
by Brian Bamford
LAST SATURDAY the
Financial Times leader writer began an editorial thus:
'A dispiriting election has produced a seismic outcome. Britain's political landscape has been redrawn as it was by Tony Blair's New Labour victory in 1997, or Margaret Thatcher's win in 1979. The Conservative landslide is a vindication of Boris Johnson's strategy of going all-out for a new Brexit deal and building his campaign around delivering it.... Yet the result, combined with the Scottish National party's surge in Scotland and nationalist gains in Northern Ireland, will strain the integrity of the UK.'
At the same time in an e-mail written immediately following the election Dave Smith secretary of the
Blacklist Support Group, which has been consistently loyal to the Labour Party wrote:
'This is an awful result for the entire labour movement.
'Whatever people's thoughts on Corbyn or Brexit; the Labour manifesto
commitments on workers rights, NHS & public services,
renationalisation of rail & utilities, house building and the
climate were supported by the majority of the population. All these
things are now at risk from a right wing Johnson government.'
Yet prior to the election in another e-mail he had wisely warned us:
'working people should never place dewy eyed trust in politicians,
lawyers or union leaders to solve our problems for us; continuing to build a movement remains essential.'
But what really happened under the Attlee Labour Government of 1945?
MILITARY BLACKLEGS & the 1945 LABOUR GOVERNMENT
Dave Smith does well to remind us that we should not
'place dewey eyed trust in politicians' etc. for within six days of the Labour Government taking office in 1945, it sent conscript troops into the Surrey Docks, London, to break a ten-week-old strike against a wage-cut....
Yet in a Labour amendment to the Military Training Bill, in Hansard on May 12th, 1939, this same Labour Party had declared:
'No conscript should be required to take duty in aid of the civil power in connection with a trade dispute, or to perform, in consequence of a trade dispute, any civil or industrial duty customarily performed by a civilian.'
Surely there is some inconsistency here?
THE GREAT ILLUSION
In 1959, on the Aldermaston CND march, some trade union critics, who described themselves as
'syndicalists', not unlike Dave Smith of the Blacklist Support Group today, claimed at that
time:
'we believe many sincere but starry-eyed Labour supporters have already half-forgotten the events during those six years in which every Socialist principle was betrayed by the politicians... [and that] It is no service to the working class for the truth to be hidden, however embarrassing and unpalatable it may be for some people.' (How Labour Governed 1945-1951 - DIRECT ACTION PAMPHLET: Publications Committee, SWF).
THE LABOUR PROGRAM in 1945
Like Len McCluskey said last week about the panicky policy incontinence of the current Labour Party, the 1945 Labour Government, with a vast majority, had an economic programme based on two principles - 'a give-away programme and state control of economic functions'.
Dave Smith in his generally depressing Tweet continues to argue in this gloomy vain:
'For blacklisted construction workers, our hope for a public inquiry into the Consulting Association scandal now
appears to be off the agenda for the next few years at the very least.'
Bro. Smith was here pinning his faith on Page 48 of the Labour Manifesto:
'We
will establish public inquiries into historical injustices including
blacklisting and Orgreave, and ensure the second phase of the Grenfell
Inquiry has the confidence of
all those affected, especially the bereaved families and survivors.'*
When I last spoke personally to Dave Smith in 2015, at a Blacklist Support Group conference on 'Bullying, blacklisting and whistleblowing' at a two-day event at the University of Greenwich, I expressed my concerns and doubts about his hopes about getting a future Labour Government to solve the problem of blacklisting etc. by creating a distinguished public inquires. Since 1979, when the alternative newspaper RAP had first exposed Cyril Smith, I long had the experience of seeking public inquires owing to the work I had put in to get something done about child abuse in Rochdale and beyond. Sadly, by the time the inquiry will finally get to publish its report many of the alleged victims will be beyond help.
The Blacklist & the Consulting Association
Tameside Trade Union Council in Greater Manchester, has been involved with what later became known as the 'BOYS ON THE BLACKLIST' during the Daf dispute in Manchester's Piccadilly in 2003. That was well before it had been finally confirmed that the blacklist actually existed in 2009** by subsequent events in which the Information Commissioner raided an office of the Consulting Association in Droitwitch, Cheshire.
As the Financial Times leader above indicates the political landscape of the UK has changed substantially. But it is not the end of history which some may claim. The nationalist issues both in Scotland and Northern Ireland, as the FT editor suggests, may still come back to haunt the Tory Government.
Dave Smith is right in his blunt response to be 'gutted' by the outcome! It is a slap in the face for what passes for the British left. But we at Northern Voices
have always been clear that we have historically even less faith in
politicians than Dave Smith has ever had. George Orwell told the poet
Stephen Spender that he always avoided going to cocktail parties to mix with literary folk for fear it may interfere with his own critical judgement of their literary work.
Could it be that being based and rooted in London that Dave Smith and some of the Blacklist Support Group, may well have become too close to the some of the Labour politicians down there and that it could have clouded their judgement?
In the years since the late naughties that I have known them; Dave Smith and the Blacklist Support Group, have always struck me as one of the most decent phenomena on the British left in this country bar none, aside perhaps from my own personal friends among the Boys on the Blacklist in the North of England, and I don't think that those associated with my own political persuasion among the English anarchists are a patch on them. Other parts of the British left, especially including the British anarchists, who have presented us with the politics of a shabby little shocker. Although I believe that Dave Smith and the Blacklist Support Group are wholly committed to fairness and common decency they will be well aware that the Labour party, when in Government, has failed to make serious in-roads towards the abolition of British blacklisting.
Despite what Dave Smith declares about us placing
our faith
'dewey eyed trust in politicians'; I fear that these honourable activists may suffer from being too trusting of people inside the Westminster bubble.
****************
*
Page 48 of the Labour Manifesto:
"We
will establish public inquiries into historical injustices including
blacklisting and Orgreave, and ensure the second phase of the Grenfell
Inquiry has the confidence of
all those affected, especially the bereaved families and survivors. We
will also consider a public inquiry in the case of Zane Gbangbola.
We will require judicial warrants for undercover operations and retain the Mitting Inquiry into undercover policing.
We
will release all papers on the Shrewsbury 24 trials and 37 Cammell
Laird shipyard workers and introduce a Public Accountability Bill".
The Blacklist
Support Group are proud to have stood shoulder to shoulder on shared
platforms for more than 10 years with campaigners fighting for justice
for Orgreave, Grenfell,
Zane Gbangbola, victims of undercover political policing, the Shrewsbury
Pickets and Cammell Laird ship workers. We have demanded and fought for
a public inquiry for over a decade - its is our campaigning
that has led to this manifesto commitment. We
therefore whole heartedly support this pledge towards getting the truth
we, and other working class miscarriages of justice, deserve. But working people should never place dewy eyed trust in politicians,
lawyers or union leaders to solve our problems for us; continuing to build a movement remains essential.
**
'During 2008/09 the Iinformation Commisioner's Office carried out an investigation into employment
blacklisting in the construction industry. As part of that
investigation, the ICO seized information from a company called The
Consulting Association. Some of the information we seized amounted to a
'blacklist' of individuals who were considered to pose a risk to their
employers if employed within the construction industry.'
***
Following the blacklisting scandal the Labour Government came forward
with regulations. These regulations are so weak that they will not
deter blacklisting. The only recourse for someone who has been
blacklisted still remains taking a case to an employment tribunal and
financial loss has to be proved. UCATT has constantly argued for the
regulations to be strengthened. They necessary changes are:
- Make blacklisting a criminal offence
- When a blacklist is discovered all those on it are automatically told.
- An automatic right to compensation for everyone blacklisted.
- For the regulations to be widened from the narrow confines of “trade
union activities” to the wider “activities associated with trade
unions”. Ensuring trade unionists can’t be blacklisted for taking
unofficial industrial action, such as a ban on voluntary overtime.