National Shop Stewards
Network (NSSN) statement on the Lindsey oil refinery strike
The strike by more than
1,000 workers at the Lindsey oil refinery (LOR) in north Lincolnshire
started on January 28 and ran for over a week. It was supported by solidarity
walk-outs across 22 other "Blue Book" sites, workplaces covered
by the National Agreement for the Engineering and Construction Industry
(NAECI) agreement across England, Scotland and Wales. It hit the headlines,
making national and indeed international news.
Against the background
of rapidly mounting job losses across many industries, this was a very
important dispute, involving widespread unofficial action in defiance
of the Tory anti-union laws, retained by New Labour and designed to curb
effective resistance by organised workers. The action at Lindsey also
posed a challenge to the European Union's Posted Worker Directive, which
is spurring a 'race to the bottom' as employers seize on it as a means
of attacking pay, terms and conditions.
The immediate trigger
to the LOR strike came after Shaws, a previous sub-contractor at the site,
owned by the French-based oil multinational, Total, lost its contract
with the US-based Jacobs. Shaws had issued 90-day redundancy notices in
mid-November, when it later emerged that the new firm at LOR was the Italian-based
company, IREM, a non-union outfit, which had indicated it would be bringing
its "own" workforce from Italy and Portugal, and not offering
any jobs to those faced with redundancy.
Much of the media coverage
of the action highlighted the placards and posters held up by some pickets,
which called for "British jobs for British workers". The early
placards were produced by rank and file industry activists associated
with the Bearfacts website, but the slogan has a very dubious history.
It has been associated with the BNP, and has since been used both by Gordon
Brown in a speech at the 2007 Labour Party conference and leading union
officials such as Derek Simpson. Shamefully, Simpson allowed himself to
be photographed with two "page 3" models from the viciously
anti-union, Daily Star, who held placards with the slogan.
To their credit, strikers
told the BNP fascists where they could go when they turned up at pickets.
But it took the leadership provided by an unofficial but very effective
strike committee to steer the strike away from this slogan and towards
clearly progressive goals.
The NSSN believes slogans
such as "British Jobs for British Workers" should be firmly
rejected by workers, but also recognises that its initial adoption by
strikers reflected the vacuum of leadership at the LOR in the wake of
the resignation of the previous stewards' committee.
The elected joint union
strike committee, which included GMB member and NSSN supporter, Keith
Gibson, drew up a series of demands, which were accepted by a mass meeting
on Monday 2 February. These included:
*All workers in the
UK to be covered by NAECI agreement
* Union controlled registering of unemployed and local skilled union members,
with nominating rights as work becomes available.
* All immigrant labour to be unionized
*Union help for immigrant workers-including interpreters and union advice.
*Force the government to change or withdraw those EU directives and court
rulings that exempt non-UK companies from abiding by industry collective
agreements.
*No victimization of workers taking solidarity action.
The settlement to the
dispute meant that workers were guaranteed 102 of the 198 jobs on the
contract for building a new chemical facility at the LOR site, with no
Italian or Portuguese workers displaced. The deal allowed for the shop
stewards to check that the jobs filled by the Italian and Portuguese workers
were on the same conditions as the local workers covered by the NAECI
agreement.
The outcome was a real, if partial, victory for the Lindsey workers and
put a temporary brake on the "race to the bottom", the drive
to push down wages and conditions by exploiting the provisions of the
EU posted worker directive and recent rulings by the European Court of
Justice.
The NSSN congratulates the Lindsey oil refinery workers on the courage
and determination they showed during their struggle. In particular, we
salute the efforts by the unofficial strike committee that ensured the
strike did not go down a reactionary, nationalist path. We will support
all efforts by the NAECI national shop stewards forum in opposing redundancies
and the 'race to the bottom', where the employers are using EU laws to
undermine union negotiated agreements and organisation. At the same time,
the NSSN firmly opposes slogans that stress narrow economic nationalism
and stands instead for solidarity in defense of workers' interests, whatever
those workers' national origin or immigration status.
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