Thousands of workers head to Birmingham to say 'Jobs Come First'
11th May 2009
National march for
jobs
WHEN: from 11am, Saturday, 16th May, 2009
WHERE: from Highfield Road, Birmingham B15, marching to Centenary
Square, Birmingham City Centre
WHO: Tony Woodley and Derek Simpson, Unite joint general
secretaries; Brendan Barber, TUC general secretary; Lindsay Hoyle
MP for Chorley; Jim Sheridan MP for Paisley & Renfrewshire
North; Darrell Riley, from Birmingham, Alabama, unemployed steel
worker from the United Steel Workers’ union; plus other leading
figures from the world of business and politics, including former
trade minister and first time marcher Digby Jones, and thousands of
workers from across the UK who are worried about their jobs and
futures.
National march for jobs
As unemployment rises across the UK and key sectors of the
economy are battered by the recession, Unite, the UK’s biggest
union, is to bring thousands of people from across the country to
Birmingham to march in defence of their jobs.
The national 'March for Jobs' on Saturday, May 16th, 2009
through central Birmingham will see workers from every sector of
the economy stand together to send a message to the government that
protecting jobs must be the number one priority.
It is expected that workers from Vauxhall, LDV, Corus, Jaguar
and United Biscuits will be among the marchers. Coaches and trains
are coming from across the UK to bring workers to Birmingham.
Unite is pressing for the government to:
- implement a short-time working subsidy to keep people in work
and off the dole
- more sizeable and speedy action to support UK
manufacturing
- more help for business from state-aid
- greater protection for UK workers from redundancy.
ENDS
Unite is being contacted by workers from across the country, and
may have case studies who are willing to speak to the media.
For further information please call Pauline Doyle on 07918 673
745, Ciaran Naidoo on 07768 931 315 or Mark Di-Toro on 07918 640
579 in the Unite press office.
Notes
The march will be supported by a Bhangra style band playing in
Centenary Square.
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