Unite: ‘there is an economic alternative'
23 September 2010
Union leads call for alternative economic
strategy
Labour party conference 2010
Unite, the UK's biggest union, will lead the calls for an
economic alternative to the policy of savage cuts promised by the
coalition government at this year's Labour party conference.
The union will be calling for the rejection of "the government’s
view that rapid reductions in the UK deficit are either essential
or in the best interest of the country" warning that the tax and
benefit changes announced in the emergency budget in June 2010 are
just the start of the new government's redistribution of wealth
from the poorest to the better off in society.
Unite will urge the new Labour party leader to voice an
alternative to the government's slashing of public spending, based
on fair taxation policies, decent public services, growing
manufacturing and decent jobs with fair pay.
It will also participate in debates on the threat to Sheffield
Forgemasters as a result of the scrapping of government support,
and the threatened sell-off of the Royal Mail.
A joint fringe meeting with Liberty on Tuesday evening will
consider how employment rights and human rights are under
attack. With some employers resorting to the courts as a
means of avoiding a negotiated solution to industrial problems, the
fundamental right to strike now hangs by a thread (6pm, Radisson
Hotel).
For a full programme of Unite's fringe meetings, visit the Unite
stand at conference (stand 137-162).
ENDS
Media contacts for Unite at Conference are:
Pauline Doyle - 07976 832 861
Ciaran Naidoo - 07768 931 315
For interviews with Derek Simpson, please contact Richard O'Brien
on 07918 631 790
Unite contemporary motion
An alternative economic and industrial
strategy
This conference rejects the economic policies based solely on
the market place and calls for a thorough review of economic
strategy with the purpose of redressing the imbalances which the
policies of the coalition will perpetuate.
Conference believes that the labour values of fairness, equality
and justice must be applied to its own economic strategy.
Conference accepts that the UK economy must prioritise growth and
jobs, which are essential to strengthen public finances.
Conference therefore rejects the current government’s view that
rapid reductions in the UK deficit are either essential or in the
best interest of the country and rejects the myths that abound that
public debt is unprecedented and unsustainable; that governments
should immediately slash public spending; that public finances are
'out of control', and that tax rises can be avoided.
Conference notes the IFS Research published on 25 August which
shows that, once all of the benefit cuts are considered, the tax
and benefit changes announced in the emergency Budget in June 2010
are clearly regressive as, on average, they hit the poorest
households more than those in the upper-middle of the income
distribution in cash, let alone percentage, terms.
Conference calls upon the new leadership of the party to engage
with party stakeholders in an open debate about the essential
elements of an alternative economic and industrial strategy.
A strategy that delivers fair and progressive taxation policies;
decent public services; support for a sustainable manufacturing
sector and decent jobs with fair pay.
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