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Cash dries up for Labour in union attack on plans for privatisation

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Published Date: 17 June 2009
LABOUR is to lose targeted funding from Unison in 64 key constituencies after the union warned the government it could not expect a "blank cheque".
Unison general secretary David Prentis warned that members would no longer be "feeding the hand that bites them", and that the union's £1 million election donation could also be at stake.

Six Labour branches in Scotland will have Unison donations
suspended: Dunfermline and West Fife; East Lothian; Falkirk; Inverness, Nairn, Badenoch and Strathspey; Kilmarnock and Loudoun; and Midlothian.

At Unison's conference in Brighton yesterday, Mr Prentis attacked Labour's policy of privatisation in the health service, which he described as more radical than the ideas pursued during Margaret Thatcher's tenure.

He also pointed to a survey showing 70 per cent of public-sector workers were not voting Labour at the next election.

His criticism came as Prime Minister Gordon Brown addressed the GMB union's conference, urging members and supporters to fight "like never before" to save public services.

"If we don't wake up to the problems faced by a Conservative government cutting public spending by 10 per cent, many services will be going, or gone," he said.

SNP MSP Christina McKelvie, a former Unison shop steward, said Labour had lost touch with public-sector workers: "This is not simply about Gordon Brown's style of government but the very policies the London Labour government have enacted and their proposed cuts in public spending."

A Labour Party spokesman said: "The Labour Party and Unison share a commitment to the values of public services and social justice, and as friends we can and should be frank with one another."





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  • Last Updated: 16 June 2009 10:15 PM
  • Source: The Scotsman
  • Location: Edinburgh
  • Related Topics: Labour Party
 
1

Nevsky;,

Moscow 16/06/2009 22:53:46
More good news for Brown. You would have thought that looses his cabinet and reputation (boob and bust) would have been enough!

He then goes on to plunge Labour to their lowest poll result in history and you would think at this point it would be time to quit.

Not quite, loses all credibility over the 'secret' enquiry and to top it off loses Labour the cash and support of the unions.

Some man!

2

The Busker in Exile,

Notts 17/06/2009 00:24:17
The CWU at thier conference last week backed away from discontinuing funding as they are still in hope that Johnson (the ex postie) will become PM in a coup at Labours conference and he will stop the Part Privitisation of Royal Mail.

Well done Unison.. its time you broke the link an consentrated on members interest rather than the labour party

Do you think RBS will give Broon an extended overdraft ?
3

Gregor Addison,

Glasgow 17/06/2009 00:29:01
I can't help wondering why it's taken so long but perhaps I'm a cynic.
4

frank mcbride,

lusitania 17/06/2009 00:53:21
#2, The Busker...............

Maybe not RBS, but I bet there will be one from the modern day "robber barons" of Lloyds Banking Group.

Let's hope Unison follow the lead of the FBU.
5

For Scotlands Future,

Vote for the SNP 17/06/2009 06:57:13
Maggie Brown: "Saviour of the World" - Destroyer of the Labour Party.

He has done more to destroy the Labour Party in 2-years than Maggie Thatcher did in 10.

You may well see Unison membership flourish while Labour dies. How many people do not become members of Trade Unions because of the millions in membership fees they pay to Labour.
6

Bret,

Aberdeen 17/06/2009 07:07:04
Mags Broon is simply playing party politics.

With the country deeply in debt,it's getting to the point where the public know full well that this endless public spending just has to be reined in.

David Cameron's suggestion to cut public service expenditure is probably more realistic in the minds of the public. Power to the people is what the ballot box is all about. People above party politics.
7

Marian,

17/06/2009 09:53:12
The end is almost nigh for the New Labour project that we have had to endure for the past 12 years when even their own tribal followers are deserting them.
8

Observer,,

Glasgow 17/06/2009 12:12:55
7 less of the tribal followers if you don't mind. There *is* a historical link between Labour and the Trade Unions that dates back more than a Century so it's not a break to be made lightly Marian and narrow minded comments like yours don't help.
9

,

17/06/2009 13:37:17
Comment Removed By Administrator
Reason:
10

Observer,,

Glasgow 17/06/2009 13:47:02
9 I think because there is still hope amongst some of the older workers that old Labour will still re-emerge. Also because amongst the higher echelons they have an eye on the prize and are thinking about themselves (after all Jim Devine and John Lyons were both full time UNISON officers before being ''elevated'' to Westminster ) it's complicated.

But as a UNISON member I have been attempting for years to break the link as have many, and we will keep on trying. However that does not make me less of a trade unionist and I dislike being called tribal as if I am thick.

 

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