by John Pilger
New Labour has done its best to destroy the Post Office as a public institution. Postal workers deserve our solidarity
The postal workers' struggle is as vital for democracy as any
national event in recent years. The campaign against them is part of a
historic shift from the last vestiges of political democracy in Britain
to a corporate world of insecurity and war. If the privateers running
the Post Office are allowed to win, the regression that now touches all
lives bar the wealthy will quicken its pace. A third of British
children now live in low-income or impoverished families. One in five
young people is denied hope of a decent job or education.
And now
the Brown government is to mount a "fire sale" of public assets and
services worth £16bn. Unmatched since Margaret Thatcher's transfer of
public wealth to a new gross elite, the sale, or theft, will include
the Channel Tunnel rail link, bridges, the student loan bank, school
playing fields, libraries and public housing estates. The plunder of
the National Health Service and public education is already under way.
The
common thread is adherence to the demands of an opulent, sub-criminal
minority exposed by the 2008 collapse of Wall Street and of the City of
London, now rescued with hundreds of billions in public money and still
unregulated with a single stringent condition imposed by the
government. Goldman Sachs, which enjoys a personal connection with the
Prime Minister, is to give employees record average individual pay and
bonus packages of £500,000. The Financial Times now offers a service called How to Spend It. Best of BritainNone
of this is accountable to the public, whose view was expressed at the
last election in 2005: New Labour won with the support of barely a
fifth of the British adult population. For every five people who voted
Labour, eight did not vote at all. This was not apathy, as the media
pretend, but a strike by the public - like the postal workers are today
on strike. The issues are broadly the same: the bullying and hypocrisy
of contagious, undemocratic power.
Since coming to office, New
Labour has done its best to destroy the Post Office as a highly
productive public institution valued with affection by the British
people. Not long ago, you posted a letter anywhere in the country and
it reached its destination the following morning. There were two
deliveries a day, and collections on Sundays. The best of Britain,
which is ordinary life premised on a sense of community, could be found
at a local post office, from the Highlands to the Pennines to the inner
cities, where pensions, income support, child benefit and incapacity
benefit were drawn, and the elderly, the awkward, the inarticulate and
the harried were treated humanely.
At my local post office in
south London, if an elderly person failed to turn up on pension day, he
or she would get a visit from the postmistress, Smita Patel, often with
groceries. She did this for almost 20 years until the government closed
down this "lifeline of human contact", as the local Labour MP called
it, along with more than 150 other local London branches. The Post
Office executives who faced the anger of our community at a local
church - unknown to us, the decision had already been taken - were not
even aware that the Patels made a profit. What mattered was ideology;
the branch had to go. Mention of public service brought puzzlement to
their faces.
The postal workers, having this year doubled annual
profits to £321m, have had to listen to specious lectures from Peter
Mandelson, a twice-disgraced figure risen from the murk of New Labour,
about "urgent modernisation". The truth is, the Royal Mail offers a
quality service at half the price of its privatised rivals Deutsche
Post and TNT. In dealing with new technology, postal workers have
sought only consultation about their working lives and the right not to
be abused - like the postal worker who was spat upon by her manager,
then sacked while he was promoted; and the postman with 17 years'
service and not a single complaint to his name who was sacked on the
spot for failing to wear his cycle helmet. Watch the near frenzy with
which your postie now delivers. A middle-aged man has to run much of
his route in order to keep to a preordained and unrealistic time. If he
fails, he is disciplined and kept in his place by the fear that
thousands of jobs are at the whim of managers. Subversive forcesCommunication
Workers Union negotiators describe intransigent executives with a
hidden agenda - just as the National Coal Board masked Thatcher's
strictly political goal of destroying the miners' union. The
collaborative journalists' role is unchanged, too. Mark Lawson, who
pontificates about middlebrow cultural matters for the BBC and the Guardian and receives many times the remuneration of a postal worker, dispensed a Sun-style
diatribe on 10 October. Waffling about the triumph of email and how the
postal service was a "bystander" to the internet when, in fact, it has
proven itself a commercial beneficiary, Lawson wrote: "The outcome [of
the strike] will decide whether Billy Hayes of the CWU will, like
[Arthur] Scargill, be remembered as someone who presided over the
destruction of the industry he was meant to represent."
The
record is clear that Scargill and the miners were fighting against the
wholesale destruction of an industry that was long planned for
ideological reasons. The miners' enemies included the most subversive,
brutal and sinister forces of the British state, aided by journalists -
as Lawson's Guardian colleague Seumas Milne documents in his landmark work, The Enemy Within.
Postal workers deserve the support of all honest, decent people, who
are reminded that they may be next on the list if they remain silent.
New Statesman source
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