Yesterday activists from Defend the NHS, The Labour
Representation committee and the GMB union organised a demonstration in defence
of Brighton NHS. The demonstration was called to coincide with the arrival of Matthew
Kershaw as NHS Trust Chief Executive. Kershaw is fresh from his role as Trust
Special Administrator at Lewisham where he pushed through plans to close the
A&E and Maternity services and close all the acute wards at the hospital,
in the face of mass community opposition. I’ve written more about this issue
here. I attended the demonstration as I have been active in the campaign to
save Lewisham Hospital and wanted to show my solidarity with those in Brighton
fighting to defend the NHS and oppose the repellent axe-man that is Kershaw.
Having seen the devastation Kershaw’s actions will cause in
South London, the GMB decided to meet Kershaw head on and not wait for him to
get comfortable in his new position. The demonstration was lively and supported
by many local residents, students from the Sussex occupation, anti-austerity activists
and the local Labour Party. It was a shot across the bows of Kershaw and showed
the sort of campaign he would face if he tried to push through his cuts agenda
in Brighton.
The demonstration was well attended and as it marched
through Brighton attracted lots of support from the populace, motorists, truck
drivers and local council workers. Several rubbish trucks drove past in convoy, loudly beeping their horns and waving as they passed the demo.
Union members, GMB officials, anti-cuts activists, Sussex
students and local Labour party members spoke at the final rally in Victoria
Gardens. One Labour speaker promised that when elected they would repeal the
Health and Social Care Bill and renationalise the privatised parts of the NHS.
While a welcome promise, they are easy to make in opposition. Labour promised
to renationalise the railways when elected in 1997, they had 13 years and they are
still privatised. They also completely glossed over Labour’s role in creating
the internal market in the NHS, the mass of PFI deals, payments by results and
other NHS reforms which laid the groundwork for the Tories to bring in the HASC
Bill. Labour speakers were heckled about their support for the bedroom tax and
welfare reform, despite their appeals for “unity”. It shows Labour won’t
receive an easy ride over the next two years if they keep carrying through the cuts
at a local level, and don’t take a principled stand against the vicious welfare
cuts. We do need unity against the cuts, but this has to be unity where all
participants take common action against the cuts, not a unity whereby we are asked
to hide our criticisms of those participating in austerity.
Mick Foote, GMB rep at the hospital gave an impassioned
speech against Kershaw and the mismanagement of the hospital, it is worth a watch:
The demonstration was exactly the sort of action we need
from the unions; proactive, uncompromising, uniting with anti-austerity
activists and working to involve and mobilise the community to build a broad
movement of opposition to austerity. It is through these sorts of actions, aimed at creating
a fighting spirit amongst staff and the community, that the strength to stop the cuts can be instilled in the the movement.
What was sad and all too familiar was the lack of support
from UNISON Health for the demonstration. Activists from the Local Government UNISON
branch were present, as were activists and staff from the UNISON Sussex
Partnership (Mental Health) branch, Brighton UCU turned up as did members of a local UNITE branch, but the UNISON hospital branch leadership had not
actively participated in the organising the demonstration and were not present
in any capacity on the demo, although individual UNISON members from the
hospital did take part.
UNISON both locally and nationally have to change their
approach. They cannot stand aside from these protests, it is both a dereliction
of duty to our members to defend their jobs and to the community to defend
our public services. UNISON has enormous resources, which could make these
and similar actions happen up and down the country, helping to develop and
create the kind of mass movement of health workers and community protests which
are needed to save the NHS. By doing nothing, UNISON weakens the struggle against
austerity. On a pragmatic level, UNISON will lose masses of members if the leadership
continue like this, as members will not see the point in being in a union which
talks a lot and yet does nothing to defend them against the cuts. UNISON
officials need to come out of their right-wing bunker and join the movement
against austerity, or they will be left behind.
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