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Employers trying to make workers poorer, Lynch tells UCU strikers

RMT general secretary joins university staff in London rally on third day of sector-wide strike action

Published on
November 30, 2022
Last updated
December 1, 2022
Jo Grady at UCU rally in London
Source: Tom Williams

Workers have learned that you have got to stand up to make yourself heard, Mick Lynch has told UK university staff on the third day of strike action across the sector.

Speaking to聽探花视频聽at a rally in London, the National Union of Rail, Maritime and Transport Workers general secretary 鈥 who has been a constant figure on the airwaves while his own union has been embroiled in industrial action for the past six months 鈥 said those who were passive in the face of 鈥渁ggressive鈥 employers were 鈥済oing to get crushed鈥.

鈥淭hey are just going to run all over you which is what they have been doing for too long frankly, in all workplaces,鈥 he said.

Asked what linked his union鈥檚 battle with that of the University and College Union 鈥 which has led up to 70,000 members at 150 universities聽out on strike聽as part of calls for more pay and better conditions 鈥 Mr Lynch said that all the disputes were about funding and employers 鈥渢rying to make聽people poorer 鈥 whether you are an education worker or a rail worker or a postie鈥.

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鈥淭here鈥檚 a lot in common in all these debates. We are challenging the paradigm 鈥 as the posh people call it 鈥 the way society is set up and the way we are being treated,鈥 he said.

鈥淲e have been pushed from pillar to post and casualised at work. People are starting to wake up to this super-exploitation and the callousness of employers and that is good for everyone, if we resist it.鈥

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Mr Lynch called for university leaders to return to the negotiating table just as his own union prepared for more strikes after failing to agree a new deal on pay.

鈥淕et back round the table and let鈥檚 get a deal on; treat your people with respect and let them make a decent living,鈥 he said, when asked what his message was to vice-chancellors.

UCU rally in London
厂辞耻谤肠别:听
Tom Williams

The current strikes are the first sector-wide walkouts in recent years and Jo Grady, UCU鈥檚 general secretary,聽claimed employers were now beginning to bend to pressure.

UCU negotiators 鈥 alongside representatives from other higher education unions聽who are also on strike聽鈥 were set to meet with the University and Colleges Employers Association (Ucea) as the strikes took place to discuss plans to bring forward the 2023-24 pay negotiations.

Ucea 鈥 which has claimed the strikes鈥 impact have so far been 鈥渓ow and isolated鈥 鈥 stressed the meeting had been planned months in advance and formed no part of the annual pay round. Its leaders have previously said that the sector聽needs more funding before it can go further on pay.

But Dr Grady said employers 鈥渘eed to realise that this problem they kept hoping would go away will not go away鈥 and said the entire union being out had resulted in a 鈥渧ery different situation鈥.

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鈥淭hey鈥檝e got the money to solve the problem; they need to spend some of that on fixing the issues rather than ignoring them and threatening staff and intimidating them when they don鈥檛 comply,鈥 she added.

Considering what a potential deal could look like, Dr Grady said staff had already 鈥渃ompromised loads鈥 but understood that some of the things they are asking for 鈥 such as action on gender and ethnicity pay gaps 鈥 鈥渨on鈥檛 be delivered tomorrow鈥. However, she wanted a聽guarantee from employers that 鈥渢hey are committed to dealing with these issues with us鈥.

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UCU rally
厂辞耻谤肠别:听
Tom Williams

Among those joining the rally outside King鈥檚 Cross station was Emma Battell Lowman, a research associate at the University of Leicester and a member of UCU鈥檚 higher education committee.

She said she was 鈥渟ick of excellent people being forced out of the university systems because they don鈥檛 have family money to hang on and deal with terrible employment conditions鈥.

Being a union representative had showed her 鈥渆xactly how bad things are鈥 but she said she was hopeful things were going to get better.

鈥淪omething is changing in this country and we are absolutely a part of it,鈥 she said. 鈥淭oday we show the power of our unity to employers. They have never seen 150 universities out on strike together. They have not seen this level of pressure before.鈥

Jared Finnegan, a lecturer in politics at UCL, said his primary motivation for striking was to protect his pension聽鈥 provided by the Universities Superannuation Scheme, which according to a recent monitoring report now boasts a surplus in excess of 拢5 billion, just months after cuts to members鈥 benefits were implemented amid fears of a multibillion-pound deficit.

He said he was 鈥渘ot against finding compromises鈥 but employers did not seem prepared to reverse their position, which he felt was 鈥渋ncreasingly untenable鈥.

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Colleagues who were on the fence last year about participating in strike action all seemed to be on strike this time around, he said, and added that he believed the union would keep 鈥渞atcheting up the pressure鈥.

tom.williams@timeshighereducation.com

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