Ireland: Tens of thousands of people: public
sector and private sector workers and their families, unemployed
workers, pensioners and students thronged the streets of eight cities
in the South on Friday, November 6; while 10 further demonstrations
took place in the north also. 70,000 marched into Merrion Square in
Dublin, 20,000 in Cork, 10,000 in Waterford, 6,000 in Galway, 5,000 in
Sligo, 5,000 in Limerick, 4,000 in Tullamore and 1,500 in Dundalk. Not
bad for a Friday with a grim weather forecast.
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When
you see the organised workers movement on the march one of the first
things that is obvious is the mixture of people, young, old, from
different places and different backgrounds, reflecting the changes in
Irish society in the recent past. It’s the common struggle that unites
people and why the struggle against these wage cuts and job losses
touches far more than the public sector workers themselves. There is no
brick wall between the public sector workers and the private sector.
How many couples work one in the public sector and one in the private
for example?
Demonstrations like this bring the masses into political action.
When the masses enter the stage of history then history can be
radically changed.
The
public sector in Ireland employs over 300,000 workers. With their
families, that makes up probably 25% of the population at the least.
That’s the reason that the struggle of the public sector workers is so
important. If these workers can defeat Cowen and Lenihan’s plans then
it would represent a big victory. That’s the best way to win over the
private sector workers, or rather to win over the ones who don’t
support the public sector workers already.
If
you read or listen to the mouth pieces of the bosses and the Fianna
Fáil you realise that in truth they are only “putting on the poor
mouth”. The attempt to divide the workers one from another is just a
way to make the workers pay for the crisis. Its the bosses crisis, they
should be made to pay for it, not us. The best of the private sector
workers will be pointing out the same argument to the people they work
with and their families as well. Ultimately this policy will rebound on
the bosses. But it could rebound on them much more quickly if the union
leaders learn the lessons of this series of demonstrations.
More
or less the same number of workers took part in this day of action as
took part in the February demonstration on the Saturday. There’s been a
huge shift in workers attitudes since then. The workers are ready to
fight to defend there interests. The biggest obstacle in this struggle
is the short sighted perspective of that section of the trade union
leadership who are prepared to settle for less than enough. For sure,
the trade union leaders were on form today, but what will they be
thinking when it comes to Monday morning when they are sitting reading
the views of the hired lackeys of the Fianna Fáil and IBEC?
The
bosses cultivate this type of slow sustained pressure from so called
“public opinion” because they and the so called “Soldiers of Destiny”
in the Oireachtas understand that they can get away with murder in the
name of “Social Partnership”. But confronted with a militant united
workers movement then they would be completely suspended in mid air.
For socialists and trade union activists in Ireland the next step has to be:
- Keep up the pressure on the trade union leaders: Make the bosses pay for the crisis
- Make the 24th of November into a twenty four hour general strike!
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