Feb. 23, 2012 at 12:00pm
Quick link: Trade unions less powerful but still influential in NDP leadership race

Interesting article on how Canadian unions are influencing the NDP leadership campaign election when it’s One Member One Vote and they can’t donate anymore

Feb. 19, 2012 at 10:49am with 2 notes
Transport and General Workers Union recruitment poster from 1935 (United Kingdom)

Transport and General Workers Union recruitment poster from 1935 (United Kingdom)

Nov. 11, 2011 at 11:16am with 9 notes
Union influence in politics is still the best means for achieving broad transformation of troubling threats to living standards, families, and communities. Better age pensions, free dental care, improved unemployment benefits, the protection of precarious workers, and low cost housing are all basics of a renewed ‘wage earners’ welfare state program that a stronger labour movement would bring to politics. These are not old-fashioned ideas but are reminders of the unfinished objectives of a reformist Labor party that can reconnect ordinary people to clear, decommodifying policies.
Sep. 14, 2011 at 1:18pm with 5 notes

We do solemnly swear that we will never under any circumstances work for lower wages or under worse conditions than we now promise one another.

We make this Vow, in secure knowledge that if we all are true to our pledge the employer will be forced to meet our demand.

Sep. 8, 2011 at 10:30am with 29 notes
Do not wait to strike till the iron is hot; but make it hot by striking.
Sep. 5, 2011 at 12:13pm with 13 notes
Our founders did not start by forming a party to seek votes. They started by building a movement to make change. A Labour movement. Trade unions, faith groups, community organisations. Standing for the dignity of man against a state that didn’t listen and a market that didn’t care.
Jun. 23, 2011 at 1:19pm with 1 note

Nick Pearce:

Social mobility has become a kind of political sublimation for policymakers who have been largely unable (or unwilling) to tackle the fundamental causes of wage polarisation, and rising wealth and earnings inequality, in the domain of the economy itself. There is now a voluminous academic literature on these issues, citing various causes of rising inequalities: technological change and increases in the wage returns to education and skills; the decline of trade unions and the weakening of the power of labour in advanced economies as globalisation has brought millions of low-paid workers onto the global labour market; and the rise of the financial sector and its ability to capture an increased share of GDP in profits paid in bonuses. 

What is noticeable about this list is that only education and skills have been the explicit target of social mobility strategies. Improving educational attainment and skills levels is amenable to policy intervention, even if it takes considerable energy and policy resources. That it is why it has featured so heavily in the lexicon of social mobility policy documents. But it also delineates the limits of modern statecraft: governments have not gone beyond the supply of skills into the deeper terrain of political economy.

Pearce may be writing about the United Kingdom but his analysis is equally applicable to Australia.

Jun. 21, 2011 at 7:03pm with 6 notes
Quick link: Marxism without revolution - class

A great post by economist John Quiggin on an achievable Left political agenda awaiting adoption and implementation.

May. 16, 2011 at 12:22pm with 4 notes
The perception of wealth inequality in Australia versus the reality (courtesy of the ACTU)

The perception of wealth inequality in Australia versus the reality (courtesy of the ACTU)