PCS Left Unity members meeting 31st July

Dear PCS Left Unity member

Following the branch consultations the NEC met and decided to ballot members on the next steps in the national campaign. The ballot opens next Thursday 3rd August. It is crucial that we have a huge turnout in the ballot.

We have called a PCS Left Unity all members meeting on Monday 31st July at 6pm which will be introduced by Mark Serwotka.  Please attend the meeting.

Left Unity National Committee

Zoom Meeting https://us02web.zoom.us/j/83081688239

Meeting ID: 830 8168 8239

One tap mobile +442039017895,,83081688239# United Kingdom

PCS National Campaign – Left Unity leadership wins real concessions – Now vote YES to pause action and take stock of progress in talks

Imagine your members had taken 6 days strike action and lost 6 day’s pay already with another one day strike called for August. Imagine that sacrifice had led nowhere, no improved pay offer and the Tories had sat it out just like they have always sat out one and two day strikes. That would be the situation now if our opponents, the Broad Left Network and Independent Left, had been in charge of the NEC and leading our national pay campaign. At every NEC meeting and at every turn in the campaign they have called for more and more one day strikes. Imagine how disheartened the membership would be.

Instead following 8 months of highly successful targeted action and just three 1 day national strikes by PCS members during our national campaign, the union is stronger than ever before. More members have joined the union. Many members have become new reps in offices. Hundreds of new mainly young activists have got involved. Groups previously not at the national forefront of the union like DfT and EFRA have delivered big contributions to our fight with solid targeted action.

Many long serving union members will remember past campaigns over the last 40 years that relied on one day strikes. Those campaigns never won, and our best reps swore never again to a campaign of one day strikes that meant members had to lose a day’s pay and do 5 day’s work in 4 days.

Left Unity members on the NEC devised and planned both the levy and the very popular strategy of targeted action alongside national action. On a day-to-day basis it was led and implemented by Paul O’Connor, the Secretary to the National Disputes Committee and the Left Unity candidate in the Assistant General Secretary election.

Supported with full strike pay, members across the union working in the DWP, HMRC, Passport Offices, Border Control, Airports, DVLA, DEFRA, Land Registry and many more, have caused massive disruption to their employers.

The Left Unity led NEC called on all members to make the sacrifice of a one-day strike just three times when it could have the most impact alongside other workers in dispute on the same day as teachers and NHS staff.

As a result of this Left Unity strategy our union has made real progress and for the first time ever our union has won significant concessions from the Tories. This is the first time ever that we have won concessions on pay centrally from any government due to an industrial action campaign. On every previous occasion the Tories have refused to shift and insisted that all talks must be at departmental level. This winning strategy was devised by Left Unity.

The key points won by the campaign are –

  1. A £1,500 non-consolidated cost-of-living payment, this is in line with payments offered to other public sector workers.
  2. A 4.5% pay increase with an extra 0.5% for the lowest paid. This is more than double the Tories original offer of 2%. Early indications are that, in major departments of state, the employer is looking to do even better than the 5% for the lowest paid.
  3. On redundancy pay through the Civil Service Compensation Scheme, the government has confirmed that it will not take any action or make any changes until 2025, in effect after the next general election. Members’ strike action has successfully blocked the government’s attempted 33% cut of the terms of the CSCS.
  4. The government has given a commitment to further talks on greater coherence of pay within the civil service. This is a significant step on what has been a long-term aspiration for our union for 20 years. National pay bargaining is the only way to end poverty pay and discrimination in delegated pay, to address a pay system which is fundamentally broken. Talks are expected to begin imminently.
  5. The government also gave a further commitment to more talks on strengthening redundancy avoidance measures.
  6. On pensions, the government has refused to discuss our members’ overpayments and other issues while the current legal action is ongoing. We have been given leave to appeal the High Court decision and our advice is that we have a good case. We can return to the issue at that point.

In past pay campaigns, members have lost several day’s pay and won little or nothing. A Left Unity led strategy of mainly targeted action on full strike pay has made sure members lost little pay and won pay increases of at least 4.5% and £1,500 plus stopping the attack on our redundancy scheme.

Left Unity Consulted members

These concessions are welcomed by Left Unity and by PCS members, however, concessions are what they are, and this is not a victory. They fall short of the demands in our national campaign and there are serious issues with some of the concessions made by the government. We should be proud of what our members have won but we also know it is less than we would like.

Nevertheless, Left Unity members on the NEC recognised the concessions as significant, and believe that it was therefore correct to consult members about them.

Those members’ consultation meetings were well attended. Part time and women members have made clear their opposition to the £1,500 being paid pro rata. Left Unity agrees this is not fair and negotiators continue to argue for full payment to all members.

Members in these meetings also agreed with Left Unity that whilst the concessions were significant, they are not yet enough. Crucially though, very few members were ready to take further unpaid national strike action at this point in the campaign.

Of the 163 branches that responded, less than half wanted to fight on, and from those that did, a number said they wanted to continue the campaign, but not take further unpaid action, and some who responded were from employer groups who had come nowhere near beating the 50% threshold.

In conclusion, the cost-of-living crisis is hitting our members hard and there is little enthusiasm for fighting on right now, if it means loss of pay. Better to pause, take stock of what delegated and national talks deliver, then review again.

Other crucial factors

Left Unity members on the NEC took members’ views expressed at these meetings into account. A number of other factors also had to be weighed up –

  1. The DWP is the biggest group in the union. The DWP did not win a legal mandate of over 50% of members voting in the recent re-ballot. Feedback tells us that DWP members want to pocket the £1,500.
  2. In HMRC the ballot mandate runs out in August. Left Unity are proud of the way HMRC reps and activists tackled the successful reballot, but balloting members during the summer holidays, at a time when more money is on offer, and members are keen to see what negotiations deliver, would not be straightforward.
  3. In the Home Office, the Left Unity led Group Executive Committee has won a significant negotiated offer which potentially meets our demands on pay. Home Office members will want this money.
  4. The targeted action strategy devised by Left Unity has won the concessions we have secured. Using the money generated by the levy, we have spent £6 million from the fighting fund. To mount significant further targeted action would mean increasing the levy. The alternative option to increasing the levy is much more unpaid strike action.

With no mandate in DWP currently, one about to expire in HMRC and the Home Office achieving a negotiated deal which meets our demands on pay, alongside MOJ and DSG members not currently with a mandate for action, further national action would be smaller and less impactful than any action taken previously. What message does that send about our ability to deliver and put pressure on the government to return with a better offer?

Hard decisions

On the one hand, Left Unity has led a successful national campaign that has won significant, important and welcome concessions. Whilst they are welcome the concessions won so far do fall short of our demands. On the other hand, mounting further targeted or national unpaid strike action now, did not have members support in the feedback from the members meetings.

This means the NEC had to make hard decisions. The instinct of every socialist activist is to fight on. Having had thousands of members come alive on picket lines and get involved in the union, nobody wants to hold back members’ enthusiasm to fight for better pay for them and their families. Set against this instinct to fight on, Left Unity members leading the union’s NEC also knew from members’ meetings that the circumstances on the ground in offices, with no DWP mandate, an HMRC mandate about to run out, a low fighting fund and a very good offer in the Home Office, the time is not right for further escalated action now across the union.

Re-ballot and Pause for talks

Left Unity is clear that this does not mean that our national pay campaign is over. That is why the NEC is now balloting members on our proposed strategy. This ballot signals a new phase in our campaign for fair pay, pensions and jobs.

The ballot recommends a temporary pause of industrial action, similar to that being recommended by the left majority in the NEU, except for the small number of areas yet to commit to paying the £1500, while we engage in departmental talks on pay for 2023/4.

We will also pause re-ballots in pursuit of our national demands. Delegated talks are ongoing, with negotiators seeking to maximise the money delivered to the lowest paid members and address the merging of AA/AO pay scales in a number of departments, and key national talks are starting soon. Once these talks have taken place, we will reconsider next steps in the campaign.

We will continue to campaign over the unequal payment of the lump sum, including pro-rating, which penalises part-time workers, many of whom are women. We will also continue to campaign on pensions, including continuing to pursue legal action on over payments.

The ballot will be online, and it will ask members to endorse the next stage in our campaign. It will be held from 3 August to noon on 31 August for all members in employer areas within the dispute. There will be a postal ballot for those without personal email addresses.

Left Unity believes that having achieved significant concessions, and consulted members, it is correct to pause to allow further talks and take stock, while continuing to fight for members where money is being held back. A pause will also give us time to keep building the union and prepare for the next stage in the fight for better pay, pensions and jobs.

Interestingly, the left-wing Socialist Teachers Alliance is putting forward a similar view as PCS Left Unity in the teacher’s pay dispute. They have issued a leaflet saying – A ceasefire not a peace treaty – calling on teachers to, “vote for a pause, consolidate our gains and build the union.”

Left Unity urges all branches and reps to talk to your members, explain the reasons for this pause and encourage your members to vote YES in the ballot.

Our opponents have easy answers but no strategy to win

Our political opponents in the union from the Broad Left Network and the Independent Left have constantly attacked the national campaign strategy led by Left Unity.

Firstly, it is important to remember that their criticism was opposed by the PCS national conference in Brighton in May. The vast majority of reps and branches at the union’s democratic decision-making body voted to support the Left Unity strategy.

Secondly, their only alternative throughout has been to call for more and more unpaid national strike action. A strategy condemned by any experienced reps who have seen it fail in the past, as the government sits out one and two day strikes.

Thirdly, at the NEC meeting when the Left Unity majority took hard but honest decisions to ballot members on pausing the campaign, their only alternative was to call for a one day national strike in August. This would be a strategy to end the campaign in defeat and place at risk any further gains we could win.

Vote YES to take stock, but continue the fight

Left Unity is clear. We have only won what we have, because of the action we have taken, and members can be confident that campaigning works and taking action gets results. We have led a campaign that has delivered significant gains. We will focus now on areas where money is being held back, but we will continue to pursue our campaign for better pay for all of our members. Now it is time to pause for further talks at departmental and national levels. The fight is not over or ended. We will assess everything after a pause, and continue to provide honest, winning leadership.

General Secretary and AGS elections – Left Unity candidates are Fran Heathcote and Paul O’Connor

On the 17th May Mark Serwotka, PCS General Secretary, announced that he will be retiring next year. PCS Left Unity is proud to have worked with Mark for many years and we wish him an enjoyable retirement.

The election timetable for a new General Secretary will run alongside the election process for the Assistant General Secretary. The elections will be held later in the year and branches will be able to nominate candidates.

The timetable is here:

Monday 2nd September: Call for nominations

Monday 16th October, 5pm: Deadline for receipt of completed nominations

Monday 23rd October, 5pm: Deadline for acceptance and election addresses

Thursday 9th November: Ballot opens

Thursday 14th December, 12 noon: Ballot closes

Upon the announcement of Mark’s retirement the Left Unity National Committee decided a process for selecting our candidates for the two roles. At the end of that process our candidates are.

Fran Heathcote for General Secretary

Paul O’Connor for Assistant General Secretary

Fran Heathcote

Fran joined the DHSS and CPSA in 1993, quickly getting involved in her local BEC. Soon, she became active in the South West, representing CPSA and then PCS at the SW TUC. 

Fran became the South West Regional Organiser within DWP and worked with many South West branches, as well as rapidly building her own branch, working with a team of newly recruited reps.

In 2003, Fran was elected to the DWP GEC and soon afterwards, became North East group liaison officer and DWP group Organiser.

On moving to the North East in 2005, she worked with a network of new and more experienced reps to strengthen the region’s organisation, helping to transform the region to be much more inclusive, soon taking up post as Regional Chair. 

DWP President

In 2012, Fran was elected as DWP President, negotiating on many issues during her time, including steering the group through the removal of check-off. Elected to the NEC since 2014, Fran was elected as Vice president in 2017, before becoming Deputy President, then President at the end of 2018.

Fran has a wide range of experience, having held various posts at every level of PCS. 

Seasoned anti-austerity campaigner

A seasoned anti-austerity campaigner, with a background of fighting for better social security, Fran is well known for her work as an activist, whether that be supporting our members on picket lines, working with other unions to build for coordinated action or representing PCS at the People’s Assembly, where Fran holds a seat on the steering committee. A tireless advocate for equality and increasing participation within underrepresented groups, Fran is passionate about organising and campaigning, with the bargaining experience to back that up.

Fran has a proud record of working with regions and branches, a building unity across the union.

Paul O’Connor

Paul O’Connor began working in the then Inland Revenue in 1988. He quickly became active in a PCS predecessor union, the Inland Revenue Staff Federation (IRSF). He worked in the Inland Revenue and subsequently HM Revenue and Customs for nearly twenty years, remaining active in the IRSF, the Public Services, Tax and Commerce Union (PTC) and subsequently PCS. He served members in various roles, including Office Rep, Branch Secretary, Branch Organiser, Branch Chair and on the Group Executive Committee. He was also Chair of the PCS North West Region from 2005 to 2007.

In 2007, Paul became a Full-Time Officer of the union, serving as Group Secretary to the Home Office Group. He was promoted to National Officer for the Home Sector in 2010. He was then promoted to Senior National Officer in 2012, a role in which he has served as the unions Head of Bargaining. He manages a team of 7 National Officers and 31 Industrial Officers. He has been at the heart of re-orientating PCS’s staffing structure to make it more responsive to the needs of activists and members.

National Campaign

Paul is also Secretary to the union’s National Disputes Committee, where he has oversight for all of the industrial action campaigns taken forward by the union. He has been instrumental in the establishment of the unions Fighting Fund and the development of our industrial strategy, targeted action funded by a levy, in pursuit of our current national campaign.

Check Off victory in the courts

Paul also has responsibility for taking forward strategic legal cases. He has led litigation against the employer which has seen PCS win seven High Court cases through judicial review, including: overturning detrimental changes to the Civil Service Compensation Scheme, an estimated benefit to members of £100 million per year; establishing a contractual right to check off leading to a £3 million damages settlement for the union from the DWP.

Resisting racist Rwanda deportation policy

Paul was central to defeating the government’s attempt to force PCS members to perform a dangerous pushback manoeuvre on refugees crossing the English Channel. He is continuing to oversee litigation to fight the government’s inhumane Rwanda deportation policy and is campaigning for the dismantling of the hostile environment for refugees in which our members are being forced to work.

PCS conference report – Building the movement, winning the future

PCS Left Unity had an overwhelmingly positive conference in Brighton last week.

We had already enjoyed very successful election results, with members re-electing a Democracy Alliance NEC, with just a handful of casualties, despite the unholy alliance of our opponents from Independent Left and Broad Left Network, joining forces. Whilst those Democracy Alliance candidates not elected will be sorely missed, it is clear that the alliance, formed with the sole aim of removing Left Unity from the leadership of our union, and which barely survived ADC, did not reap the anticipated benefits. There is now much discussion about whether it can survive the upcoming GS/AGS elections, with one Independent Left candidate declaring in advance of these discussions concluding. In contrast, Left Unity have invited nominations from across our membership, and will wait for these to close before declaring our candidates.

The main debate at ADC on Tuesday afternoon, over the way forward for the National Campaign, following passionate contributions on all sides of the argument, and a fair bit of sectarianism from our opponents, saw conference vote convincingly for the Left Unity strategy, as set out in our emergency motion, and reject the defeatism of our opponents. This was an important victory and one which allows the incoming NEC to continue with the strategy that gives us the best opportunity of winning for our members.

In some respects, conference last week crystallised a simple question – what kind of union do we want? The task of building a fighting, democratic union is ongoing, but it is an ambition that can not only be knocked off course but, as we have seen this week, could easily be reversed if some of our opponents came to power.

The Left Unity position on most of the key debates at conference was overwhelmingly successful, with conference rejecting the anti-democratic attempt to run PCS for 5 months without a General Secretary or disenfranchise those branches and activists that could not physically get to Brighton. The BLN were behind both of these moves to subvert the democracy of our union, and in particular, their attempt to restrict the right to vote in the block vote elections to those fortunate enough to be in Brighton, whilst preventing those joining virtually, due to health or caring responsibilities, from taking part, was a cynical manoeuvre.

Both of these assaults on democracy were resoundingly defeated by conference, and saw our opponents become ever more agitated. Heckling and shouting, and intimidating many first-time delegates, who have told us they then felt unable to fully take part in what should have been a positive experience.

It became obvious why the BLN were keen to avoid the results of the Block Vote elections being declared, when the results confirmed that members had not elected a single one of their candidates.

A historic vote was carried on our devolved administrations, resulting in inaugural, policy-making conferences being planned in Scotland and Wales in the autumn, following elections of executive nation committees for the first time. This is ground-breaking for PCS and something to be welcomed, having been widely consulted on, and supported, in our devolved nations, yet another example of democracy in action. 

On Equality, conference rejected the NEC motion which attempted to set out a pan-equality agenda, taking forward work on black members’ issues, womens’ issues and disabled members’ issues, as well as LGBT+ issues, in favour of a motion narrowly focused on Proud. The incoming Left Unity led NEC will ensure that this motion is implemented, recognising that the most successful outcome is one where more LGBT+ members participate in the Proud network, making it a far more inclusive part of our union. PCS Left Unity is fully committed to working hard to ensure that this happens.

Wednesday night saw a successful Left Unity rally, where a packed, enthusiastic room heard from Mark Serwotka and Fran Heathcote, alongside a number of excellent contributions from the floor. The focus was very much on the future and the success of the National Campaign. Lots of positive feedback was received afterwards and a long list of new joiners.

Conference is a time when you should come away feeling refreshed and revitalised, and whilst there are always setbacks, we hope that delegates, trainees and observers enjoyed the experience and will be able to take forward the issues agreed into their workplaces, and involve themselves wholeheartedly in working together to win our campaigns.

If you’re not yet a member of Left Unity, please get involved in our campaigns and consider joining us. The future of PCS and our ability to co-ordinate and work with other unions, is dependant on Left Unity growing within our union, pursuing the message of hope and unity that only we bring to PCS members.

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