I’m sure I am not the only UCU member worried about the steady erosion of democratic rights in the UK.
Voter ID is being introduced for elections in the UK. This will disenfranchise some voters, including some of the most disadvantaged ones. In the USA, Republican administrations try to keep potential Democratic voters off the electoral registers through such measures.
The right to demonstrate and protest is increasingly being criminalised in the Public Order Bill.
We are facing even more anti-trade union laws. The Government is proposing to use a supposed problem about emergency cover to legislate to make it compulsory, threatening trade unionists with the sack if they refuse to work.
What is common to these attacks on democratic rights is the creation of a fictitious problem, to which increasing the powers of the state at the expense of citizens is presented as the remedy. It is always important to ask the subversive question ‘To what problem is this measure proposed as a remedy?’.
The problems are fictitious.
Many trade unionists have seen in the workplace the ways employers and managers create fictitious problems as a basis for pushing through changes they wanted anyway – often changes to our detriment.
There is no evidence whatsoever for any serious level (or even any minor) level of voter fraud in the UK. So, the case has not been made for voter ID.
The inconveniences at times from protests and demonstrations are much less than the social problems which would arise from a loss of the right to protest.
There is not a problem about emergency cover being provided by workers in ambulance, health, fire and other emergency services. It already happens. The problem is that there is a failure to provide these services in ordinary times because of chronic understaffing and under-investment in public services.
Trade unions must campaign against these attacks on democratic rights. Trade unions need a free society in which to operate effectively for their members.
UCU Congress 2022 voted in favour of proportional representation for UK elections. This would be a step forward in democracy in the UK.