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Old November 21st 09, 10:44 AM posted to uk.transport.london
[email protected] rosenstiel@cix.compulink.co.uk is offline
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First recorded activity at LondonBanter: Sep 2008
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Default Is it time for transport unions to be banned?

In article
,
(MIG) wrote:

On 20 Nov, 16:56, wrote:
In article ,

(Bruce) wrote:
On Fri, 20 Nov 2009 15:04:59 -0000, "Recliner"
wrote:


As you say, the RMT is one of the more militant unions, and perhaps
its members would remain just as militant even if the union were
headed by someone else. After all, they voted for Crow, and would
presumably elect someone else in his mould if he disappeared -- in
effect, they're in control, not the union leader. Even if the union
didn't exist, they may still call unofficial, wildcat strikes or
disrupt the railway in other ways (rather like the TOCs whose
drivers suddenly won't work on Sundays).


What is needed here, and across much of the public service sector,
is a combination of a no-strike deal and compulsory pendulum
arbitration of pay claims. *But it will never happen under Labour,
because Labour doesn't want to upset its Union paymasters.


Not that I would want to be characterised as an apologist for the
Unions or the Labour Party but you seem to have overlooked 12 1/2
years of contrary evidence to that proposition. Isn't the RMT one
of those unions that has stopped paying Labour for precisely that
reason?


Are you suggesting letting facts spoil a good rant?


Would I do that?

--
Colin Rosenstiel