High court ruling scuppers BA strikes – another nail in the coffin of the 'right to strike'

BA today won a high court injunction which ruled unlawful the cumulative 20-day strike called by the Unite union, on the grounds that it had not followed to the letter of the law the 1992 Trade Union Act.

Submitted by Django on May 17, 2010

In a sign of how cynical the tactic of using technicalities to close down strikes has become, BA's objection rested on the union's obligation to announce “as soon as possible” the results of the ballot, in terms of the number of yes and no votes and spoilt ballots. In a move that places even more hurdles in the way of lawful strike action, the high court judge accepted BA's case that the strike was unlawful because the results of the ballot had not been announced by Unite to each member by post, rather than through their website and union noticeboards, as is common. Unite argued that BA was unable to find a single member of cabin crew unaware of the outcome, to no avail.

Like BA's previous successful injunction against strike action by its employees over Christmas, the technicality it is disputing could in no way affect the mandate for strike action that has been presented by cabin crew. 81% of members voted in favour of strike action on a turnout of over 70%. Instead, a clear message has been sent to employers that no matter how large or clear the vote for strike action is, the most trivial of technical points can be used to halt strikes.

A new employers' strategy

Over the past year, the tactic of seeking high court injunctions against strikes on the basis of technicalities has been refined to an art by employers. Following the successful injunction granted against a strike called by Unite at Metrobus in London in July 2009, which again concerned the letter of the law on how to announce a strike not being followed, employers have taken out a number of injunctions with broad success. Over the past five years, over 30 such injunctions have been sought, and all but one have been granted.

These rulings have further stacked the law in the favour of employers. The wave of anti-strike legislation throughout the 70s, 80s, and 90s was bad enough. It primarily aimed to conclusively outlaw secondary action and ban workers from calling strikes in mass meetings on the shop floor, and was coupled with an employers' offensive and the destruction of much of industry in the UK, leading to defeats which the working class has still not recovered from. While many on the left and in unions complain that the labour government never met the promises it made in opposition to repeal the anti-strike laws, in reality it has strengthened them, as described by Martin Mayer of United Left:

The Labour Government has not only refused to repeal the Tories' anti-union laws, it has made them worse by a couple of very serious amendments to the legislation (which were used by the Court of Appeal in the Metrobus case). Following Labour's victory in 1997, the Unions lobbied the government to change at least one aspect of the legislation which required Unions to give an accurate list of names of those to be balloted for strike action. The Government's amendments did that by allowing Unions to declare their "check-off" membership by employee category and location, and separately their Direct Debit membership with an explanation of how that figure was arrived at.

However more significantly, the Labour Government's amendments changed the whole emphasis of the legislation away from the Tories' original intention, which was to protect union members from their own union by ensuring strike ballots were independent and democratic. New Labour's amendments made the whole rigorous balloting requirements and disclosure of information a protection for employers, so that they could adequately prepare for any strike action. This means employers can claim that any deficiency in the balloting process affects their ability to prepare for a strike - in other words a bosses' injunction charter.

The most high-profile injunctions we've seen recently have concerned on the one hand the union's record-keeping in terms of membership and on the other its announcement of strike ballot results – either to employers or its members. The strike by Network Rail workers was ruled unlawful because the ballot, as conducted by a third part hired by the RMT union, included workers who had left their workplaces or changed jobs without informing the union. The 12-day Christmas strike at British airways was declared unlawful because the union had balloted members who had accepted redundancy, although the letter of the law also states it would have been unlawful not to ballot these workers. The union is obliged to provide detailed and accurate information of this kind to allow employers to prepare for strike action, though of course employers are not obliged to provide information about staffing to the union, basically giving them a permanent advantage – Network Rail, for instance, can move its signalling staff as and when it pleases, meaning the union's records will never be 100% accurate.

On the other hand they have concerned the announcement of results, which allows bosses to prepare for strike action and gives the time to scrutinise the information for the kind of discrepancies described above.

But what these rulings demonstrate is that the right to strike doesn't really exist in the UK anymore, because they impose an onus on unions and consequences which don't exist for other kinds of organisations. It is unimaginable, for instance, that a council could be prevented from collecting its council tax payments due to inaccuracies in its database of residents, or that the results of the general election could be annulled due to irregular voter registration (which certainly does happen – evidence of electoral fraud arises at every general election, including this one.) In this way, smaller organisations with smaller resources like trade unions are obligated to meet higher standards of record-keeping than exist elsewhere.

The ability to gain these kinds of injunctions is a gift to employers because it keeps the right to strike, enshrined in International and European law there in theory, while outlawing it in practice. The right to strike is enshrined in the International Labour Organisation's Convention on the Right to Organise and Bargain Collectively, ratified by Britain, The Council of Europe's Social Charter, ratified by Britain, and the UN's International Covernent on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights. In theory, Britain meets those requirements, in practice, any strike can be outlawed.

Employers are aware that even the threat of an injunction can draw out the organisation process of calling strike action, further demoralising workers, as was the case at Manchester Metropolitan University recently.

The Unions and 'Anti-Union' Laws

Its worth making a point at this stage in case we are mistaken as arguing from the perspective of defending unions' rights. Unions are of course inconvenienced by this state of affairs, but on the other hand complex anti-union laws give them more scope for frustrating the initiative of their members. Whether or not the unions 'want' to impose anti-union laws is irrelevant, in practice they either have to do that or have their funds sequestered, any union which openly and flagrantly defies the laws will lose its right to protection from litigation and will be destroyed through the courts.

Union leaders will even invent laws that don't exist to frustrate independent action by workers defending their interests. For instance, during the Visteon occupation at Enfield last year, Unite bosses urged workers to end their occupation on the grounds that it was illegal. Ex-workers at Ford-Visteon Enfield have described being terrorised with stories of how riot police would raid the factory and they'd be sent to prison for their occupation. In fact, squatting is not illegal and they faced no such risk.

What matters is whether workers are able to struggle in their interests effectively, and what tactics allow that to happen.

I broke the law and I won

All of this paints a bleak picture – the inability to legally strike, unions losing any vestige of being organs for struggle and taking on the cowed, corporatist role they have in China, or held in the ex-Soviet countries.

But unions are permitted to exist within capitalism for a reason; they function as a pressure valve, allowing anger and militancy to be channelled down restricted, legalistic paths. Unions are able to represent workers to the employer, and negotiate the cost and terms of their labour. The only other alternative form conflict can take is workers organising their own action through mass meetings, without official union mandates.

We saw a glimpse of what this looks like during the wave of oil industry walkouts last year. Though there is no definitive split between the 'workers' and the 'union' in cases like this, with shop stewards often taking leading organisational roles, the strikes worked without a legal mandate and ignored every piece of anti-strike legislation since the 20s. There was no ballot, and secondary action took place on a huge scale. Whatever reservations we may have about the initial motives behind the strikes (which are best addressed here), they showed that it is possible to take successful, large scale illegal industrial action without repercussions. There have been a number of wildcat strikes at the Royal Mail in recent years too.

It is entirely possible that should there be enough of an appetite for action amongst workers in the coming years, we may see more action of this kind. After all, in countries where striking is illegal, such as China, it happens frequently on an illegal basis. On the other hand it is entirely possible that we could see a demoralised and cowed working class incapable of breaking with the unions and the official restrictions on strike action which now prevent it from taking place. Either outcome is possible, but only one stands any chance of fending off the massive attacks on our living conditions which are in the pipeline.

Comments

Steven.

14 years 7 months ago

In reply to by libcom.org

Submitted by Steven. on May 17, 2010

who wrote this article?

Django

14 years 7 months ago

In reply to by libcom.org

Submitted by Django on May 17, 2010

Me - off sick with man-flu today and was pretty certain it'd be granted.

Steven.

14 years 7 months ago

In reply to by libcom.org

Submitted by Steven. on May 17, 2010

sorry, hope you feel better soon. Thanks for writing it, it's a great article - to avoid confusion in future you should get a writing pseudonym and tag stuff with it.

I guess this means they are going to have to ballot yet again... it's a shame that unofficial action doesn't seem to be emerging as a result of legal strike action being denied. Hopefully workers will start talking about this sort of thing, taking the struggle more into their own hands, working to rule, slowing down, calling in sick, etc

Django

14 years 7 months ago

In reply to by libcom.org

Submitted by Django on May 17, 2010

There's also the concern that now the strike has retrospectively been ruled illegal the union could be open to litigation and the cabin crew could be legally disciplined/fired for striking.

steven.

sorry, hope you feel better soon. Thanks for writing it, it's a great article - to avoid confusion in future you should get a writing pseudonym and tag stuff with it.

Yeah, I'll think of something for the future.

Django

14 years 7 months ago

In reply to by libcom.org

Submitted by Django on May 17, 2010

Speculation, but its happening in the mainstream press, not just left/ultraleft circles, e.g. in the Guardian:

There are fears that Unite could be liable for compensation of at least £250,000 and that the crew who joined the March strikes could be threatened with severe disciplinary sanctions because they took part in a strike that has been ruled illegal, albeit in retrospect.

The airline won on a technical point, arguing that Unite failed to carry out its statutory duties by making sure that everyone balloted was told the result.

When balloting for strikes, unions should give those who took part a detailed breakdown of the result, as required by section 231 of the Trade Union and Labour Relations (Consolidation) Act 1992.

The union's barrister, John Hendy QC, said the airline had not been able to find even one employee who did not know the result of the ballot, which voted overwhelmingly for strike action.

Django

14 years 7 months ago

In reply to by libcom.org

Submitted by Django on May 18, 2010

Thinking about this more, it basically puts unions back in the position they were in before the the Taff Vale judgment of 1901 and the Trades Disputes Act 1906, which granted them immunity from litigation for officially conducted ballots.

When you can rule strikes illegal on technicalities such as this, or even more worrying ones (Unite were injuncted for the Xmas strikes for balloting members who accepted redundancies, but they also could have been injuncted not for balloting them) pretty much any strike could be retrospectively ruled illegal, and the union would be open to legal action. Much more worryingly, anyone who struck could then be disciplined or sacked.

Steven.

I guess this means they are going to have to ballot yet again... it's a shame that unofficial action doesn't seem to be emerging as a result of legal strike action being denied. Hopefully workers will start talking about this sort of thing, taking the struggle more into their own hands, working to rule, slowing down, calling in sick, etc

Well I think whether workers would be willing to take things into their own hands would depend on the workforce - the Network rail strikes had a relatively narrow ballot, and there doesn't seem to be much sign that BA staff are willing to take unofficial action right now. In the national Postal Strikes last year various disputes, a number of which involved unofficial strike action, got rolled up into the official dispute - it would have been self-defeating to seek an injunction in that kind of case.

gypsy

14 years 7 months ago

In reply to by libcom.org

Submitted by gypsy on May 20, 2010

As Django says. This may actually backfire against the state as if striking through a union is made pretty much illegal then wildcats may come into popularity. Then the state will realise that perhaps the negotiators with capital are not so bad afterall. Although I doubt it. I very much hope workers take matters into their own hands,with go slows and what not.

gypsy

14 years 7 months ago

In reply to by libcom.org

Submitted by gypsy on May 20, 2010

Also found this on the bbc-

http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/business/10126117.stm

Do we still have a right to strike?

"It really does bring into question whether we have a right to strike in this country, which is a fundamental human right."

That was the reaction of Unite joint leader Tony Woodley to the news that British Airways had won a High Court injunction preventing members of cabin crew from going on strike.

In the latest twist in the long-running dispute between BA and its cabin crew union Unite, Mr Justice McCombe granted the injunction to the airline based on whether the union had followed rules in contacting its members with strike result details.

Unite says the decision was made because it had not told its members that 11 ballot papers had been spoilt in its latest vote on industrial action in February.

ticking_fool

14 years 7 months ago

In reply to by libcom.org

Submitted by ticking_fool on May 20, 2010

Appeal successul - http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/business/10130274.stm

no1

14 years 7 months ago

In reply to by libcom.org

Submitted by no1 on May 20, 2010

According to media reports, some flights were still disrupted this week. Does anyone know why this is - any wildcats or go-slows?

Django

14 years 7 months ago

In reply to by libcom.org

Submitted by Django on May 20, 2010

I think its more to do with BA not knowing whether the strikes were going ahead until the last minute - the injunction came the evening before strike action was due to begin at 12.01. So they didn't have the time to reinstate cancelled services.

Steven.

14 years 7 months ago

In reply to by libcom.org

Submitted by Steven. on May 21, 2010

Django is correct - it was because they had already made contingency plans and cancelled a large number of flights - around 10% of long haul and 40% of shorthaul flights I believe.

So actually this was probably in the end a good result for the workers - they got to cause disruption without losing money, and BA suffered the embarrassment of losing an appeal.

I think with the appeal they had to have realised how ridiculous the premise was, and what the dangers are if they don't let people legally take strike action under the control of the unions - workers will have to take the struggle into their own hands, which would be much more difficult to control.