ttosca…excuse me “for confusing you with a partisan Labour supporter” due to your daily balanced rhetoric, in a 2-main party system where one will be the next P.M., fairly understanding their records in power and why they introduced policies in fair economic times and foul – and the legacies they left. Hmmm.
On ‘balance’, I think that it is MORE than fair to say, based on your rhetoric, that your politics are far closer to Old Labour’s e.g. “And btw: the trade unions represent the working public, unlike businesses, so there is no philosophical or moral equivalence”.
And I can live with that statement, other than the shareholders that own those businesses and entrust the Directors to run a globally competitive company, ARE mainly “the working public” usually via their pension funds.
So moving this subject on, I think that we would both agree that WITHOUT BUSINESSES, there are no jobs, no salaries - so no “working public” pay rates versus inflation, or anything else to worry about, other than if businesses and workers aren’t paying taxes, there is no funding of JSA/Benefits/Welfare - WITHOUT perpetual higher national debt and ever higher taxes for those lucky enough to still be in work.
A perpetual socialist government/coalition in England enabled by non democratic boundaries, heavily influenced by relatively militant trade unions funding the party and individual MPs, where businesses do NOT feel represented in a UK government is therefore DEFINITELY NOT my idea of democracy – as we have been here before and it was not sustainable – but that is the direction Labour under Ed Miliband is clearly taking us.
When Labour & UK Trade Unions last ‘shared’ power and didn’t have the same priorities =Thatcher.
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Winter_of_Discontent
“The Winter of Discontent refers to the winter of 1978–79 in the United Kingdom, during which there were widespread strikes by public sector trade unions demanding larger pay rises, following the ongoing pay caps of the Labour Party government led by James Callaghan against Trades Union Congress opposition to control inflation, during the coldest winter for 16 years.”
“The strikes were a result of the Labour government's attempt to control inflation by a forced departure from their social contract with the unions by imposing rules on the public sector that pay rises be kept below 5%, to control inflation in itself and as an example to the private sector.”
When UK Trade Unions dictated to businesses and German & Japanese workers didn’t = mass producing British car companies decimated.
news.bbc.co.uk/local/liverpool/hi/people_and_places/history/newsid_8401000/8401200.stm
“British Leyland's Speke factory symbolised all that was wrong with UK car manufacturing in the dark days of the 1970s, a million miles away from the high performing plants of today at Ellesmere Port and Halewood.”
“In 1978 British Leyland's Speke Number Two plant was under threat of closure, afflicted by a series of crippling strikes, low sales of the TR7 it manufactured, and a history of poor industrial relations coupled with inefficiencies.”
“In 1970 British Leyland, who had taken over Triumph, spent £10.5 million building Speke Number Two plant, it was one of the most modern and best equipped plants in Europe designed to build 100,000 vehicles a year all under one roof.”
“When BBC Nationwide visited in February 1978 the plant only had a few months of life left.”