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Defending the Right to Strike
Posted on February 11, 2015

Sharan Burrow, General Secretary, International Trade Union Confederation
In towns and cities, court rooms and corridors, workplaces and street corners the battle lines have been drawn for workers to hold on to their right to strike.
On February 18, a global day of action in support of the right to strike will demonstrate the will of working people to keep the right to withdraw their labour.
The day of action is in response to an audacious move by employer groups at the International Labour Organisation to end the international legal basis for the right to strike. It is shaping up as a major test of the power of employers and big business to dictate wages and working conditions to employees.
Permanent link | Categories: Right to Strike • ITUC
Ulster Unions Say No!
Posted on February 06, 2015

Peter Bunting, Congress Assistant General Secretary
On a cold Monday in January, the Belfast Telegraph reported that a ‘straw poll’ of local employers agreed that a big cut in Corporation Tax in NI would be good for them. Hold the front page.
The unscientific poll was concocted at a seminar organised by ‘tax experts EY’ (the trendy rebrand for Ernst & Young). Most present agreed with each other that “any cut to NI’s block grant should come out of a reduction in public spending.”
Permanent link | Comments (0) | Categories: Northern Ireland • Stormont House Agreement
Who Remembers Charlie Hebdo?
Posted on January 29, 2015

NUJ Irish Secretary, Seamus Dooley outside the Charlie Hebdo offices, Paris
Séamus Dooley, Irish Secretary, NUJ
Every morning I click on the International Federation of Journalists’ website.
On the top right hand corner there’s a black countdown clock. It details the number of journalists and media staff killed so far this year.
As I write – on January 29 - that number stands at 22.
This week my NUJ colleague Jim Boumelha, President of the IFJ condemned the brutal murder of Mexican journalist Moises Sanchez Cerezo, from the town of Medellín de Bravo, in the state of Veracruz.
Permanent link | Comments (0) | Categories: Charlie Hebdo • Media • NUJ • Freedom of Expression
Why European Year for Development is a Trade Union Issue
Posted on January 22, 2015

David Joyce, International Development and Equality Officer, Congress
David Joyce, Congress Equality Officer
President Michael D Higgins was guest of honour at the Irish launch of the European Year for Development (EYD) in Dublin Castle, which was an appropriate way to mark this potentially critical year – for trade unions and wider society alike.
Over the course of 2015 two United Nations summits will effectively define the parameters for future international policy making:
- In September, the UN will agree new goals to replace the Millennium Development Goals (MDGs) – a new ‘Sustainable Development Framework’ – to tackle poverty, inequality and environmental destruction,
- In December, the Climate Change Summit in Paris will set new climate action targets, to replace the Kyoto Protocol.
Permanent link | Comments (0) | Categories: Development • Equality • Global Solidarity • Climate Change
Freelance Workers to Regain Union Rights
Posted on January 12, 2015

Esther Lynch: Legislation & Social Affairs Officer, Irish Congress of Trade Unions
Esther Lynch, Congress Legislation & Social Affairs Officer
A new ruling from the European Court of Justice (CJEU) may force authorities across Europe to reverse policies that have resulted in the effective denial of full union rights to freelance workers, for over a decade.
The ruling – delivered by the court in December - arises from a case taken by Dutch unions which challenged the classification of freelance musicians as individual business ‘undertakings’.
Under competition law this meant they were not entitled to bargain collectively with their employer.
Permanent link | Comments (0) | Categories: Freelance Workers • Collective Bargaining
The Charter of Corporate Rights
Posted on December 12, 2014

David Begg
Sometime in the not too distant future an Irish government could move to increase the minimum wage or introduce a living wage (http://www.livingwage.ie/), in order to boost growth and living standards.
Nothing very extraordinary in that, except perhaps that it runs counter to current orthodoxy which claims that driving down wages is the only way to secure recovery.
But after six years of this self-defeating nonsense, we are left with embedded depression and over 26 million people out of work across the Eurozone.
In such circumstances, it is entirely rational for electorates and governments to think anew about policies and politics that might actually work.
That would be the norm in any modern, democratic society.
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