Workers at Swansea auto parts plant vote to strike
Wednesday, May 27, 2009
Workers at the Linamar automobile parts factory in Swansea, Wales voted by a wide margin today to strike, after an dispute over the firing of one of the worker's union organisers remained unresolved.
An 88% turnout resulted in a vote of 139 in favor of striking to 19 against.
Canada-based Linamar took over the plant from Visteon in July 2008. Shortly after the takeover, Linamar offered 208 of the plant's 360 workers voluntary redundancy, hoping to transfer work to Mexico; 140 accepted. Linamar claims to have no long-term plans to close the plant. On April 28, however, Linamar fired political activist and union convener Rob Williams. Upon Williams' firing, he refused to leave the Visteon plant. The police escorted him from the building as the day shift workers at the plant staged a spontaneous walkout. Williams was temporarily reinstated after emergency negotiations between Unite and Visteon management, but his dismissal was made permanent a week later.
Unite, Williams's trade union, describe Williams's firing as an "illegal" "attack on the union" and has brought the matter to the attention of UK Prime Minister Gordon Brown. Williams himself told left-wing newspaper Socialist Worker: "They have sacked me because they want to weaken the union and intimidate the shop floor."
Workers at the plant also say Linamar is breaking a promise made to the union when the plant was taken over to keep Visteon's terms and conditions, particularly to establish a final pension scheme for workers who were part of the company before its 2000 spin-off from Ford.
Linamar has not given comment to the press on the dispute as of this writing.
Rallies in support of Williams, who is also running for European Parliament on the No2EU ticket, and of the union have drawn sizeable crowds, with about 90 at the most recent rally include three Members of the Welsh Assembly representing the ruling coalition of the Labour Party and Plaid Cymru as well as the Liberal Democrats, on May 17 outside the Visteon plant in Swansea.
Linamar Swansea has close ties with Visteon factories in Enfield, Belfast and Basildon. Workers at those three factories recently won a victory against Visteon by occupying their plants and locking management out when redundancies were announced in April.
Sources
- Alec Thraves. "Successful Sunday gate protest at Swansea Linamar plant" — Socialist Party (England and Wales), May 18, 2009
- Dave Reid. "Marvellous meeting supports Rob Williams, sacked Linamar convenor" — Socialist Party (England and Wales), May 15, 2009
- "Union chief talks to PM over sacked rep" — South Wales Evening Post, May 14, 2009
- "Rob Williams sacking upheld at Linamar" — Socialist Worker, May 12, 2009
- "'We're here for the long haul,' insists Linamar" — Llanelli Star, January 28, 2009
- Martyn Brown. "Unemployment set to hit 2M as 1,000 more jobs are axed" — Daily Express, December 6,2008