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Election Special

dearunite.com exclusive!
only a year to go
Simpson - one wounded year left
Election Results! Simpson Won but wounded, Hicks now in pole position

Here are the results: Simpson 60,048, Hicks 39,307, Coyne 30,603, Reuter 28,283.

It's a pretty poor victory for Simpson, an incumbent General Secretary who used the full legal and publicity weight of the union in his campaign. Not to mention the dirty tricks and lies by the union. It's a stunning result for Jerry Hicks, comfortably beating Coyne and refuting the claim that a vote for Hicks was a vote for Coyne. In fact Coyne seems to have done the worst of all, nearly being beaten by the unknown Reuter, despite Coyne's massive expenditure and perhaps because he was backed by the Murdoch newspaper empire.

It certainly puts Hicks in pole position as contender at the next election in 2010.
New! [Jerry Hicks] Result announcement
New! [Unite] Scrutineers report
Posted by www.rogerlyons.com on 7th March 2009, updated 12th March 2009



don't even think about it
Simpson - used £399-a-night Waldorf suite
Simpson in Body Massage Jet Shocker

Things are hotting up in the election race. According to the Mail on Sunday, Unite General Secretary Derek Simpson stayed in a luxury hotel suite 'which boasts such luxurious features as "body massage jets"'.

Seriously though, someone (or two) already knows how well each candidate is doing - Electoral Reform Services count the ballot papers as they come in, they don't wait until the day the ballot closes. CORRECTION - This is the previous practice with elections for the Executive but for this election they are not opening the envelopes until Saturday. Simpson appeared stressed at Staythorpe and last night made a poor showing on BBC's 'Hardtalk' program - the program of choice for those down or out, judge for yourself.

Meanwhile Coyne for his part seems to have won the desperate support of the Mail on Sunday - they don't openly come out in favour of him (that would damage his chances even more than Rupert Murdoch's support did) but he is the only other candidate mentioned in a full page of almost childish attacks on Simpson.

Surely the only difference between Coyne and Simpson is that with Coyne you won't get to see this stuff in the papers (don't worry, we would continue to publish it).

The Mail on Sunday do provide further evidence, if it is needed, that the Union's statement which went out with the ballot papers was a lie. The newspaper writes:

In 2007, the last year for which figures are available, Mr Simpson is revealed as earning a £105,217 salary, plus further benefits including £13,333 for a car and £24,070 in pension contributions.
If you haven't voted there is still time to chose the only candidate who promises take the average wage of a skilled worker, Jerry Hicks

Ballot papers must arrive in the envelope provided by 12 noon on Friday 6th March.
[Mail on Sunday] Unite chief used £399-a-night Waldorf suite despite £800,000 union house
[Jerry Hicks] The only Left candidate
[Ray Smith] Stressed at Staythorpe
[Workers Liberty] No applause for Derek Simpson at Staythorpe
[Fenland Citizen] Staythorpe - 'many started heckling him'
[BBC] Hardtalk, soft Simpson
[dearunite.com] Simpson's real remuneration
Posted by www.rogerlyons.com on 1st March 2009



on route to £200K
Simpson - 30 mentions in one magazine - almost one per page
New! Notice the banner in the background - 'Cut My Pay, No Way'
Fighting for Jobs (his own and about 5 others)

A member has written to us:

"I wonder if any of you can spot a recurring theme in the latest issue of 'United', the Unite Spring newsletter which arrived, entirely coincidentally, in the middle of the balloting period for the Unite Joint General Secretary post?

Front Cover - an heroic photograph of Joint General Secretary Derek Simpson with a megaphone
Page 2 - a 'With You In The Dark Days' column by Joint General Secretary Simpson, accompanied by a photograph, plus photograph of Simpson with the Prime Minister underneath.
Page 5 - Two photographs of Joint General Secretary Simpson, one with the Prime Minister, another looking attentive. Three articles on this page, all of which include quotes from Simpson
Page 7 - Another photograph of Joint General Secretary Simpson with the Prime Minister
Page 11 - Joint General Secretary Simpson quoted in an article
Page 12 - Joint General Secretary Simpson quoted in an article
Page 15 - a photograph of Joint General Secretary Simpson with the Prime Minister
Page 16 - Joint General Secretary Simpson quoted in an article
Page 20 - Joint General Secretary Simpson quoted in an article
Page 21 - Joint General Secretary Simpson quoted in an article
Page 22 - Joint General Secretary Simpson quoted in an article
Page 24 - Joint General Secretary Simpson quoted in an article
Page 27 - Photo of Joint General Secretary Simpson
Page 28 - Joint General Secretary Simpson quoted in an article
Page 29 - Joint General Secretary Simpson quoted in an article
Page 30 - Joint General Secretary Simpson quoted in an article
Page 32 - Joint General Secretary Simpson quoted in an article
Page 38 - Joint General Secretary Simpson quoted in an article
Page 45 - Seven letters, six of which speak for or have positive mentions of Joint General Secretary Simpson.
"

This tactic will be familiar to members who remember General Secretary Roger Lyons, or any who happen to live in North Korea.
[Unite] Fighting for Jobs
[dearunite.com] Previous Story - 'Kevin and Derek - Two Sides of the Same Coyne'
Posted by www.rogerlyons.com on 20th February 2009



on route to £200K
What Simpson costs us - heading for 9x the average wage
Dirty Tricks and Lies

In an incredible and probably illegal move the union's executive have circulated a 'correction' to the election address of candidate Jerry Hicks. New! Hick's reply to the 'correction'

Unlike the blatant electioneering at members' expense which was Simpson's letter to all members last week (estimated cost £250,000), this document was actually included with the ballot papers. Because of this we believe it constitutes an amendment to Hick's election address and an extension to Simpson's, both of which are illegal. If so it would represent a serious cock-up by the union's legal department and may result in a re-run of the election.

To add insult to injury, the Executive statement is untrue and misleading according to the union's own Annual Returns. The statement says "Mr Simpson's salary is currently under £100.000". But according to the last available figures compiled by the union, his basic salary in 2007 was £105,217 and the total cost of his remuneration, including his car and housing benefit was a whopping £194,252. The only possible explanation would be if Simpson has taken a pay cut in his election year, maybe that was his justification for a 17% pay increase in 2007. We've asked Simpson about this and received no comment.

The Daily Mirror have come out in support of Simpson. This is not at all connected to the fact that the union pays the paper to host the column "The Rights Stuff", written by Unite Legal Director Georgina Hirsch.

Meanwhile Coyne's paper, The Times, has been whinging about Simpson's £250K mailing to all members last week. This is despite being under legal threat from Simpson, although they have published one grovelling apology so far.
New! [Jerry Hicks] Reply to the 'correction'
[dearunite.com] Simpson's remuneration
[Unite Executive] 'Correction'
[The Times] Union leader Derek Simpson accused of breaking election rules
[The Times] Apology
Posted by www.rogerlyons.com on 18th February 2009



Little Kevin, Large Derek
Kevin and Derek - Two Sides of the Same Coyne

The leadership of the Left Gazette organisation have now come full circle and are supporting the existing General Secretary, Derek Simpson, in next week's election. This is after their disastrous affair with Faircloth. It's a very weak endorsement, apparently recognising the damage they have done to the Left organisation -
"We recognise that there are people on the Editorial Board and among our rank and file members who now want to support Jerry.. In view of this we accept that we cannot seek to impose this decision".
However they have come up with a stunning election slogan - "Vote for Simpson - Stop Coyne!". That neatly sums up their entire position - vote for Simpson out of fear, not because he's going to do anything differently.

But unfortunately Coyne is not the bogeyman they need. He's not rabidly Right wing. More of a careerist. Just like Simpson has become, desperate to get his extra year in power.

Coyne is very much the union officers' candidate (although Paul Reuter is more so). Coyne won't repudiate any more strikes than Simpson does, he won't live any more lavish a lifestyle than Simpson (is it possible to? Even Joint General Secretary Woodley can't keep up). Coyne stands on a policy of appointment not election of officials, one which Simpson has surely been pursuing ever since he wrote the exact opposite in his previous election manifesto.

In summary you can't get a cigarette paper between the two. Coyne is what Simpson has become. As Jimmy Warne, the last decent Chair of the Gazette says

"the only thing these two men disagree about is whose arse should be in the seat"
If you want the union to continue to be run by the officers for the officers, with fat salaries and strike repudiation, and you want the final removal of branch and member democracy in the union, vote for Coyne or Simpson. Or for Reuter if you want all that but don't trust Little and Large.

The only candidate who represents change, and the Left, is Jerry Hicks. Hicks is what Simpson once promised to be.

However if you are an officer and are supporting Coyne, you should read carefully Private Eye's chronicling of his antics, with his brother Greg, under the title 'The Brothers Grim'. Here's a sample:

"What can you expect when management, in the form of Kevin Coyne, is given an office in the local T&G HQ so that he can carry on working while his own workers, who are also T&G members, were out on strike"
[Jerry Hicks] The only Left candidate
[Jimmy Warne] The EETPU is alive and well
[The Times] Union Chief's Secret Deal over Perks and Pay Rise
[Private Eye] Coyne in 'Brothers Grim'
[Private Eye] Coyne in 'Rotten Boroughs'
[Private Eye] Coyne in 'Murkeyside'
[Private Eye] Coyne in 'TUC News'
[Gazette] Announcement of Faircloth's defection
[Simpson and Coyne] A collection
Posted by www.rogerlyons.com on 14th February 2009



Derek's Decline to Fat and Feline
Lean Simpson in 2002, Simpson now
Rise of the Fat Cat

This website has been documenting the decline of General Secretary Derek Simpson since his first helicopter ride, back in 2004. We don't think we've missed anything and attach a sample of clips below.

However Rupert Murdoch's The Times, who published none of it, has suddenly uncovered a shed load! And election candidate Kevin Coyne, who must have had a sack over his head for all the years he's been a union official, has suddenly discovered it too! It is of course a coincidence that Coyne has just been anointed as the Times' chosen candidate.

Strangely they both seem to concentrate on the salary, house, kitchen, helicopter, expenses, trips abroad and pension. But then if your policies are just the same as the person you want to replace, what else can you do?

The most important thing is how such riches change a leaders' policies. Simpson's policy decline / wealth incline is a classic example of that change. 'All wealth corrupts, absolute wealth corrupts absolutely'.

The only candidate in this election to commit to take the salary of the average skilled worker is Jerry Hicks.

[Jerry Hicks] The only Left candidate
[The Times] Leader article praising Coyne
[Previous Simpson Story] We're All Going on a Summer Holiday
[The Sun] Havana Ball
[Previous Simpson Story] Simpson Attacks the Left (by the late Ian Rez)
[Previous Simpson Story] Union Blows Nearly £1/4 million on One Employee
[Previous Simpson Story] Goes Around, Comes Around (helicopters and more)
[Previous Simpson Story] Simpson Sacks More of His Own
[Previous Simpson Story] Simpson - Workers are Wankers
[Previous Simpson Story] Derek why are you sacking my Dad?
[Previous Simpson Story] Baylissgate!
[Previous Simpson Story] No election of Officers, ever.
And spot any difference..
[Private Eye] Coyne in 'Brothers Grim'
[Private Eye] Coyne in 'Rotten Boroughs'
[Private Eye] Coyne in 'Murkeyside'
[Private Eye] Coyne in 'TUC News'
Posted by www.rogerlyons.com on 14th February 2009




Oh what a tangled web we weave,
When first we practice to deceive
Faircloth Unravelled

Well we didn't think he'd last long. Despite the support of the rump of the Gazette and of the Socialist Workers Party (or probably because of it), Faircloth came a disastrous fourth in the nominations race. The Gazette claim to have sacked him (though nowhere have they put it in writing), but it is clear that it was Faircloth who pulled out. What is not clear is whether Faircloth ever had any intention of going beyond the nomination stage. True to his history of supporting whoever is in power under Sir Ken Jackson, Faircloth has now come out with unqualified support for the incumbent General Secretary Simpson. Doubtless he would get a nice promotion if Simpson wins. Faircloth doesn't deserve any more of our comment.

What is of interest though is the number of branch nominations Simpson got. Although more than the other candidates, it is a very poor showing for an incumbent General Secretary. Jackson or Roger Lyons would be horrified if their paid election machines only delivered that much. Woodley would never have that problem in the T&G. It illustrates the contradiction between closing down branch democracy in the union but still hoping for their votes - the more you close, the lower proportion of the remaining branches will support you.

It also shows the very real possibility of the Left winning - we show below the breakdown of branches by candidate, with Faircloth's branches allocated to Jerry Hicks, as would have happened without the Great Gazette Cock Up, and as will probably happen now.

Branch nominations without the Faircloth spoiler

[Jerry Hicks] The only Left candidate
[Unite Official website] Branch nominations in full (scroll down)
[Laurence Faircloth] Oh no I'm not
[Laurence Faircloth] Oh yes I am
Posted by www.rogerlyons.com on 14th February 2009



End of the Pier at Preston

The first time the union's Left organisation (the Gazette) nominated someone for General Secretary, they chose Derek Simpson and it turned out to be a tragedy. The second time, last Saturday (1st Nov), it was a farce.

Imagine this: The Simpson control freaks have walked out and you become the only Left organisation in Unite amicus section. What's the most important decision you will ever have to make? That's easy - choose a candidate for General Secretary. Now what's the most stupid thing you could ever do? Easy again - choose a Right winger.

Incredibly the national Gazette leadership have done just that. AEEU United man Laurence Faircloth is officially the Gazette candidate. ('AEEU United' was Sir Ken Jackson's right wing organisation in the AEEU union, counterpart to 'MSF4Labour' in the MSF union.)

You wouldn't think the Gazette's leadership could possibly compound this cock-up, but they have:

1) The North West (NW) leadership knew Faircloth was a right winger before they proposed him to NW Gazette regional meeting on 19th October but they didn't tell those present.
2) They proceeded to announce and publicise their decision as if it was a National Gazette one, before the National Gazette meeting of 1st November to decide the issue. It gets worse.
3) The national Gazette leaders ensured that at the so called 'hustings' where potential candidates would put their case, that only one would turn up (Faircloth). And to round it all off,
4) At the National Gazette meeting (in Preston, where else) they refused to allow NW members a free vote and so block voted Faircloth in.
5) This was after Faircloth had given a performance that even all his supporters agreed was abysmal.
We are now hearing that Faircloth was openly announcing himself as the Gazette candidate as far back as 9th October, well before any open meeting on the matter.

You may find it hard to believe that the National and NW Gazette leadership could be so stupid. So you should read a statement from the person who chaired the Gazette the last time it was a worthwhile organisation - Jimmy Warne. Dearunite.com have also provided a list of Frequently Asked Questions (FAQ) that covers any lingering doubts about it.

This mess leaves only one Left candidate in the election - Jerry Hicks, though even Simpson is to the Left of Faircloth.

AEEU United were a loathed right wing supporters club for Sir Ken Jackson. Most left AEEU members who recall the Jackson era would rather vote for Simpson than an AEEU United candidate. So probably Faircloth will simply dilute the Left vote and either allow Simpson to slip back in or worse, allow Kevin Coyne (ex 'MSF 4 Labour') the openly Right wing candidate in. The only hope for the Left is if Faircloth doesn't get enough nominations . We encourage you to invite him to speak at your branch - based on his performance on Saturday that will help.

For those that don't know the current Gazette leadership, it is an odd alliance of the Socialist Workers Party (SWP) and the North West Gazette leaders. The SWP sectarians are motivated by an obsessive and irrational hatred of the remaining Left candidate, Jerry Hicks. As for the NW leadership, who knows what goes on inside their heads. Not very much it seems.

Democratic structures will never flourish if their leadership pre-decide issues and then pretend to have votes on them. Especially if they get it utterly wrong....
[Jimmy Warne] What has happened to the Gazette?
[AEEU United] Right wing Slate
[NW Gazette] Faircloth's the nominee (before the National Gazette decide)
[FAQ] Frequently Asked Questions
[dearunite.com] Previous Story - Inside MSF for Labour
Posted by www.rogerlyons.com on 9th November2008



Gordon McNeil, Madan Gupta, Chris Bowyer.
"More joy in heaven over one repentant sinner than over ninety-nine righteous people who have no need to repent"
Jesus (attrib).
Woodley Sees Sense in Hunger Strike

After an extraordinary Press Release last week attacking its hunger striking shop stewards, the TGWU side of Unite have now seen sense and backed down. The hunger strike has been suspended and assurances given that the legal costs the workers were fighting for will be honoured by the union.

This could be a massively important move for the whole Labour movement: The legal decision the workers won (and the employers have appealed) is that a suspended strike day can be unsuspended without the union having to re-issue 7 days notice. This opens up the possibility for any union to call large numbers of strike days in a dispute, give the employer notice of them and suspend them all. Then they could re-activate the strike days they choose at the last minute, causing considerably more disruption to the employer. It is a huge loophole in Thatcher's anti trade union laws. A loophole that even the current Labour Government would find it embarrassingly difficult to push legislation through Parliament to close.

It's good to see the union now fighting for members. However it's to Unite's great shame that democracy and accountability is now so poor that shop stewards have to resort to a hunger strike to get the union's hierarchy to pay attention.
[Indymedia] Airport workers suspend hunger strike after union guarantees that their demands will be met
[dearunite.com] Previous Story - Woodley Faces Hunger Strike
[Unite the union] Unite Press Release - 'Protesters Demand £1 million each from Unite'
[Daily Mirror] Rooftop Demo 3 Winched to Safety
[Daily Mirror] Hunger Striker Rushed to Hospital After Protest
Posted by www.rogerlyons.com on 14th April 2008



"Let them eat cake" Marie-Antoinette (attrib).
Woodley Faces Hunger Strike

Unite joint General Secretary Tony Woodley is facing a hunger strike by two of the union's own shop stewards. Bizarrely this is because Woodley reneged on promises he made to end a previous hunger strike, according to the workers. Unite shop steward Gordon McNeill, referring to legal costs not being paid, told Indymedia
"We soon discovered that the word of Tony Woodley and other senior leaders of this union is worthless. "
The union deny that they have reneged on a promise to pay the legal costs, see their press release at bottom.

The dispute arose because the union repudiated a strike, siding with the employer's claim that it was illegal. The union's executive minutes are littered with such strike repudiations*, which basically amount to giving in to employer's lawyers. However in this case the workers then took their own legal action, and won a determination that the strike was in fact lawful at an Employment tribunal and then again at the Appeal court.

Last September's hunger strike and rooftop protest at Transport House in Belfast was called off after Woodley agreed to pay the £200,000 in legal costs arising from this long court battle, which the workers had to fight without any support from their union. The two hunger striking shop stewards say not one of promises made has been kept.

"We will not call off our hunger strike until we have firm commitments from Tony Woodley that he cannot wriggle out of."
* Typically the Amicus Executive alone was making about 10 strike repudiations per meeting, until these decisions were buried in the joint NEC minutes last May.
[Indymedia] Cops sent in to arrest protesting Belfast airport workers
[Amicus the union] A typical repudiation minute
New! [Unite the union] Unite Press Release - their side of the story
New! [Socialist Party] Belfast Airport workers win historic court victory - But struggle for justice continues
New! [Hunger Strikers] Response to the Unite press release.
Posted by www.rogerlyons.com on 8th April 2008



"It's not the people who vote that count; It's the people who count the votes" Stalin (attrib).
Election Over

The first Unite! executive election results are now in. On the Amicus side General Secretary Simpson's pet National Gazette organisation has wiped out the right wing and has overall control. That's a bit academic really, Simpson already controlled the executive and some right wingers had actually become official Gazette candidates. Moreover one Amicus member has reported sight of a right wing slate of recommended candidates that actually includes senior Gazette people (more details soon if we get them).

The TGWU section election was over before it began, with most of General Secretary Woodley's supporters club taking office unopposed and without a vote (winning 25 seats unopposed and 14 out of the 15 contested ones, giving them 39 out of 40 seats!).

However dearunite.com have done some initial analysis. The most striking figure is the turnout - an appalling 9.7% for the TGWU and a record low of 8.9% for Amicus, down over a third from the 2003 executive elections figure. At this rate there will, literally, be zero lay democracy in the union by 2016.

Within the turnout figures though there are some huge variations. And congratulations are due to Simpson's right hand man Steve Davison, who won with the highest recorded turnout of any sector, section or region, in Amicus or the T&G. Although only some 14% it is a staggering 55% above the Amicus average turnout, resulting in a win for Davison by a comfortable 4,274 votes. Just as well really, we couldn't have the Chair of the Executive, President of Conference, Chair of the General Purposes and Finance committee and Chair of the National Gazette not get elected. Where would democracy be then? In any case Simpson's/Davison's National Gazette organisation stumbles undemocratically on, having missed its January deadline for an AGM and with its officers now outside their elected period. Oddly this doesn't seem to stop them negotiating their merger deals with the T&G's Broad Left.

The TGWU elections that did take place are especially interesting. Their turnout figures are more consistent than Amicus' but their 'spoiled ballot paper' rate is all over the place, varying from 232% of the average spoil rate in one section to an amazingly low 12% of the average (i.e. 0.02%) in the food sector. In fact food, road, docks, and region 4 must all have some very careful voters - they have extremely low spoil rates. The latter 3 also have turnouts up to 40% higher than average, especially region 4. Dearunite.com, with our Amicus background, have little knowledge of the TGWU so explanations on a postcard please.
[Amicus section] Full election results
[TGWU section] Full election results (very large acrobat file)
[dearunite.com] Previous story Ballot Guide - Updated with the results
[Amicus] 2003 Results
Posted by www.rogerlyons.com on 4th April 2008



Vote! Vote! Vote!
DearUnite.com Ballot Guide

Here is our personal list of decent and half decent candidates in the current Unite amicus section election. It is based on past experience, voting records and our knowledge of General Secretary Simpson's election machine.

Our amicus section list below is exhaustive, i.e. if a candidate does not appear on our list they are, in our view, either a right winger, a close supporter of the current leadership within Unite amicus section, or completely useless. And quite possibly all three. Unfortunately this applies even if they have been listed by the amicus Gazette as 'left' candidates.

Updated with results
Lost John Barr, Community and Not for Profit
Won Louise Cousins, Women's
Lost Jim Donaghy, Ireland
Won Gill George, Health
Lost Bill Gray, Foundry & Metals
Lost Andy Hanks, Education, MOD, Government Departments, CMA
Lost George Hickman, GPMU
Lost Paul Maybin, Civil Air Transport, Railways, Buses and Ferries
Lost John McEwan, Yorkshire
Lost Terri Miller, Women's
Lost Raymond Morell, Eastern & London
Lost Pat Russell, General Industries & Servicing
Won Peter Simpson, Finance, PSA & Business Services
Won Billy Spiers, Construction and Contracting
Won Jane Stewart, Women's
Won Frank Wood, Health
We do not list the candidates who have already won because no one stood against them. One or two of them are OK.

The nomination process in the 'Gazette' organisation has been shambolic this time, with loyal Simpsonite Won Steve Davison somehow managing to get approved as the Yorkshire candidate without an election and despite John McEwan (recommended above) being the better candidate. Steve is already chair of the union's Executive, chair of the General Purposes and Finance Committee, President of Conference (also unelected) and Chair of the Gazette Organisation so it's surprising he couldn't arrange a vote. Maybe Chris Weldon, the Gazette's star election officer, was helping out at the time?

Other Gazette re-nominations we cannot recommend, such as Won Howard Turner, Won Peter Taylor, Lost Tam Mitchell, Lost Graham Hunt and Won Agnes Tolmie, have all consistently ignored decisions made by the Gazette's own national organisation and have instead towed the Simpson line. They will all no doubt be jetting off to the sun with Simpson in a month's time.

On the GPMU side, the long established Left ended up falling out with the Gazette leadership (Davison), with this complaint in writing:

"These [Gazette approved GPMU] candidates had been selected without any apparent reference to anyone from the GPM Left and, in addition, the candidates had no previous record of any involvement with the GPM Broad Left. In fact, they were being promoted by people who had actively worked against the Left in the past."

On the TGWU side, four good left wing independents are Lost Andy Erlam, Lost Ian Lidbetter, Lost Rachael Webb and Lost Rob Williams (Wales). Here is the official TGWU Broad Left list.
[GPMU Left] Falling out with Simpson's Gazette
Posted by www.rogerlyons.com on 3rd March 2008



Derek Simpson and the Shadows
"We're All Going on a Summer Holiday"

At the last Amicus section Executive Meeting General Secretary Simpson announced to the surprised members present that they were all going to Cuba this summer.

Rather than send just a delegation to celebrate May Day 2008 there, Simpson has decided to send the entire National Executive, over 60 people in all. The estimated cost of this is around £100,000. One member, Ian Allinson, objected but the decision was passed overwhelmingly. Apparently Simpson said it was a reward for their time in office and to compensate for the measerly £25 a day 'beer' money (plus all their travel and accommodation expenses) they get for attending meetings to rubber stamp such decisions.

We're all going on a summer holiday
no more working for a week or two.
Fun and laughter on our summer holiday,
no more worries for me or you,
for a week or two.

We're going where the sun shines brightly
we're going where the sea is blue.
we've all seen it on the movies,
now let's see if it's true.

Ordinary members of Unite will be given the privilege next month to be able to re-elect these poor Executive members.
[unitetheunion.org] List of current NEC members
[Gill George] Trip to Cuba
Posted by www.rogerlyons.com on 25th February 2008



dearunite.com exclusive!

Another £1/2 million?
Paid Off!

With a huge and secret payoff, Unite General Secretary Derek Simpson has settled the Employment Tribunal case brought by the remaining two of the 'Baylissgate three' employees he sacked last year. Simpson insisted on a confidentiality clause to prevent members knowing the size of this payoff to the union's ex Head of Purchasing Cathy Willis and ex Education Officer Jimmy Warne.

The last time a similar payoff was made by the union was in 1999, to Assistant General Secretary John Chowcat and again the union tried to keep it secret. However member Jim Mortimer, one time Labour Party General Secretary, used union members' legal rights to uncover the sums paid - after 3 years of effort he established that just under £1/2 million of members subs were paid out. We estimate this latest payoff is close to that record amount. Moreover the union's National Executive (assuming they are ever told the amount) will find it difficult to ratify Simpson's decision - After the Chowcat payoff, at the union's annual conference in May 2000, motion 47 was carried which instructed the National Executive "not to make any more secret payments to employees of the union upon termination of their employment". The annual conference was the supreme governing body of the union at the time.

Jim Mortimer, 87, has already begun the long process to reveal the amount paid out to Warne and Willis.

The Employment tribunal hearing last month was scheduled for two weeks but ended on the second day after Assistant General Secretary Doug Collins, having completed his marathon witness statement, faltered almost as soon as his cross examination had begun. Unlike the Tribunal of the first of the Baylissgate three, Des Heemskerk, this time the union's Legal Director Georgina Hirsch and the General Secretary did not provide witness statements. Instead their stuff had been included in poor Mr Collins' lengthy 220 paragraphs. Consequently he struggled to back it up in court - he even had difficulty pronouncing some of the words in his own statement! At the end of day two, and only a small way into Collins's ordeal, the union instructed their expensive QC to meet with Warne and Willis to try and settle.

Although Willis was being supported by her trade union the GMB, Warne had had his legal aid stopped by his own union (Unite of course) before it began because, according to Unite, "his case didn't have a reasonable prospect of success". Consequently he had had run up £20,000 in debts to fund his case. Had the tribunal run its course the two would certainly have won, as Des Heemskerk already had, but the union would just as certainly appealed, resulting in another 18 months delay and massive extra costs. In Des' case there was no possibility of appeal which can only be on a point of law. In Warne and Willis's case there is currently no case law for dismissal for trade union activities, where the activities are within a trade union, hence grounds for a point-of-law appeal. Not to mention the embarrassing possibility of Simpson setting case law and becoming the first trade union General Secretary to be found guilty of sacking trade union employees for trade union activity, in the run up to Trade Union Council conference.

The union demanded that Warne and Willis undertake not to criticise Simpson or the union in any way. The two rejected this and although not free to disclose the amount they are free to speak about what went on in the union after Simpson took over. The union did undertake to pay all of Warne's and the GMBs legal costs.

While the actual amount may remain secret (for a while) there can be no doubt that the payoff massively exceeded what the two could have expected to win had the case completed. This itself is a disgrace and must surely indicate to the Executive what an expensive farce members are having to pay to cover up.
[dearunite.com] Previous Story - Union Refuse to Re-instate Illegally Sacked Employee
[Private Eye] Des Heemskerk's ET
[dearunite.com] Previous Story - Chowcat payoff finally disclosed
[Certification Office] Mortimer v Amicus
Posted by www.rogerlyons.com on 18th September 2007



Conference report - Simpson Attacks the Left
A report of this years Unite annual conference in Bournemouth from Ian Rez. An edited version of this report appeared in Labour Left Briefing magazine
[Ian Rez] Conference 2007
Posted by www.rogerlyons.com on 18th September 2007



dearunite.com exclusive!

Jimmy Warne, Gazette Chair 2001-2006
The Truth Behind 'ATU Network'

The Blairite organisation in Amicus, the 'ATU Network', has been very quiet of late. In fact almost nothing has been heard from it since General Secretary Simpson seized control of the rival Left Organisation, the 'Gazette', in early 2006 -on the ATU website the 'latest' press release is dated June 6th 2006.

We now believe this is no coincidence. Dearunite.com has uncovered evidence and testimony that links the ATU to the top leadership of Amicus, to the very people who now run the Gazette, to the people who were vocal in denouncing the ATU in public.

ATU Network was launched in January 2005 by Les Bayliss, Assistant General Secretary of Amicus (and who now writes for the Gazette), Cath Speight, Regional Secretary for Amicus's Wales Region and a member of the Labour Party's National Executive Committee, and Kevin Coyne, a full-time national officer who was then the Regional Secretary of the North West Region. 'Unite' Joint General Secretary Simpson has, in his own words, 'promoted and relied heavily' upon Bayliss for a long time.

However we have also uncovered that Tony Burke, yet another 'Unite' Assistant General Secretary, is listed as the author of their 2006 press release.

What will really be a shock to Gazette activists is the secret discussions about ATU by the Gazette leadership. In Dearunite's first exclusive, this scheming is revealed by Jimmy Warne, Chair of the Gazette at the time ATU was being created. Jimmy lists dates, times and places where ATU was talked about as an alternative to the Gazette with prominent Gazette members Steve Davison, Chris Weldon and Howard Turner, whilst ATU was readied to be sold to Gazette supporters as 'Gazette Light'.

The key thing to consider is the dates of the meetings - Davison, Weldon and Turner (the leadership of the current Gazette) were discussing ATU before it was launched! Unite General Secretary-to-be Graham Goddard later attended a meeting on ATU. So the Gazette leadership appear to have been active in the formation of ATU, a rival organisation! We publish Jimmy's account, unedited and in full, here, so judge for yourself. The pieces are all beginning to fall into place - this may well explain why General Secretary Simpson spent so much time at the last Executive meeting attacking Jimmy Warne.

The biggest irony in all this is that North West are the region who were hit hardest by the ATU Network. Readers will remember North West Gazette's activists being the willing troops for Simpson and Davison when they seized control of the Gazette. The irony is that ATU's greatest success to date was at the North West Regional Conference in January 2006. There almost all the candidates on the ATU slate were elected and the NW Gazette activists were slaughtered.

The old phrase 'lions led by donkeys' doesn't begin to describe it, more like mice eaten by cats. With perhaps the odd rat thrown in.
[Jimmy Warne] The ex-Gazette chair's account
[ATU Network] The Official Website
[ATU Flyer] Handed out by Bayliss at Amicus officer's meeting
[Wikipedia] ATU Network
[ATU] Another ATU Flyer
Posted by www.rogerlyons.com on 28th May 2007



Joint General Secretary Simpson addresses his financial backers
Union Blows Nearly £1/4 million on One Employee

At the London Central Employment Tribunal (ET) today the final chapter of Des Heemskerk's unlawful dismissal by the union was played out - the remedies hearing. Amicus/Unite had spent a lot of time and effort, not to mention members' money, avoiding a re-instatement order, which is rare enough anyway. They succeeded in that by convincing the Tribunal that there was now an irretrievable breakdown of trust. However the Tribunal awarded £56,000 compensation to Des, one of the highest awards ever seen in this type of case. Moreover all of Des's costs were awarded against the union, estimated at in excess of £50,000, on the grounds that the union's case was misconceived and vexatious. An award of costs, especially 100%, is very unusual at an ET and it reflects the fundamental mismanagement of the case by the union. In making the award of costs the Tribunal Chair stated that the breakdown of trust had been entirely brought about by the union. Amicus's own legal costs are likely to be significantly higher.

The remaining two of the sacked 'amicus three', Cathie Willis and Jimmy Warne, have their hearing in August.
[dearunite.com] Previous Story - Union Refuse to Re-instate Illegally Sacked Employee
[dearunite.com] previous Story - 'Skimming' - Illegal and Legal
Posted by www.rogerlyons.com on 25th May 2007



We make no apologies for re-running this story, we do apologise for asking people to re-join the Labour party.
John McDonnell - The Betrayal

This is how it should have been: John McDonnell, a smart, media savvy MP, a great speaker with a superb track record on union issues and an opponent from day one of the war on Iraq, stands for leader of the Labour party. The grass roots of the union movement (which founded the Labour Party), support him. His policies match exactly what the unions leaders profess to want. Because of this and responding to the activists, the union leaders fund his campaign and publicly pledge support for him. The media start taking him seriously. Labour party constituencies come out in support. The union leaders follow through with personal visits to their MPs and persuade many to nominate John. Union publicity departments move into action to promote John to members. John's campaign takes off and captures the public imagination. The dour Brown appears arrogant and lacklustre, opportunist Blairites stand and split the New Labour vote. McDonnell wins on a radical agenda....

A dream maybe but you know this is possible, look how Blair blew in from nowhere and took over the Labour Party, and with very little grass roots support. Moreover this is exactly what the union movement is meant to do, it founded the Labour party precisely for the purpose of representing its members. And even if McDonnell had not quite made it, the debate on his policies would at least have been opened up in the Labour party.

And here is the reality: Apart from the commendable ASLEF, RMT and FBU, union leaders pay lip service to their grass roots, quite content for them to waste their activism. Agents of the leaders even cynically tell the activists they must work harder - 'winning support for McDonnell will be absolutely fundamental '. Meanwhile the leaders contribute no funds and cynically write off McDonnell in private. To add insult to injury the Amicus General Secretary secretly contributes £15,000 to Jon Cruddas's campaign for the deputy leadership, without even informing the union's executive let alone asking their permission.

Unlike with McDonnell, there was no discernable grass roots pressure to support Cruddas. Described as "one of a clutch of top insiders coming in as replacements in safe seats" Cruddas is a characterless MP from nowhere with a very limited chance of winning a worthless prize. He has a poor Left record, rated by theyworkforyou.com as "Very strongly for the Iraq war" and "Very strongly for introducing foundation hospitals". Moreover Cruddas is actually campaigning to cut the unions' influence in the Labour party, from 50% at present down to 33%!

All this jumped out of the bag last Friday when General Secretary Simpson, kindly, brutally or foolishly depending on your point of view, came clean in the Morning Star newspaper and put the McDonnell campaign out of its misery:

"all the indications that I've seen are that that won't happen [John getting on the ballot paper]... I don't see the point of going out on the field for a glorious defeat. "
- Remember this is the Derek Simpson whom everyone said had no chance of beating Sir Ken Jackson to become General Secretary of Amicus. Simpson went on:
"If you can win or you have no alternative but to fight, then fight. If you don't have to fight and you don't think you can win, why expose weakness?"
as he opened up to public view the weakness of his support for McDonnell. The McDonnell campaign is now reduced to desperately going direct to trade union MPs, appealing to them over the heads of the union leaders to get the necessary 44 nominations.

Incidentally Tony Woodley, General Secretary of the T&G union, also contributed £15,000 to Jon Cruddas's campaign. The T&G broad left (or at least 'Workers Liberty' who seem to run it) have started to see through the sham support for McDonnell - they are even beginning to question their General Secretary.
[Morning Star] Looking to the Future [large file, please wait]
[Workers Liberty (T&G Left)] Tony, Why Don't You Back John McDonnell?
[John McDonnell] Home Page
[TheyWorkForYou.com] Jon Cruddas
Posted by www.rogerlyons.com on 15th March 2007



And Then There Were Two
With Meacher standing down today it now looks likely that there will be a election for leader. No thanks at all to Simpson or Woodley and despite massive pressure by Brown on MPs - signing the nomination paper for McDonnell means signing away any job in government (assuming Brown wins).

You can watch the candidates in debatehere , just click twice on the play button above. Who would you vote for? If you join the Labour Party by Friday 1st June you get a vote. And you can get your trade union to pay the first years subscription.
[dearunite.com] Previous Story - John McDonnell - the Betrayal
[Labour Party] Join here
[Amcius the union] Ask about the union scheme to pay your 1st years subs
Posted by www.rogerlyons.com on 14th May 2007



Paul Epstein QC - £6K a day?
'Skimming' - Illegal and Legal
Private Eye have covered the union's Employment Tribunal which we reported on recently. Des Heemskerk's remedies hearing will be on 25th May when the union will be fighting to prevent his re-instatement.

General Secretary Simpson, after declaring "His lawyers were good. Ours were xxxx. I wanted to stand up and do it myself" has instead retained top barrister Paul Epstein QC, estimated cost £6,000 per day of your money (inc VAT). Meanwhile normally loyal Simpsonite members of the union's Executive have been distancing themselves from the decision to oppose re-instatement. This is despite evidence in the draft NEC minutes that they supported Simpson. Re-instatement after winning an Employment Tribunal is a key Trade Union principle which the TUC and Amicus profess to support.

It's a shame Simpson isn't doing it himself, his daily rate is a mere £675 a day. And no VAT. Bargain.
[Private Eye] TUC news
[Cloisters] Paul Epstein QC
[dearunite.com] Previous Story - Union Refuse to Re-instate Illegally Sacked Employee
Posted by www.rogerlyons.com on 12th May 2007



TGWU Executive Recalled Over "Super Union" Name Debacle
The T&G leadership have had to concede to recalling its Executive tomorrow (25th April), after failing to convince the Executive members with a two page letter last week that there was no going back on using the name 'Unite' because the name had been registered by Amicus and all the publicity material for the new union had already been printed.

This latest set back for the TGWU leadership follows it losing a 6 to 2 vote at the Finance and General Purposes meeting on Thursday 12th April over balloting the membership on a name for the new union.

The T&G Leadership had apparently given a commitment throughout merger process that the membership would be given a democratic vote on the name of the new union. This was confirmed on the front cover of the March/April TG Record announcing the successful 'yes' vote of the unions' membership to merge.

Preparatory work on choosing a name for the new union is almost complete, and alternatives will be put before the membership in a democratic vote in the near future."
The ditching of the ballot of the membership has created a serious division between the leadership and the lay members of the Executive, who see the issue now not just about the question of the name but one of a test of lay member democracy, and ultimately, who will control and decide on policy when the new union is formed in May. And this on top of the T&G leadership's failure to support John McDonnell and the 'merger' agreement with United Steel Workers.

It is also understood that motion 26 (The terms and conditions of the General Secretary) will be raised at the recalled Executive meeting. A busy meeting.
[Guardian] Name dispute mars new union's launch
[dearunite.com] Previous Story - Unite! - Even General Secretaries
[dearunite.com] Previous Story - John McDonnell - The Betrayal
Posted by www.rogerlyons.com on 24th April 2007



Simpson - Off to Ottowa
Now a US Merger on the Cards
More press releases from Amicus farm on the 'World domination' theme. Plus a nice trip to Canada. Sadly there is one US union that 'Unite' will never have much in common with - 'UE', who restrict their General Secretaries' salaries to the top wage paid in their industry (£25,000) . That would mean an 84% pay cut for Derek Simpson.
New! [Pittsburgh Tribune] Trans-Atlantic union merger may lack mettle
[Guardian] T&G and Amicus in global union plan
[USW] USW and Amicus to make historic announcement
[UE union] How about merging with this one Derek?
[BBC] UK and US unions in merger talks
[Scotsman] Merger plans to create world's first super-union
[dearunite.com] Previous Story - Simpson - Global super-union within a decade
Posted by www.rogerlyons.com on 16th April 2007



Woodley - 70% pay rocket but a target on his back?
Unite! - Even General Secretaries
The new union is to be called 'Unite', according to the Times who have reliable sources in the two unions. T&G's plan to go out to a ballot of members on the name has been abandoned.

The T&G Executive seem to have taken to the title - a motion was passed without debate at their executive meeting last month calling for the two General Secretaries (GS's) terms and conditions to be united. This may well relate to the different treatment Simpson gets over Woodley in the Instrument of Amalgamation re retirement - Woodley has to leave a year early. Simpson of Amicus's remuneration package, at £153,337 a year, is about 70% above Woodley's more modest £90,264 (2005 figures). The T&G Chair and vice chair were delegated to negotiate the changes with Woodley, with the clear instruction to

"ensure that the GS [Woodley] suffers no detriment as a consequence of the Instrument of Amalgamation being registered and is therefore treated no less favourably than the GS of Amicus."
Woodley himself has insisted that he will be treated no differently to any other employee of the TGWU. Both unions have agreed to try to achieve equality of terms and conditions for relevant post holders over a three year period. Woodley did turn down a pay rise when he became GS, this may account for his remuneration being a whopping 70% below Simpson's.

As readers of dearunite.com will know, Instruments of Amalgamation (IoA) are famously preoccupied with General Secretaries terms and conditions rather than union issues (unions after all being run for the benefit of the GS's not the members). The Amicus/T&G IoA is no different, in fact it goes to great lengths to lay down when each GS will retire and how Graham Goddard is to be eased into the resulting vacancy.

A problem for the T&G Chair and vice chair in their negotiations is that the IoA does specifically treat Simpson and Woodley differently - firstly Woodley has to retire a year early, Simpson does not. Secondly if Woodley goes earlier for whatever reason, Simpson becomes leader till 2011, however if Simpson goes early, there has to be an election as soon as possible and Woodley has to stand down within 12 months. And toys can't be re-arranged in the pram once they have been balloted on. They can only be thrown out.
Oh dear...
New! [T&G GEC] The motion
[Times] Super-union manages to unite on a name at last
[dearunite.com] Previous Story - One Union, One Joint General Secretary
[dearunite.com] Previous Story - Tony Woodley an apology
Posted by www.rogerlyons.com on 4th April 2007, updated 12th April 2007



Simpson leaving the ET after giving evidence against Des Heemskerk in November
Union Refuse to Re-instate Illegally Sacked Employee
At Amicus' National Executive meeting last week General Secretary Simpson launched a 50 minute tirade against Des Heemskerk, the sacked union employee who has just won a unanimous Employment Tribunal judgement against the union. He also attacked Jimmy Warne, ex-Chair of the Gazette broad left organisation, and Cathie Willis, ex-Head of Purchasing in Amicus. Simpson prefaced his remarks with 'I believe' explicitly to avoid defamation proceedings, there was only one point where he forgot - resulting ironically in Simpson slandering his own lawyers. In fact his barrister was good (and so he should be at about £4,000 a day, plus VAT), it was his case and his Legal Director that were crap (in our belief).

Simpson also attacked www.dearunite.com but that is not unusual for an Executive meeting. All in all he outdid his infamous 'amicus farm' rant which preceded the sacking of the three staff, when he referred to 'former friends out to get me'.

All this hot air drew attention away from the shame and the fact that Amicus is the only trade union to refuse to re-instate its own employee after an Employment Tribunal has judged them illegally dismissed. Certainly union employees have won against unions before, but either settled or never wanted re-instatement. The Executive's refusal is a blatant breech of the TUC guidelines which Amicus claims to support. Most of all it will seriously damage Amicus's representation of ordinary members wanting re-instatement, their employers will simply cite this case.

Members of the executive were given copies of the full Employment Tribunal judgement - undoubtedly individually doctored for tracking purposes - Simpson admitted at the meeting that "from time to time we put a comma in a place to try and find out who’s leaking". Georgina Hirsch, Amicus' Legal Director, had already confirmed at the Employment Tribunal that they put "deep electronic tags" on documents . Despite the damning criticism of Hirsch by the tribunal, none of Simpon's rant was directed against her, on the contrary he pronounced her as "incapable of lying" and declared he had given her the afternoon off because she was "devastated" by the ruling. He did say though that "her reputation has been damaged in the legal profession". Judge for yourself, the unanimous written judgement contained some extraordinary language about the union's Legal Director (who also ran the investigation), starting off with

"The Tribunal had reservations regarding the evidence given by Ms Hirsch...During the course of the hearing Ms Hirsch changed her stance in regard to many matters of substance"

"There was one further matter which gave concern regarding Ms Hirsch's evidence namely that she submitted her statement of evidence only after she had received the statements of evidence of the Claimant rather than producing it prior to exchange and thus in ignorance of what the other witnesses had written." Incidentally Simpson said this was simply because the barrister submitted it late - this would not explain how in Georgina's late statement she made reference to comments in Heemskerk's witness statements which she was not meant to have read.

"5.19 The Tribunal was concerned to observe the attitude of Ms Hirsch in giving evidence. Although she in her statement denied an assertion by one of the trade union officials that she had, and had adopted during the investigation a bullying nature/ manner, the Tribunal was not surprised given her demeanour even when giving evidence that she could be so conceived, particularly when she was doing the investigation, on home ground. The Tribunal was also unimpressed that she felt it necessary to repeatedly protest how important telling the truth was to her because she was a qualified lawyer. She went so far as to say she thought that meant that her word was obviously more reliable than the word of others." "Ms Hirsch was not the ideal person to put in charge of the investigation. But it was not impossible for her to have carried out a fair investigation provided she suppressed her resentment of and antipathy towards the Claimant. Sadly she was unable to do so. Bias against Mr Heemskerk was evident throughout her dealings with the matter."

"The appeal proceeded on the basis that Ms Hirsch's investigation was adequate when a properly critical review would have demonstrated it to be anything but."

"The focus on soft copies led Ms Hirsch to fail to carry out a proper investigation. Not only did Miss Hirsch ignore the fact that two of the questioned source documents were "hard" ie. not produced by electronic means - she failed to even to look at the documents or take advantage of the opportunity offered by Mr Beaumont to see the documents which had been sent anonymously to him and which he had reproduced on the website. This was despite his offer to make them available in suitable conditions and his view that they were clearly of great importance to such an investigation."

All this is surely evidence that the Amicus General Secretary is bonkers (in our belief). Judge for yourself from his own statements last week:
"I taped the meeting with Jimmy Warne" This was when Jimmy was Chair of the 'Gazette' and long before sacking him. Simpson thereby stakes the claim to be the first person to tape record Gazette meetings, something the Gazette has only recently become fussy about.

"They’re linking with likeminded people in the T&G and working with them. They want Woodley as General Secretary."

"There was a nest of phone calls between Des, Jimmy and Cathy. Their jobs had nothing in common, they had no reason to talk to one another". (Des, Cathie and Jimmy have been close friends for years and openly so)

"They were going to challenge me in February but they decided not to."

"His lawyers were good. Ours were xxxx I wanted to stand up and do it myself."

"And right at the heart of the cesspool, Des Heemskerk and Jimmy Warne".

The union's case in a nutshell was that Heemskerk had downloaded the 'Baylissgate' documents from Hirsch's computer network drive and leaked them to dearunite.com. This line was held at the investigation, the disciplinary and the appeal but was totally discredited at the Tribunal. Apart from blaming his own lawyers, the gist of Simpson's rant last week was that the union, right up to the time of the Tribunal itself, had been mislead into thinking the leaked documents they accused Heemskerk of stealing were electronic, when in fact they were paper copies. But in reality the documents posted on www.dearunite.com were clearly not all electronic. The tribunal itself spotted that one and said Hirsch must have known from the beginning:
"It was clear on the face of the documents submitted to the disciplinary hearing that prior to the commencement of the [union's disciplinary] hearing she was aware that one of the disclosed documents had not and could not have been sourced electronically. Thus a major plank of the Respondent's case against Mr Heemskerk was a seriously undermined at the outset."
A remedies hearing is scheduled for later this month and, although extremely rare, it is possible the Tribunal may order re-instatement for Heemskerk. Simpson is throwing yet more members money at lawyers to prevent this happening and has made it obvious that he would not abide by such a ruling.

Incidentally last weeks Executive meeting also refused to consider supporting John McDonnell for leader of the Labour party or donating any funds to his campaign.
[Employment Tribunal] Read the Judgement in Full
[dearunite.com] Previous Story - Sacked Amicus Official Wins Unfair Dismissal Tribunal
[dearunite.com] Previous Story - Amicus Farm rant
[dearunite.com] Previous Story - John McDonnell - The Betrayal
New! [Socialist Appeal] Victory: sacked Amicus worker wins tribunal
Posted by www.rogerlyons.com on 2nd April 2007



Gazette National Organiser Chris Weldon - happy to be organising election campaigns again
Preston 2007
A rather belated report on the amicus broad left 'Gazette' group AGM in Preston earlier this month, or at least on the matters that concerned dearunite.com

The Gazette's Board, in its pre-meeting, had voted 4-1 to expel David Beaumont, the editor of dearunite.com. Meanwhile the members from the NW region, normally loyal Simpsonites, had voted in their pre meeting 60%-40% not to support his expulsion. Similarly and equally amazingly most members from Yorkshire opposed his expulsion too. It is still not clear who was most surprised by this, David Beaumont or the Gazette Board. In any case the Board, in the person of Chair Steve Davison (also Chair of the unions' NEC, JEC, GPFC, Delegates Conference etc...) skilfully allowed their own expulsion motion to fall off the end of the agenda.

An apologist for Chris Weldon stood up and blamed everyone but Weldon for his stunning election defeat. This included blaming dearunite.com - despite the fact that this website refrained from publishing anything on the election or the candidates for the whole of the election period. We ran the story only after the second ballot closed (despite the severe temptation to report the first Corus ballot cock-up). The only mention we have ever made of Weldon was his bit part role in the Evening with Graham Goddard in July 2006. The South Yorkshire apologist, when challenged for evidence by ex-Gazette chair Jimmy Warne, ludicrously cited the Goddard article as the reason Weldon lost. This has prompted the author of the article, Ray Smith, to write in and give the background to it here.

In a humorous moment Weldon was re-nominated for his Gazette National Organiser position by David Beaumont. This role is to co-ordinate activities for elections and organise Gazette campaigns. David obviously felt Chris needed the practice after his disastrous regional election campaign. Substitute the words 'brewery ' for 'regional' and 'piss-up' for 'election campaign' and you have some measure of Weldon's organising record to date.
[dearunite.com] Previous Story - Gazette Leadership Attempt to Censor dearunite.com
[dearunite.com] Previous Story - An Evening with Graham Goddard
[Ray Smith] Putting the Record Straight
[dearunite.com] Previous Story - Gazette Loses First and Only Officer Election
Posted by www.rogerlyons.com on 27th March 2007



Georgina Hirsch - 'Little Ms Forgetful'
Sacked Amicus Official Wins Unfair Dismissal Tribunal
Sacked Amicus Press Officer and ex-Gazette editor Des Heemskerk has won his case against the union for unfair dismissal. The case collapsed after the union's legal Director (and highest paid official*) Georgina Hirsch changed her story. Throughout Des's suspension, sacking and appeal, Hirsch and the union claimed Des had stolen the 'Baylissgate' documents from Hirsch's computer network drive. When forensic evidence was presented to the Employment Tribunal that the documents leaked to dearunite.com were paper copies and not electronic ones, she changed her story, literally at the last minute.

In her revised witness statement Hirsch told the tribunal she is very forgetful but had just remembered giving her office keys to one of the other officials they sacked, Cathie Willis, and that Cathie must have opened her office, broken into her desk, taken some more keys and opened her locked filing cabinet. These allegations had never been aired before despite the union investigation (conducted bizarrely by Hirsch herself), the lengthy disciplinary and the appeal. Cathie Willis denies these new charges, her tribunal is scheduled for August.

At the tribunal Des Heemskerk's barrister told the three member panel:

"Amicus is one of the largest trade unions in the country and claims to be dedicated to defending the rights of employees and ensuring they are treated fairly by employers. Therefore it should be expected to treat its own employees properly and to ensure that any investigation or disciplinary hearing is conducted fairly. In fact Amicus fell well below the standards that would be expected of any ordinary commercial employer, let alone an employer ostensibly committed to protecting the rights of employees.
Hirsch also let slip to the tribunal that the union regularly spies on its own employees, using, in her words, "deep electronic tags" on internal memos to all staff, in order to track who they forward them to.

According to TUC guidelines Amicus must now re-instate Heemskerk. However General Secretary Derek Simpson has already told the tribunal this will be over his dead body. More details shortly...
* Hirsch is paid more than the General Secretary, but unlike him she doesn't get a free house
New! [Employment Tribunal] Read the Judgement in Full
[dearunite.com] Previous Story - Simpson Sacks Activists
[www.lesbayliss.com] Baylissgate - start here
[dearunite.com] Previous Story - Georgina Hirsch, What's in a Domain Name?
[dearunite.com] Previous Story - Union Pays Private Investigators to Spy on Member
[dearunite.com] Previous Story - 'The New Industrial Tyranny'
Posted by www.rogerlyons.com on 15th March 2007, updated 26th March 2007



McDonnell - Simpson puts the boot in
John McDonnell - The Betrayal

This is how it should have been: John McDonnell, a smart, media savvy MP, a great speaker with a superb track record on union issues and an opponent from day one of the war on Iraq, stands for leader of the Labour party. The grass roots of the union movement (which founded the Labour Party), support him. His policies match exactly what the unions leaders profess to want. Because of this and responding to the activists, the union leaders fund his campaign and publicly pledge support for him. The media start taking him seriously. Labour party constituencies come out in support. The union leaders follow through with personal visits to their MPs and persuade many to nominate John. Union publicity departments move into action to promote John to members. John's campaign takes off and captures the public imagination. The dour Brown appears arrogant and lacklustre, opportunist Blairites stand and split the New Labour vote. McDonnell wins on a radical agenda....

A dream maybe but you know this is possible, look how Blair blew in from nowhere and took over the Labour Party, and with very little grass roots support. Moreover this is exactly what the union movement is meant to do, it founded the Labour party precisely for the purpose of representing its members. And even if McDonnell had not quite made it, the debate on his policies would at least have been opened up in the Labour party.

And here is the reality: Apart from the commendable ASLEF, RMT and FBU, union leaders pay lip service to their grass roots, quite content for them to waste their activism. Agents of the leaders even cynically tell the activists they must work harder - 'winning support for McDonnell will be absolutely fundamental '. Meanwhile the leaders contribute no funds and cynically write off McDonnell in private. To add insult to injury the Amicus General Secretary secretly contributes £15,000 to Jon Cruddas's campaign for the deputy leadership, without even informing the union's executive let alone asking their permission.

Unlike with McDonnell, there was no discernable grass roots pressure to support Cruddas. Described as "one of a clutch of top insiders coming in as replacements in safe seats" Cruddas is a characterless MP from nowhere with a very limited chance of winning a worthless prize. He has a poor Left record, rated by theyworkforyou.com as "Very strongly for the Iraq war" and "Very strongly for introducing foundation hospitals". Moreover Cruddas is actually campaigning to cut the unions' influence in the Labour party, from 50% at present down to 33%!

All this jumped out of the bag last Friday when General Secretary Simpson, kindly, brutally or foolishly depending on your point of view, came clean in the Morning Star newspaper and put the McDonnell campaign out of its misery:

"all the indications that I've seen are that that won't happen [John getting on the ballot paper]... I don't see the point of going out on the field for a glorious defeat. "
- Remember this is the Derek Simpson whom everyone said had no chance of beating Sir Ken Jackson to become General Secretary of Amicus. Simpson went on:
"If you can win or you have no alternative but to fight, then fight. If you don't have to fight and you don't think you can win, why expose weakness?"
as he opened up to public view the weakness of his support for McDonnell. The McDonnell campaign is now reduced to desperately going direct to trade union MPs, appealing to them over the heads of the union leaders to get the necessary 44 nominations.

Incidentally Tony Woodley, General Secretary of the T&G union, also contributed £15,000 to Jon Cruddas's campaign. The T&G broad left (or at least 'Workers Liberty' who seem to run it) have started to see through the sham support for McDonnell - they are even beginning to question their General Secretary.
[Morning Star] Looking to the Future [large file, please wait]
[Workers Liberty (T&G Left)] Tony, Why Don't You Back John McDonnell?
[John McDonnell] Home Page
[TheyWorkForYou.com] Jon Cruddas
Posted by www.rogerlyons.com on 15th March 2007



Merger ballot Results

As per expectations, the ballot for merger of the Amicus and T&G unions has resulted in a 'Yes' vote. The results in Amicus were
18.9% in favour
8.1% against
73% not voting
(Or if you prefer, as both unions do, 70.1% in favour and 29.9% against, on a 27% turn out). The T&G machine achieved a significantly better 'For' vote at 23.3% of ballot papers issued (86.4% of votes returned).

Historically union mergers have attracted very high majorities in favour, typically 80% or more of votes returned. The last one, AEEU and MSF, was supported by 84% and 80% of each union respectively, on a 31% turnout. The Amicus result is therefore surprisingly low, especially given the massive pro-merger campaign by both unions' publicity departments and virtually no 'against' effort by anyone.

However the 13% drop in turnout since 2001 is understandable given the decline in lay democracy, in Amicus at least, over the last 6 years.
[BBC] T&G and Amicus form super-union
[T&G] T&G and amicus members back new union
[Amicus] Amicus and T&G members back new union
[dearunite.com] Previous Story - The Final Instrument
[Computer Weekly] The 2001 MSF/AEEU merger results
New! [T&G union] Full T&G Ballot Report
Posted by www.rogerlyons.com on 12th March 2007



Gazette Leadership Attempt to Censor dearunite.com

The Simsonite leadership of the Gazette group have written to the editor of dearunite.com threatening to expel him unless two articles are removed from this website and he agrees to never criticise them again.

In their long letter, John Boardman, Steve Davison, and Chris Weldon have clearly confused themselves (who have only been in post a year and may not make it beyond next Saturday) with the Gazette organisation which has been around for 20 years. They accuse dearunite.com of "attacking the integrity of the Gazette" in articles that actually attack them. In particular they object to the Gazette under the new Simpsonite regime being called the 'Pet Gazette'.

dearunite.com editor David Beaumont has sent a reply and we publish both letters here. This website is happy to make clear the distinction between criticism of the Gazette leadership and of the Gazette itself, in fact we can see how some of the articles can be mis-read. And of course it is natural for leaders, who have come to think they own an organisation, to see criticism of them as criticism of the whole organisation. So we are going through all previous articles to make sure the object of any 'attack' is clearly identified. And for the record, if we didn't believe the Gazette was worth fighting for we would have left it long ago.

We're also going through and extracting the word 'Pet' from 'Gazette' since it is claimed to cause offence - it's a shame to see it go as we do think it neatly summarises what the outgoing Gazette treasurer of 11 years described as the current leadership's 'subservient relationship with amicus General Secretary Simpson'.

If the Gazette leadership do manage to expel David Beaumont it will be a minor exercise of power but they will be a lot further down their slippery slope of changing the Gazette organisation from an open democratic one to a bland election machine for Derek Simpson and Graham Goddard, where dissent on websites, blogs, in reports and meetings can be crushed at any time.

Two of the Gazette leadership have already banned three supporters from the NW Gazette meetings and five left Gazette NEC members have been expelled from the Gazette NEC caucus.
[Gazette Board] 'Relationship with dearunite.com website'
[David Beaumont] 'Attempted censorship of dearunite.com'
[dearunite.com] Renamed story - 'The Tame Gazette Leadership'
[dearunite.com] Renamed story - 'Gazette Leadership delay AGM'
Posted by www.rogerlyons.com on 2nd March 2007



dearunite.com exclusive!

sad poodle
A bad year for the New Gazette Regime
Gazette Loses First and Only Officer Election

Chris Weldon, trusted pal of Amicus General Secretary Simpson and board member of the Gazette group, has lost the Yorkshire election for regional secretary. Independent candidate Bernard McAulay won by 11,173 to 8,174 votes, a massive majority. This result, on Simpson's home turf, is shocking for the Gazette and for the returning officer (Derek Simpson). Not to mention the loss of thousands of pounds of Gazette supporters' money blown in the campaign. Hopefully the Gazette grass roots will be asking serious questions about what went wrong at their AGM, due a week on Saturday. Weldon is long overdue in being held to account by the Gazette, having been instrumental in attempting to set up the rival ATU organisation.

It concludes a bad year for the Gazette under the new Simpsonite regime -

viruses mailed out,
the coup that removed the Chair and Editor,
a marked decline in involvement by activists,
the embarrassment of having Graham Goddard anointed next General Secretary without any consultation with Gazette members,
blatant rigging of the AGM meeting date to after the merger ballot closed,
the overriding of the majority of Gazette members who opposed the merger terms,
Simpson not informing the Gazette leadership of the changes he made to the Instrument of Amalgamation,
jumping the gun on the new union name ahead of a members ballot,
tearing up all the Gazette's democratic requirements for a merger,
leaking of a memo exposing divisions
and the resignation of the respected Gazette Treasurer of 11 years.
On the plus side they do now have a glossy website, complete with direct feeds from the official union site.
The history of the Yorkshire Regional secretary election is complicated. It is incredible that the election ever happened at all, we never thought it would, or at the least we believed Simpson's chosen candidate Chris Weldon would be unopposed. However an independent candidate, Bernard McAulay, did stand against him, despite massive pressure. The election was run twice - at the last National Executive meeting General Secretary Simpson announced the first ballot had to be re-run due to 'administrative and technical errors'.

We can exclusively reveal what those 'administrative and technical errors' are: Chris Weldon in his election address (distributed with the ballot papers) mentioned his time as a shop steward at Corus no less than three times. As early as paragraph 4 (of 16) he begins

"As a Shop Steward for Corus Engineering Steels I progressed to senior Shop Steward..."
No harm in that, it is obvious that amicus members working for Corus and not knowing the candidates are likely to vote for the one who worked for that company, there are a lot of Corus members in Yorkshire and Weldon needed those votes.

However by coincidence when the ballot papers were first posted out, they didn't just go to Corus members in Yorkshire region, they went to Corus employees throughout the UK. There are reports of Corus staff receiving ballot papers in Corby in Northamptonshire, Workington in the North West, in Teesside and in Scotland. And the numbers are not small, Corby alone has 1,800 members. Fortunately some members complained. Quite probably ballot papers went to non Corus non Yorkshire staff as well, but we have only heard of complaints from Corus ones.

For balance we have linked to both candidates election addresses, here's a quote from Bernard McAulay's:

"Before voting ask yourself one simple question - Why are we having an election in Yorkshire and Humberside when in other regions our fulltime officers continue to be appointed by the leadership against the rules of our union'?"
That's not really correct Bernard, lots of other regions did get ballot papers it's just they were marked 'Yorkshire and Humberside Region'.

Simpson had always given the cost of the ballots as a reason for not having elections for officials. We never believed that but if each one is run like this one maybe he had a point. Also losing it doesn't help - we can confidently say now there will be no more elections under Simpson, who was reported to be chucking up his breakfast at today's news. http://www.amicustheunion.org/Default.aspx?page=6071
New! [Amicus official site] Election Results
[Bernard McAulay] Election Address
[Chris Weldon] Election Address
[dearunite.com] Previous Story - Oh What a Tangled Web We Weave
[dearunite.com] Previous Story - Simpson Seizes Control of the National Left
[Amicustheunion.org.uk] Election of Yorkshire & Humberside Regional Secretary
Posted by www.rogerlyons.com on 1st March 2007, updated 20th March 2007



Gazette - Viruses by Mail or Website
Two of the regular mailings from the amicus Gazette leadership to all its supporters have been found to contain viruses. dearunite.com contacted the Gazette board members involved but they both declared they had nothing untoward on their machines. The two emails originated outside the gazette but were forwarded by the Gazette web site editor John Boardman to secretary Paul Birkett, who emailed them out. This problem coincides with some malicious Trojan software appearing on the Gazette leadership's website. If you have visited the website or you receive Gazette emails it would be well worth scanning your PC. Trojan software captures keystrokes and passwords. The Gazette board have taken no steps at all to warn email recipients or website visitors.
[ZoneAlarm] Description of the Web Site Trojan
[34SP.com] Gazette website host's description of the problem
[Warning] Email Virus 'Please sing the petition'
[Gazette mailing] Please sing the petition (virus removed)
[Warning] Email Virus 'Algerian men deported'
[Gazette mailing] Algerian men deported (virus removed)
Posted by www.rogerlyons.com on 1st March 2007



£4,000
One General Secretary, two helicopters, no education department...
Goes Around, Comes Around

Ever since General Secretary Simpson sent letters out to the Amicus education staff telling them all their jobs were being outsourced, supporters of Simpson have been spreading allegations about that department. Education officers have been described as racist, homophobic, sexist, 'not interested in trade unionism' and lazy. One Simpson supporter claimed at a London meeting that he had heard the racist phrase 'towel heads' used by officers. Simpson of course would not dirty his fingerprints on such a smear campaign, nevertheless his comment at the last Executive meeting that the education officers had 'oceans of time on their hands' was certainly not designed to stifle the claims.

dearunite.com have not been able to substantiate a single one of these allegations and nor, curiously, had we ever heard them before the closure of the department was announced. In fact many members speak highly of the training they have received.

Well what goes around comes around and it seems at least one education officer at the training centre at Esher Place has got their retaliation in. Information was provided to the Sun newspaper, no friend of trade unionism, and published last week under the title "Union boss lives like a King". The Sun quotes amicus sources alleging that Simpson is arranging for four rooms at Esher Place, (once Henry VIII's royal palace) to be made into one huge suite, to be called the "General Secretary's suite". A humourous photomontage of Simpson as Henry VIII was included:

We've looked through the Sun story and the basic facts appear to be true. We should correct two errors though: The Sun quoted Simpson's salary package at £162,000 a year. Yes that's correct, but three years back, in 2004. Secondly the Sun alleged that the General Secretary

"once infuriated rank-and-file members by taking a helicopter to visit the Glastonbury pop festival at union expense."
Simpson actually went to Glastonbury by helicopter for two years running, the first was paid for by members (£4,000 according to the Guardian) and the second time by employers. And which is worse we wonder?

Shortly after being elected, when Simpson used to address the Gazette grass roots, he would joke about the size of the hotel suites that he was allocated. The joke went something like this: "thee ent'd thru wun door in't Lanc'shur an't came oot thru t'othur in't York-shur'. Doesn't seem so funny now the union is building him the things.
[The Sun] Union boss lives like a King
[The Sun] Previous story - Leftie chopper trip flies in the face of decency
[dearunite.com] Previous story - Simpson Sacks More of His Own
[Amicus Official site] Esher Place
Posted by www.rogerlyons.com on 26th February 2007



one
...and only one
One Union, One Joint General Secretary

What happens under the Instrument of Amalgamation in the merged union if either Joint General Secretary is unable to continue in office for some reason, say through ill-health?

In the original Instrument there was no provision. Curiously in the amended version, whole sections were added to cater for it, but only on the Amicus side. For example if Simpson drops dead, an election has to held 'as soon as possible' for General Secretary designate (General Rules section 3.7.2). And under section 3.7.3, Woodley must retire 'no more than 12 months afterwards'. On the other hand if Woodley were to kick the bucket, or leave through ill-health, our reading of the Instrument is that Simpson would become the only Joint General Secretary, i.e. effectively the General Secretary, until 23rd December 2010 (section 3.7.1).

With that sort of power Simpson would not have difficulty in ensuring that Graham Goddard becomes the next General Secretary of the union.

Some people have argued that no, instead the Deputy General Secretary of the TGWU would take over. We can find no rule for this, in fact 3.7 makes clear that only people who are General Secretaries of the two unions 'at the time of registration of the Instrument of Amalgamation' shall serve as Joint General Secretaries. And at the end of the day the Instrument is what matters, not what verbal assurances people give.

In brutal summary, if Simpson dies Woodley has to stand down within 12 months. But if Woodley dies, Simpson becomes the only General Secretary of the new union until 2011. We wish them both good health and, similarly, we really are delighted to hear that Woodley has no intention of retiring in the near future.
[dearunite.com] Previous Story - The Final Instrument
[dearunite.com] Previous Story - Tony Woodley
[IoA] New Version
Posted by www.rogerlyons.com on 7th February 2007



Suspended
Sample from a bulletin board after the settlement
Cabin Crew Accuse Woodley of 'Selling Out'

TGWU General Secretary Tony Woodley is to face British Airways cabin crew furious at the way they believe the union leadership "sold them out" in the deal to avert a strike.

Woodley was due to appear at a mass meeting of cabin crew today but it was postponed 'to allow tempers to cool'. The TGWU's BASSA online bulletin board had to be suspended last week because of the level of anger directed at union officials by cabin crew over the pay deal. The deal was portrayed by BA as a paltry 0.1%, averaged over 2 years. The T&G described it as "the best that could be achieved by negotiation" adding

"If that sort of offer had been on the table after a strike, we would have accepted it."
Is that after winning a strike, or losing it? Two of the BASSA committee reps have resigned in protest at the settlement.
[Independent] BA cabin crew accuse Woodley of 'selling out' over strike
[dearunite.com] Previous Story - Tony Woodley
[dearunite.com] Previous Story - BA Strike Off
[TGWU] BA cabin crew: Agreement reached - strikes off
Posted by www.rogerlyons.com on 6th February 2007



Tony Woodley
We have removed a story "Woodley to accept Axe" which concerned a Mr. T. Woodley the General Secretary of the TGWU. We stated that Mr. Woodley had attempted to negotiate a means of leaving the union in the near future in return for a substantial pay off. We now accept that this is not true and that Mr. Woodley is working hard to ensure that the new amalgamated union is a great success. We also accept that Mr. Woodley has no intention of retiring in the near future and any statement to the contrary is wrong. We apologise to Mr. Woodley for any upset caused to him as a result of our earlier statement.
Posted by www.rogerlyons.com on 31st January 2007



BA Share Price
BA Takes off
BA Strike Off

The TGWU strike at BA has been cancelled, after the union's General Secretary Tony Woodley took over negotiations from Jack Dromey. The union and BA have both claimed victory, with BA for example claiming the pay increase is 0.2% and 0% over 2 years, in real terms. Woodley however described the new package as a 'significant improvement for our cabin crew members'.

It remains to be seen what the cabin crew think, on the other side though the shareholders are clear - BA's share price shot up today to its highest in 9 years.
[British Airways] Settlement of TGWU dispute
[TGWU] Agreement reached - strikes off
[dearunite.com] Previous Story - Woodley to Accept Axe
[Guardian] £600,000 for shop stewards fired over Gate Gourmet strike
[TGWU] Tony Woodley intervenes in BA cabin crew dispute
[Amicustheunion.org.uk] Amicus BA stewards vote to recommend revised pension proposals
New! [Daily Telegraph] BA shares soar despite passenger woes
Posted by www.rogerlyons.com on 30th January 2007



Amicus Closes Education
Amicus has today sent notices to all its education staff telling them the entire department is to be closed. More soon.
Posted by www.rogerlyons.com on 25th January 2007



Gazette Leadership delay AGM
The leadership of the amicus left grass roots organisation the 'Gazette', currently controlled by General Secretary Simpson and his side kick Steve Davison, has postponed the date of their Annual General meeting so that it is after the merger ballot has finished.

The original date should have been 10th February but has been moved to 10th March. The merger ballot will run early February to early March; traditionally the vast majority of votes are returned within a week of the start date.

Simpson is clearly concerned that union activists might regain control of the Gazette before the merger ballot closes. If that happened the Gazette would almost certainly recommend that members reject the current merger terms.

The announcement of the delay simply says "Yorkshire [Simpson and Davison's region] had problems with 10th & 17th February". Apparently Yorkshire claimed there were "very important equality conferences in Yorkshire on that day [10th]". So important that there is no trace of them on the official amicus website's events page. Ironically the new date chosen conflicts with International Women's day events.
[dearunite.com] Previous Story - 'The Tame Gazette Leadership'
Posted by www.rogerlyons.com on 1st January 2007



One World, One Union, One Leader
Simpson's prescient 2005 Xmas Card?
Simpson - Global super-union within a decade

Amicus General Secretary Derek Simpson will announce this week a pact with German engineering union IG-Metall and two US unions - the United Steelworkers and the International Association of Machinists. This will confirm a rumour first reported by dearunite.com back in June last year.

New! Incredibly we are hearing from multiple sources that Simpson's announcement was news to the members of the union's own ruling executive! The General Secretary never discussed, debated or even mentioned the matter at NEC meetings. A classic symptom of megalomergermania or what? We wonder if he bothered to tell the TGWU.

The announcement represents a remarkable continuation of the policies set by Simpson's predecessor, foe and IG-Metall fan Sir Ken Jackson. Jackson, part-time boss of NIREX the Nuclear Waste accumulation authority, would similarly be proud of Simpson's stridrent pro nuclear position.
New! [Times] Global super-union within a decade, says Amicus chief
[Observer] Birth of the first global super-union
[Sunday Herald] BNFL paid union to back new nuclear power stations
[AEEU Gazette] Simpson's 2001 whinge about Sir Ken's NIREX job
[Amicus Official site] 'A clear political lead on the future of nuclear power'
[dearunite.com] Previous Story - How Simpson got Nuclear Power Past conference
[dearunite.com] Previous Story - When IG-Metall was just a rumour
Posted by www.rogerlyons.com on 1st January 2007



Democracy under the knife
The Final Instrument

dearunite.com have at last obtained the amended version of the Instrument of Amalgamation (IoA) for the super union merger, the existence of which was revealed by General Secretary Simpson at the end of November. This final version was sent to the Amicus Executive members only this week.

The document contradicts Simpson's claim that the T&G can change nothing - there are over a dozen changes from the Amicus approved one, necessary to get the document past yesterday's T&G delegate conference. The document also declares the name of the new union to be "the Amalgamated Union". It seems unbelievable as a permanent name but Amicus have registered www.amalgamatedunion.org.

Some of the changes relate to the issue absolutely vital to members - who gets the top salary package and for how long. Simpson seems to have done well here, Rule 3.7.1 has had another 6 lines added to protect him from a legal challenge to his staying on until 2010. General Secretaries are normally required by law to stand for election every 5 years. By 2010 Simpson will have managed 8 years without the votes of any member of the MSF, GPMU, UNIFI or TGWU components of 'The Amalgamated Union'.

Other changes:
3.7.2 and 3.7.3 are amended to enforce T&G General Secretary Woodley to stand down 12 months after Simpson retires, resigns or dies, if before 2010. This effectively allows Simpson to determine the date of election of his and Woodley's replacement, if he wants.
4.1 contains an addition guaranteeing the existing trustees their positions in the new union.
The contentious 5.4 (d) (iv) (e) which said all candidates for election must be accredited workplace representatives has been dropped entirely.
5.4 (f) (i) Definition of regions - Humberside has been added to Yorkshire. This whole clause reeks of Gerrymandering, it talks of '7 English regions defined by the Regional Development Agency boundaries', this sounds very objective and fair. However England actually has 9 Regional Development Agency areas, all of different population sizes. The IoA has merged the biggest, London, with Eastern, making a region twice the size of Simpson's favourite NW region. Twice the size but measured equal in the new union.
5.4 (h) (ii) The top job. Re-written in line with 3.7.1 above
5.4 (h) (iii) Ditto in line with 3.7.2
5.4 (h) (iv) Ditto in line with 3.7.3
These three points, all about the top job, must be important to be covered twice in the IoA.
5.4 (i) (c) All candidates must be 'accredited workplace representatives' has now become "accountable representatives of workers" and a whole new section has been added which allows only the Executive to define what is meant by the new term.
5.4 (m) (ii) Labour party. A new addition specifies the role of political committees "to coordinate the Union’s work in the Labour Party, under the direction of the Executive Council."
5.4 (n) renamed from (o). Who knows what the original 5.4 (n) was, it has never been seen.
5.4 (r) Political fund, this section has replaced section 6.

The document was sent out to a postal ballot of Amicus Executive members this week. They were asked to approve it without discussion and also to allow General Secretary Simpson to make unknown changes in future 'as necessitated by the Trade Union Certification Officer'. What's commonly known as a 'blank cheque'.
[IoA] New Version
[IoA] Pre T&G Version
[dearunite.com] Previous Story - An Instrument of Amalgamation
Posted by www.rogerlyons.com on 21st December 2006



T&G Conference Backs Merger
Breaking News.....More soon
[T&G union] Historic vote passed to create UK's largest union
[BBC] Activists vote for 'super-union'
[Guardian] Plan to create super union put to vote
Posted by www.rogerlyons.com on 19th December 2006



What a difference a day makes
Amicus Pulls Merger Poll
Today the union took down its electronic poll on the merger, only a day after it was sent out to activists in their regular email bulletin. Now members trying to vote, or just wanting to see the results, get the message:


Done? We surely have been. Yesterday evening the voting was running at 64% against merger, 36% unsure and none in favour.

The irony of Amicus pulling a cheap and meaningless electronic poll on the very day the Transport and General union are having a full merger conference, will no doubt be lost on Amicus General Secretary Simpson. He had already dismissed today's T&G conference in Birmingham as a 'waste of money', saying "they can change nothing".
New! [Guardian] Diary (5th paragraph)
[Amicus Activist] 'Merger scruitineer named' (sic)
[Amicus Activist] What a difference a day makes
Posted by www.rogerlyons.com on 19th December 2006



An Engineering Tradition
Baron Jordan Derek Simpson
Remarkable Similarity
Readers have spotted the remarkable similarity betweens Simpson's 2006 proclamations on the merger and a 2003 speech by the detested Bill Jordan, to the Right wing's organisation, 'AEEU United/MSFfL'.

Jordan (or is it Simpson?) "lambasts the left for their ‘ideologically charged’ views" and "talked about globalisation", and the need for big unions to deal with "‘Today’s multinationals, bigger than entire national economies, [who] are wandering nomads in the world economy".

The Right-wing ex-General Secretary of MSF, Roger Lyons, was also at the 2003 meeting where he "hinted that he has some hopes of coming to an ‘agreement’ with the left."

Uncanny....

Jordan, ex-President of AEEU, got his peerage in 2000 to become 'Baron Jordan'.
[dearunite.com] Previous Story - Joint Meet of MSF for Labour and AEEU United 16.03.03
[dearunite.com] Previous Story - Inside MSF for Labour
Posted by www.rogerlyons.com on 13th December 2006



One Union to rule them all, One Union to bind them,
One Union to bring them all and in the darkness blind them
'One Union' Scheme Opposed by Amicus Left
An analysis of the recent Amicus Unity Gazette meeting in Manchester makes it clear that the vast majority of the Broad Left organisation's regions oppose the merger, on the proposed terms at least. Only about 60 people were present in Manchester, from the whole of the UK. 41 of these were from the NW region, which is controlled by the General Secretary. All of them block voted for the merger. Another 5 people were from Yorkshire region, Simpson's home turf. Undoubtedly they voted for the merger. Only 14 people voted against but this number is made of 5 regions - 1 person from East Midlands, 1 from Scotland, 2 from Eastern, 4 from West Midlands and 6 from London. So only 2 Gazette regions voted in favour of the merger terms, 5 voted against - 29% to 71%:

Despite this obvious evidence that the Gazette grass roots members oppose the terms, Simpson's cronies managed to push it through by bussing in the NW voting fodder. Other regions such as SW sent no one, such is the lack of confidence in the democracy of the National Gazette nowadays.

Also a remarkable memo from within the Right of the organisation has come to light exposing the divisions. In it the author refers disparagingly to 'Gillard's crew', Pete Gillard being the secretary of London Region Gazette. The author alleges that the Left Wing NEC member Gill George failed to tell London Region about Simpson's changes to the Instrument of Amalgamation. In fact no one, not even the NEC, has yet seen Simpson's amended version, even his own tame Gazette leadership's website currently says

"The revised Instrument of Amalgamation will appear here when it is available"
Actually it will only be revealed at this week's TGWU delegate conference (19th Dec). There was much confusion in the Gazette leadership after Simpson let slip the existence of an amended Instrument at Manchester. After the meeting the Board of the National Gazette were unable to summarise what Simpson had said and they had to give up trying. Simpson proudly boasts he speaks without any prepared notes, it seems he also speaks without preparing his cronies.

In one more insult the Simpson-run Gazette have decided on the new union's name, despite the fact that the TGWU have yet to vote on it. Not surprising they have gone with "One Union", the name personally created by Simpson after rejecting 200 others and blowing £10,000 on consultancy. Here is their new logo:

Steve Davison the chair of the National Gazette announced:

"The new union has the potential to be one of the most democratic trade unions that has ever been in existence"
Not much potential evident at the formation stage.
[dearunite.com] Previous Story - 'The Tame Gazette Leadership'
[National Gazette] Divisive memo
Posted by www.rogerlyons.com on 11th December 2006



Names of the New Super Union
Yet more differences between Amicus and the T&G union: Amicus have spent £10,000 on consultancy to choose a new name for the merged super union, whereas the T&G are asking their members to decide. The T&G described their method as "more democratic and a lot cheaper than a consultancy”.

It also turns out that Amicus General Secretary Simpson has rejected all two hundred names provided by his consultants, including 'Voice', 'Accommodate', 'Spectrum' and 'United'. Instead he has decided on 'oneunion' AKA '1union' and his long time lawyer Georgina Hirsch has registered both internet domain names, oddly using her own name as the registrant. She is after all now the highest paid employee of the union, higher than Simpson himself if you exclude his 'housing benefit' (£44,752 a year in 2004).

'Hirsch and Simpson's Big Expensive Union' was too long apparently. 'One World, One Union, One Leader' is definitely out.
[The Times] Workers asked to stamp identity on new super-union
[oneunion.org.uk] Already registered
[1union.org.uk] Also Already registered
[dearunite.com] Previous Story - What's in a Domain Name?
Posted by www.rogerlyons.com on 4th December 2006



Something for Simpson's Christmas list
'Communicating' the Merger
The contrast between the T&G union and Amicus's approaches to the merger continues. The T&G are having a recall conference, they have made changes to the Instrument of Amalgamation, they made it available to members along with a detailed guide and they have published the report of the Joint Working Party.

Amicus on the other hand, under the tight grip of General Secretary Simpson, have delayed and resisted all of the above. Only this month did they 'leak' a fancy timeline and the un-amended Instrument of Amalgamation document to their Gazette website. Prior to this the only communication was a patronising brief to activists penned by Simpson himself.

The latest move from the Amicus communications department is to:

"collect quotes from reps in each region explaining why the merger will be good for them personally/their sector/their region" "The deadline for this next week as we need them in time for the magazine"
Offers of quotes on why the merger is bad for our members and for the trade union movement are being declined.

Which of the two union's approaches will predominate in the new union we wonder.
[Amicus Communications Department] Communicating the Merger
[London Region (non tame Gazette] Alternative Guide to the Merger
[T&G union] Comprehensive coverage by the T&G at least
[Derek Simpson] Letter to Activists
[dearunite.com] Previous Story - An Instrument of Amalgamation
Posted by www.rogerlyons.com on 27th November 2006



T&G Approve Instrument of Amalgamation (Amended Version)
The amended Instrument of Amalgamation was unanimously approved by the Executive of the Transport and General Workers' union yesterday. This version of the document has not been seen by members of either union yet (and nor do we have a copy) but its existence was revealed last Saturday by Amicus General Secretary Derek Simpson.

Because the T&G version is slightly different to the one approved by the Amicus Executive, it will by law have to go back to an Amicus Executive meeting. Doubtless though this process will be a formality.

Unlike Amicus, the T&G will now be putting the document to a democratic conference of union delegates.
[Personnel Today] Super union moves step closer
[Life Style Extra] T&G union executive approves plan
[AFX News] T&G union executive approves plan
Posted by www.rogerlyons.com on 23rd November 2006



26 years service
Dead, or just enjoying the tickling?
The Tame Gazette Leadership
Amicus General Secretary Derek Simpson swaggered in to stroke the 'National Unity Gazette' organisation he controls last Saturday. The meeting had been hastily called to back the merger before the T&G executive considers the Instrument of Amalgamation today (22nd). Simpson is always listed as a speaker at Gazette meetings but normally never turns up.

The 'Gazette' group's leadership had been booted into panic mode by the General Secretary, in a last minute (and first ever) concern about eliciting grass roots support for the merger. So much so that they had called this 'Quarterly' meeting for 18th November, only a month since their last 'Quarterly' meeting on the 7th October. Most Gazette supporters didn't expect one until the AGM in January. Not only that, Simpson's administrator Steve Davison (also Chair of the union's Executive and GPFC) had arranged for the meeting to be in Manchester; this is a direct breach of the Gazette Constitution (which Simpsonites had previously written!), which states that all National meetings will be held in Preston.

On top of all that, the tame Gazette leadership's website had published some secret Amicus pro-merger documents. These consist of a rather child-like PowerPoint presentation and a fancy merger 'timeline'. They are the very documents which were issued to Executive members under strict secrecy and marked in red: "This e-mail and any files transmitted with it are private and intended solely for the use of the individual or entity to whom they are addressed". However now the tame Gazette leadership is controlled by Simpson, it seems it's OK for them to leak documents, just not for truly independent websites. We belatedly provide them below.

Apart from Simpson's appearance, the Manchester meeting closely followed the format of recent National Gazette meetings - a tiny attendance of 60 people, mostly white, middle-aged and male, with block-voting decided in advance by the NW and Yorks regions, obviating any tiresome need to listen to the arguments. All of this accounts for the about-face on the previous merger policy, summed up in a longstanding motion from London region:

“The Gazette reaffirms its policy in relation to the proposed merger with the TGWU that ‘any Instrument of Amalgamation shall require the agreement of a recall Conference before being submitted to a ballot of the membership’.”
Instead the meeting voted to merge with no recall conference by about 40 block votes to 20 Left votes. Those 40 members have now torn up all the Gazette's democratic requirements for a merger which had been carefully laid out in the past, and by much better attended meetings. For the convenience of nostalgic Gazette members here is a list of those requirements, not one of which will now be fully met. This list may be of use to the Gazette members of the union's Executive, who we hear had been assured before the last Executive meeting (in what would be a blatant lie) that existing Gazette policy was not for 'a recall conference before merger'.

Simpson did let slip one thing - the Instrument of Amalgamation which the Amicus Executive had approved, and which everyone present thought they were voting on, was not the latest version. Apparently some changes had been made by the T&G. Specifically the requirement that all delegates be workplace reps had been scrapped, now branch officials could also be delegates. Despite this obvious change by the T&G, Simpson repeated his assertion made at Blackpool that the T&G were wasting time and money with a recall conference and that they could change nothing.
[London Region] An Analysis of the Instrument of Amalgamation
[Gazette] Leaked Power Point Presentation (PowerPoint file)
[Gazette] Leaked Merger Timeline
[dearunite.com] Previous Story - The Decline of the Gazette
[dearunite.com] Previous Story - Simpson Seizes Control of the Gazette
Posted by www.rogerlyons.com on 22nd November 2006



Simpson: 'T&G can change nothing'
Speaking to delegates at the Equalities Conferences in Blackpool, Amicus General Secretary Derek Simpson responded aggressively to questions concerning the lack of consultation with Amicus members over the forthcoming merger with the T&GW union. He attacked those asking for a special or recall conference (which the T&G are having) to debate the issue as 'detractors from lay democracy within the union'. The Executive was an elected lay body and it had endorsed the Instrument of Amalgamation, therefore members should accept their decision, not challenge it, he said. (Actually the Executive are now outside of their elected period).

The General Secretary defended the disgraceful lack of information to Amicus members on the grounds that the negotiations with the TGWU were highly sensitive and 'could not be complicated by members knowing what was being discussed'.

Clearly irritated by the fact that the TGWU was having a recall conference to consider and vote on the Instrument of Amalgamation, Simpson declared:

"They can have as many conferences as they like, but they can change nothing"
The General Secretary stumbled over concerns of delegates that in the new union all members elected to Committees, Councils and Conferences have to be workplace reps. He pleaded that the issue would be looked at and talked vaguely about the possible role of Equalities reps. To the assembled delegates who had spent years confronting barriers to represent the union and extend its work and influence, but would now find themselves blocked from the structures of the new union, this smacked of indifference.

Simpson's address on 3rd November was in the plenary session, where all the delegates from the three Amicus conferences- Disabilities, LGBT, and Ethnic Minorities were together.
[dearunite.com] Previous Story - Turkeys Cancel Christmas - Until 2008
Posted by www.rogerlyons.com on 21st November 2006



dearunite.com exclusive!

26 years service
Gazette Treasurer's resignation letter
The Decline of the National 'Unity' Gazette
The 'Gazette' is the grass roots Left organisation that got Amicus General secretary Derek Simpson elected (on a platform of 'election of officials'). Its good times ran from Simpson's election in 2002 up to last years Rules conference, where the organisation narrowly managed to get election of officials adopted into rule. That was achieved despite overt lack of support from Simpson who refused to make a speech to conference in support, despite covert wrecking, including delaying implementation of the rule and, lately, just plain breaking of it.

Recently the National Gazette has entered into serious decline. Firstly, in classic style, the organisation began to abandon its Broad Left ethos - NW region acted to exclude 3 Socialist Workers Party (SWP) members and got away with it. The Gazette caucus of Executive members did the same, expelling four elected members. Inevitably this Witch Hunt spread beyond the SWP (First they came..." etc...) - Simpson sacked three key Gazette members (not SWP but Labour Party this time) from their union jobs and arranged the removal of two of them as Chair and Editor of the Gazette respectively. Simpson supporters pushed through as the new Chair one Steve Davison, who also happens to be chair of the union's executive and of the General Purposes and Finance Committee. In other words a committed Simpsonite.

The last National Gazette quarterly meeting epitomised this decline. Only about 70 people made the trek to Preston, down from nearly 200 in its heyday. Moreover (and incredibly) a massive one quarter of the two hour meeting was spent discussing this website. What sparked it off was a statement read out by John Boardman, Gazette Editor and NW Chair, complaining about our article 'An evening with Graham Goddard'. He claimed, without any evidence, that the open evening had been tape recorded, and attempted to make this the big issue. Boardman had never raised this allegation in his correspondence with us and we have no idea whether it was taped. Much to Boardman's discomfort people then began raising the real issue of substance - what democratic process selected Goddard as Deputy General Secretary and as the next General Secretary (a process which is, in Goddard's own words, 'unstoppable')? The answer is none.

Whether the "Evening with Graham Goddard" report was from tape, shorthand or just from good notes is irrelevant. In fact a recording would only make it all the more accurate. Alleging tape recording was clearly just a means to make it emotive. Boardman's statement contained a threat to 'bring the matter to the Gazette Board' if it ever happens again. The obvious intention is to suppress accounts of Gazette meetings, whether recorded or from notes. This account you are reading may now be a disciplinary offence within this once open organisation.

Fortunately we can never be stopped from reporting what the National Gazette Board didn't say. In that spirit we publish the resignation letter of Bill Young, the Gazette's much respected treasurer of eleven years, and a founding member of the organisation back in 1960. The Gazette leadership had received it well before the last national meeting. They decided to announce the resignation but withhold the contents of the letter, for reasons that will become obvious when you read it:
[Resignation Letter] Bill Young, Gazette Treasurer 1995-2006
[John Boardman] 'asking for your assistance'
[dearunite.com] Previous Story - An Evening With Graham Goddard
New! [Guardian] Power struggle to lead UK's biggest union
Posted by www.rogerlyons.com on 20th October 2006



A Note on Accountability
Two criticisms of this website were aired at the last National Gazette meeting. We refute them here.

The first accusation is that we are one-sided. This argument comes from stupid people. What they mean is that we have exposed something about their power or behaviour and they are not happy about it. Of course it's one-sided! Go to a discussion forum if you want multiple sides. Go to the official site or the 'new' Gazette site if you want the union leadership's view. Or if you really want to read a publication with its "snout in the trough of patronage and corruption that so dominates our movement" try Paid Union Review, whose entirely independent sister organisation receives £3,000 every year from Amicus, courtesy of the infamous Les Bayliss.

The second accusation is that the website is not accountable to anyone. This argument comes from clever people. What they mean is that they cannot employ, promote, demote, sack or otherwise threaten us to stop stories they don't like getting out. We are independent. You may notice that we reproduce, ironically, the by-line of last year's Amicus conference as our backdrop - "no power without accountability". It refers to the gross unaccountability of those who have power in the union. This website has no authority within the union, no power. The only power we have is you coming to read the site. You can remove that limited power at any time by simply not visiting...
Posted by www.rogerlyons.com on 20th October 2006



dearunite.com exclusive!

Oops where's the third one gone
Towards another year on £162,163
An Instrument of Amalgamation
Last Wednesday the Amicus executive approved the 'Instrument of Amalgamation' which will form the basis of the new super union merger. Only a handful of Executive members voted against. This is in contrast to the Transport and General Workers Union Executive who (unanimously) voted not to approve it but instead put the document out for consultation with their members.

Moreover, whereas the T&G will then put the merger to a properly constituted conference of delegates (as the GMB did), Amicus are bypassing that troublesome formality and going straight to the legally required ballot of members. Historically members, when presented with a simple postal ballot in the comfort of their homes, vote overwhelmingly for mergers. Delegates at conference on the other hand insist on discussing bothersome details and asking awkward questions.

Apparently most of the Amicus Executive couldn't be arsed with the details and it's not even clear they read the document. Typos in the legally binding document like section 3.2:

"The rules of the Amicus Section which shall consist of the rules of the Amicus in force immediately before..."
[our italics] might be expected to slip through but how about obvious errors like section 10?
"a member of either of the a merging unions"
To be fair to the Executive, their job was made difficult by the senior union employees (in whose interests Amicus is run), who only let most of them see the document two days beforehand, and in conditions of paranoid secrecy. In fact the Instrument is still not available to Amicus members, so we publish it for you here.

We've had a quick look through it, here are a few points of interest:

1) Predictably Amicus General Secretary Derek Simpson has extended his term of office by a year, he will now go on his 66th birthday (23 December 2010), incidentally without ever having had to face a ballot of all the members. Instruments of Amalgamation are a notorious means of extending General Secretaries' terms of office, without it Simpson would have to retire at 65 by law or face an election. Of course this extension is only to provide "continuity from the transition period" - nearly 4 years after the merger? Pull the other one! Oddly the document forces T&G General Secretary, Tony Woodley, to retire in 2011 and not the 2013 that he is entitled to stay on to. [Rules 3.7.1 and 3.7.2]

2) The powers of both General Secretaries over the lay Executive are massively increased: Either man can now declare any issue “fundamental” which then requires a hard-to-get 75% majority vote on the Executive. There are no criteria for determining an issue as “fundamental” so effectively it becomes a personal veto by a Joint General Secretary. [Rule 3.1]

3) There is now no restriction on Joint General Secretaries delegating their powers – to any employee of the union, not just other senior officers. [Rule 3.8]

4) Simpson's early manoeuvre back in 2002 to pass all the Executive's powers to himself between meetings of the Executive is now formally put into rule. However the document's architects have screwed up - both General Secretaries have all the power between meetings - what if they don't agree with each other? [Rule 3.9]

5) Rule 3.10 neatly and stealthily buries Amicus's hard won rule that officials must be elected. In fact it may even scupper the T&G's democratic structure for appointing officers. So-called 'Gazette' Executive members didn't hesitate to breach official Gazette policy on this one then.

6) There are other changes designed to reduce lay democracy in the new union. Regions' funds are cut in half, from 2% to 1% [Rule 5.4 (f) (iii)]. The Policy conference is cut from 1 delegate per 1,000 members to 1 per 2,000 [Rule 5.4(j)]. The Rules conference is cut to 1 delegate per 4,000 members! [Rule 5.4.(k)(i)]. And the first conferences are put off until November 2009/2010.

7) Lastly the Executive can now outsource disciplinary authority to anyone (including full-time officers). In fact they can 'offshore' it - there is not even a requirement that they delegate it to members of the Union. [Rule 5.4 (r)].

The T&G will certainly come back with corrections and changes to the Instrument of Amalgamation, so we will have to re-witness the farce of the Amicus Executive approving it a second time without consulting our members.
[Instrument of Amalgamation] The full document..
[dearunite.com] Previous Story - It's Official: GMB out of Megalo-Merger
New! [www.amicustheunion.org.uk] The official version - 'an exciting future'
New! [Guardian] Power struggle to lead UK's biggest union
Posted by www.rogerlyons.com on 15th October 2006



dearunite.com exclusive!

Simpson's Big Heart
"Equality is at the heart of everything we do"
Simpson Sacks More of His Own
On Saturday 18th August, five male Amicus education officers woke up to personal letters from Amicus General Secretary Derek Simpson entitled "Notice of Termination". The letters began
"I am writing to advise you that with effect from the date of this letter you are hereby being given formal notice, in accordance with your contractual rights, of the termination of your contract of employment with Amicus."
One of the five employees, Roger Bates, suffered a heart attack that same weekend.

But it wasn't all bad. Simpson's letter continued with an offer of "suitable alternative employment" at reduced salary and conditions. This was followed by six paragraphs of waffle worthy of John Prescott, attempting to justify the action, and concluding with:

"Arrangements will be made during the period of your contractual notice for you to be fully consulted on this unfortunate situation, and for you to have the opportunity to discuss with us this very regrettable turn of events"
And what was the cause of this incredible behaviour by a trade union? The letters were the union's response to an Equal Pay claim from a female Education Officer, assisted by the five men as comparators. Rather than pay her what the men were being paid, the union decided instead to sack the men and re-employ them on the lower female salary. This it seems is how our union handles Equal Pay claims.

According to the GMB, the union representing the sacked employees, Amicus's action is not only in breach of contract law, it is also in breach of the Sex Discrimination Act which states

"Protection against victimisation also includes not only the woman bringing the claim, but also anyone who assists her, for example , her comparators."
The GMB reps produced an Emergency Edition of their magazine "Members Direct", called "Amicus putting the 'h' into hypocrisy and the triple 'd' into double standards".
[Derek Simpson] Dear [insert your name here]
[GMB Members Direct] Amicus putting the 'h' into hypocrisy...
[dearunite.com] Previous Story - Simpson Outburst - Workers are Wankers
[dearunite.com] Previous Story - Simpson Sacks Activists
New! [Guardian] Diary article (skip to fifth paragraph)
Posted by www.rogerlyons.com on 12th September 2006



Previous News
Simpson Outburst - Workers are Wankers, An Evening with Graham Goddard, GMB out of Megalo-Merger, More Two-Legs on the Farm, Fear, Favour and Apathy Down on Amicus Farm, Union Pays Private Investigators to Spy on Member, Simpson Sacks Activists, Union in Coke Disgrace, Simpson Seizes Control of the National Left, Turkeys Cancel Christmas - Until 2008, BNP Trade Union unmasked, Secret NEC minutes Uncovered,Union Drops Legal Action Against dearunite.com, Super Union Project Underway.
[previous news]
Posted by www.rogerlyons.com on 29th June 2005





















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