From
the BBC» :
All the ingredients are in place for a fresh bout of industrial unrest as we enter 2010.
A sharp squeeze in public spending looms, the private sector grapples with the recession, and there is a new mood of militancy in the trade union movement.
British Airways (BA» ) cabin crew and airline executives have observed a tense Christmas truce in their bitter dispute over jobs and working practises. The 12 day strike planned over Christmas may have stopped by the High Court, but the underlying grievances still fester. Both sides have retreated to their trenches, while preparing for a new outbreak of hostilities.
Leaders of the Unite union are understood to be combing through their membership lists of BA air stewards to ensure that their records are up to date. They are desperate to avoid the fiasco of their November ballot, by observing the letter of the law, and excluding any members about to leave the airline.
The expectation is that the union will get another strong mandate for strike action. This might be timed to coincide with the half term holidays, meaning more misery for the travelling public.
Fight for justice
The railways are never far from labour trouble; the industry seems at times to be in a semi-permanent state of unrest.
Bob Crowe, the pugnacious leader of the RMT▸ union forecasts 2010 will be a "year of action".
Signal workers will go out on strike in South Wales early in the New Year, a ballot of Network Rail maintenance staff is planned over proposed job losses, and the union is warning of confrontation with London Mayor Boris Johnson over cuts at London Underground.
"The growing militancy of confidence of the trade union movement will increase in 2010," Mr Crowe said recently in an ominous warning to employers. "As far as the RMT is concerned, whoever wins the election it will be business as usual in the fight for workplace and social justice."
Mr Crowe accuses employers of using the threat of unemployment to bully workers to accept cuts in jobs, pay and working conditions. But he predicts that concerted trade union opposition will halt these moves "dead in their tracks".