Whilst the Labour leadership election is rightly commanding
a lot of attention, the policy of the Party (and of a future Labour Government)
will not be determined by the election of a leader.
Indeed one of the issues which Party members need to
address is how to democratise the cumbersome and opaque policymaking process
the Party adopted in the 1990s. That is as important as arrangements for
democratic selection of Parliamentary (and all other) candidates.
Right now however, the Labour Party is asking for ideas
about how to improve our workplaces and our working lives through its Workplace 2020 campaign. For
those of us in trade unions with relatively complex and slow moving
policymaking machinery, the opportunity to engage directly in this exercise is
worth taking.
We know that we face a Government determined more than ever
before to
hack away at workers’ rights – if we can help to shape the policy of the
Opposition, and campaign, under the continuing leadership of the current Party
Leader, in support of those policies, we will maximise our chances of resisting
the attacks which will come upon us before any General Election.
The policy relationship between the trade unions and the
Party exists generally at a national level, and the decisions which will be
taken at Conference (and at the TUC) are
of course important – however, Workplace 2020 is an opportunity for us to
engage at a local level, and one which we should take.
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