Brown vows no return to strong union past
TOYAKO, Japan (Reuters) - Prime Minister Gordon Brown pledged on Monday to resist calls for greater union rights, saying full employment would be achieved with a flexible workforce rather than by strikes.
Speaking to reporters travelling to the Group of Eight summit, Brown said successful countries in a global economy would be those achieving full employment through "fairness with flexibility".
"So there will be no return to the 1970s, the 1980s, or even early 1990s, when it comes to union rights, no retreat from modernisation," Brown said.
Former prime minister and Conservative leader, Margaret Thatcher, curbed the bargaining power of trade unions in a reform programme in the 1980s, blamed by left-wingers for throwing thousands out of work.
Brown's Labour Party is due to hold its national policy forum on July 25 and there have been growing calls from the trade unions that help fund the party to make it easier to call strikes.
Brown has insisted on a tight curb on public sector pay awards to stop fuelling inflation. In the year to the end of March the median public sector pay rise was 2.5 percent compared with 3.5 percent in the private sector.
Unions have become increasingly restive after years of relative docility under successive Labour governments since 1997.
Last year more than one million days were lost to strike action, up from an average of 660,000 during the 1990s.
The GMB union earlier this month withdrew funding from the first of 30 local Labour parties in protest at government policies and said it would no longer help pay off the party's 24 million pounds of debts. Continued...





