New Union Leader Warns Labour: "We've Been Left Wanting"
نظرة سريعة
- A new union leader, Sarah Egan, has issued a stark warning to the Labour Party, stating they "haven't delivered" and have left members "wanting." Egan, who recently defeated the incumbent general secretary, criticized Labour for not introducing progressive policies and alienating members.
- She indicated that the union might cut its substantial financial ties with the party.
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A new union leader has criticized the Labour Party for failing to deliver on promises, suggesting members are desperate for change and may reconsider their financial ties to the party.
A grassroots campaigner for more than 30 years, she upset expectations when she defeated the incumbent general secretary, Christina McAnea, in December last year.
She has suggested that the union had previously been "a sleeping giant" which was too "subservient" to the Labour leadership.
But in her first interview with a national broadcaster, Egan told me her membership had a clear message for ministers: "I have been very frank with the government. When Labour came into power there was a sense of relief. But sadly we've been left wanting."
She added: "Communities are really struggling. They [Labour] haven't delivered and my election demonstrated that members were desperate to have their voices heard."
"It isn't us that will hand the keys to No10 to Reform - it's them, unless they change course. And drastically."
"They've got to start introducing progressive policies. Investment in infrastructure, pay restoration, better services, insourcing. They need to ensure that they deliver on promises they made when they came into government."
Warming to her theme, she said her members had been "handing money over to the Labour Party and getting absolutely nothing in return".
Her union still pays a high annual membership - or affiliation fee - to Labour of more than £1m a year, but at a conference next year, members will vote on whether to cut their ties with the party.
So would Egan, who was expelled from Labour for reposting messages from Socialist Appeal, a Marxist group now proscribed by the party, take a similar tack?
Egan insists that she has only ever been a Labour member - and it wasn't her choice to leave.
She tells me the 1,300 delegates at the conference in Brighton this week will discuss the relationship with the party, but won't debate "disaffiliation" – in other words severing formal and financial ties to Labour.
She said the union was "affiliated to Labour at the moment" and it would be up to members in each region of the union to decide if that was to change.
"But look at Reform's actions in last 12 months, these demonstrate they are not on side of workers."
She said she welcomed the setting up of Your Party last year by Jeremy Corbyn and Zarah Sultana to offer an alternative to Labour on the left, but the party didn't make a huge impression at May's local elections in England.
"Your Party offered people an opportunity to give Labour a warning that it needed to change. And I feel really sad that that warning is being delivered now by Reform."
She said Labour had made mistakes which alienated it from some of her members who had been looking forward to a new government two years ago: "It's not just about Labour not delivering, they were attacking our movement and our membership."
With a Labour leadership contest likely if Andy Burnham wins the Makerfield by-election this week, would the relationship with Labour would improve with a change at the top?
She, like Angela Rayner, is exercised by the government's intention to make migrant care workers already in the UK wait up to 15 years to gain permanent settlement.
I asked if that concerned her but she said her message would be the same no matter who led Labour.
She describes herself as a trans ally and said her union is considering legal action following the Supreme Court ruling on biological sex and the ensuing EHRC guidance.
While she stressed that strikes must still be a last resort, at the weekend she told local government workers to prepare for ballots if a 3.3% pay increase isn't improved.
So I asked her – a few times - how much salary she was now drawing.
She wouldn't give me a figure but she did say it was "considerably less" than the rate for the job, and she was donating the surplus to the union's industrial fund (covering strike action) and a charity, adding that her message to members was "when your pay rises, so will mine."
A full list of all the candidates standing in the Makerfield by-election can be found here.
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توقعات الذكاء الاصطناعي — احتمالات وليست حقائق
Union members will vote on cutting ties with the Labour Party at next year's conference.
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أسئلة مفتوحة
- Will the union cut its affiliation fee to Labour?
- What specific progressive policies does Egan want Labour to adopt?
- How will Labour respond to this criticism?






