Reblogged from Kate Belgrave:
Here are Boycott Workfare  protestors outside Senate House, defying police clampdowns on campus  protests and making plenty of noise about the political class’ disgusting  embrace of workfare and benefit sanctions…
….and inside the building, the ultimate rogues’ gallery of thieves and  state-funded robber barons who are making a filthy pile out of workfare,  taxpayers and the misery of people who find themselves unemployed or unable to  work. ERSA, the trade body for the so-called welfare-to-work industry, was  holding an annual workfare conference in the building today. The roll-call of  attendees included: Esther McVey and Stephen Timms, the DWP’s director of social  justice (ironic job title of the millenium there), the CE and director of  Tomorrow’s People – the organisation that brought you the scandal where  unemployed people were forced to work without pay and had to get changed under a  bridge during the Queen’s Jubilee. There was also, apparently, a smorgasbord of  plundering work programme providers – the likes of Avanta, Seetec, G4S, A4e and  Pinnacle People. Joy.
Anyway. History will judge these people harshly. It’s just a pity that the  political classes, and organised labour and Labour refuse to judge them harshly  now. To date, it has been the  member-led groups that have beaten the government and pro-workfare companies  and charities back – on the streets, online and in the courts. Same  thing with the fight to save the Independent Living Fund – member-led groups  like Disabled People Against Cuts were behind that success and pretty much on  their own fighting for it. Established charities and the political class ignored  them. So. There are people who are going to find themselves on the wrong side of  history here and I only regret that I won’t be around to see it.
Workfare is  absolutely a labour issue, but Labour was not to be seen today – unless you  counted Timms, who was  somewhere inside the conference, hoovering lunch up with the crooks. I  counted a couple of Unite community flags at the protest, but really, there  should have been a couple of thousand. And more. But there weren’t. Which was  and is extraordinary, albeit totally expected… except the fact is that we’re  seeing something very significant here.
We’ve been seeing it for a while. We’re  at a point (again, we’ve been at it for while) where  the very notion of a wage for work is under threat and if things continue as  they are, very few jobs will pay. Everyone will be under the boot of a sadistic  corporate. As  for decent terms and conditions to go along with some sort of wage – forget  it. As one speaker rightly said today – the workfare juggernaut will end up  driving everyone’s wages into the dirt.
It’s bad enough that people on benefits  are expected to work for free. It’s only a matter of time before everyone else  will be. That  has certainly been the case in America, which is something I’ve said before, but  I might as well say it again. An example: several years into New York city’s  workfare programme, District Council 37, a union which represented municipal  employees, took  Rudy Giuliani to court, saying that his workfare programme “had illegally  replaced nearly 2000 unionised clerical workers with unpaid welfare recipients  in three agencies.” That sort of thing. It’ll be that sort of thing all  round.
And if you rely on a wage to get by – as opposed to a trust fund, etc – it’ll  be that sort of thing coming your way soon, if it hasn’t hit you already.  Meanwhile, the member-led fightback groups get on with the battle. They know  that there is no negotiating with the political class and/or the major  corporates that the political class represents. And they are right. Austerity  governments of all stripes exist only to hand public money to the private  sector. They will do that and do that until there is nothing left.
Ho hum.
