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DESCRIPTION:Victory To The British Felixstowe Dockers! Join The Action on August 22 At 
 SF  UK Consulate\nSolidarity Has No Borders!\nAn Injury To One Is An Injury 
 To All!\n\nMonday August 22, 2022 12:00 Noon\nBritish Consulate 1 Sansome 
 St/Market\nSan Francisco\n\n\nOn Sunday  August 21, 2022 British dockers at 
 the Port of Felixstowe which is the largest port in the UK. These dockers 
 are members of UNITE and this is a  7 day strike for more wages. \n\nThe 
 inflation in the UK and around the world including the US means wage cuts 
 and there is a growing strike wave in the UK.\n\nThe British government and 
 bosses  are also facing rail, tube, public workers and teachers who are 
 hitting the streets. The Tory  government  is also threatening to ban 
 workers from striking in order to shutdown this growing workers rebellion 
 against the capitalist system that is destroying their lives. There is 
 increasing support to unite all these struggles  for a general strike to 
 bring down this rotten reactionary Tory government.\n\nThe Liverpool 
 dockers are also moving toward a strike as well. US longshore workers in 
 1995 supported the Liverpool dockers who faced  the union busting attack of 
  bosses & the government  who privatized the ports to destroy the 
 unions.\n\nThe same issue is taking place now in Oakland where the 
 Democratic mayor, City Council, Rob Bonta, Nancy Skinner and Governor Gavin 
 Newsom are trying to privatize the Port of Oakland for billionaire union 
 buster and the GAP and A’s owner John Fisher for a new stadium. They even 
 wnat to give him $850 million of tax money while public schools are being 
 shut down like Parker Elementary. The Democrats who run the school board 
 voted to close 11 schools in working class Black and Brown community.  
 Parents, teachers and community members have turned it into a liberation 
 school and need support.\n\nThe shipping bosses and the PMA are also on the 
 attack. They want to automate the docks and destroy the jobs of ILWU 
 longshore workers coastwise. The action of the Felixstowe dockers  must be 
 joined by action of US longshore workers who also face the same attacks. 
 The Biden administration and US Department of Labor Secretary Marty Walsh 
 are supporting the bosses against US railway workers who face horrendous 
 conditions and they are telling longshore workers they better not take 
 action to defend their jobs and rights. Longshore and rail workers need to 
 join together for a united fight together.\n\nThis is also  at a time when 
 these shipping companies have made billions of dollars during the pandemic. 
 Their greed and demands for automation to eliminate ILWU jobs are being 
 backed by Biden and Walsh who tell workers to keep working although the 
 contract expired in on July 1.\n\nThe UFCLP supports the formation of a 
 mass democratic labor party that will be based on working people against 
 the billionaires who run both the Republicans and Democrats and are pushing 
 privatization, repression & driving working people back to work in the 
 middle of a pandemic and with no real health and safety protection. Profits 
 come first for the bosses and Democrats who do their bidding.\nWe also need 
 to build internationallsm and unite our struggles globally.\n\nJoin The 
 Picket In Solidarity With Felixstowe Dockers at the UK Consulate\n\nMonday 
 August 22, 2022 12:00 Noon\n1 Sansome St./Market\nSan 
 Francisco\n\nInitiated by\nUnited Front Committee For A Labor Party 
 UFCLP\nSolidarity Has No 
 Borders\nwww.ufclp.org\ninfo@ufclp.org\n\nBritain’s Largest Container 
 Port Felixstowe Port to Strike-Action On August 21 \nDock workers at the 
 Port of Felixstowe along Britain’s east coast are set to go on an 
 eight-day strike later this August after negotiations between their union 
 and the port owner fell through. \n\nThe Unite union, which represents 
 1,900 workers, rejected the offer from port owner CK Hutchison Holdings, a 
 Hong Kong-based conglomerate that made a pre-tax profit of almost £61m in 
 2020 from the port. \n\nCK Hutchison is offering a 7% pay raise and £500 
 bonus. Unite wants a better offer, given that retail inflation has hit 
 11.8%, and workers received a below-inflation pay increase of 1.4% last 
 year.\n\n“Both Felixstowe Docks and its parent company CK Hutchison 
 Holding Ltd are both massively profitable and incredibly wealthy. They are 
 fully able to pay the workforce a fair day’s pay,” Unite’s general 
 secretary Sharon Graham said. “The company has prioritized delivering 
 multi-million pound dividends rather than paying its workers a decent 
 wage.”\n\nThe upcoming strike will be the port’s first since 1989. Port 
 of Felixstowe, about 90 miles east of London, handles around 40% of 
 containers leaving and arriving in the U.K.\n\n\nStrikes announced at port 
 of Felixstowe as company fails to make acceptable pay 
 offer\n\nhttps://www.unitetheunion.org/news-events/news/2022/august/strikes-announced-at-port-of-felixstowe-as-company-fails-to-make-acceptable-pay-offer/?fbclid=IwAR35QOn3Yort-pTnKWh7w-5ur0Ci8gxqEr2M4kgmYqfqD7Cn41O31IGPCi0\nFriday 
 5 August 2022  Share\nWorkers at the port of Felixstowe will begin strike 
 action later this month in a dispute over pay after peace talks at the 
 conciliation service Acas failed to produce a reasonable offer.\n\nEight 
 days of strikes\n\nOver 1,900 workers, who are members of Unite, the UK’s 
 leading union, will begin eight days of strike action on Sunday 21 August 
 ending on Monday 29 August.\n\nTalks at Acas failed to reach a satisfactory 
 conclusion yesterday after the employer the Felixstowe Dock and Railway 
 Company failed to improve on its offer of a seven per cent pay increase, 
 which is significantly below the real (RPI) inflation rate of 11.8 per 
 cent. Industrial relations were already strained as workers only received a 
 1.4 per cent, below inflation, increase last year.\n\nMassive 
 profits\n\nUnite general secretary Sharon Graham said: “Both Felixstowe 
 docks and its parent company CK Hutchison Holding Ltd are both massively 
 profitable and incredibly wealthy. They are fully able to pay the workforce 
 a fair day’s pay. \n\n“The company has prioritised delivering 
 multi-million pound dividends rather than paying its workers a decent 
 wage.\n\n “Unite is entirely focused on enhancing its members’ jobs, 
 pay and conditions and it will be giving the workers at Felixstowe its 
 complete support until this dispute is resolved and a decent pay increase 
 is secured.”\n\nLargest container port\n\nFelixstowe is the UK’s 
 largest container port and 48 per cent of containers brought into the UK 
 are transported via the port.\n\nStrike action will have a huge effect on 
 the UK’s supply chain and will also cause severe disruption to 
 international maritime trade, as well as the UK’s supply chain including 
 the logistics and haulage sectors.\n\nWealthy companies\n\nThe Felixstowe 
 Dock and Railway Company is extremely profitable; its most recent accounts 
 show that it made pre-tax profits of £61 million in 2020, when it also 
 paid out £99 million in dividends.\n\nThe company’s dividends are paid 
 into a complicated company structure but are principally received by the 
 organisation’s ultimate holding company, CK Hutchison Holdings Ltd. It is 
 registered in the Cayman Islands and listed on the Hong Kong stock 
 exchange.\n\nThe workers undertake all forms of manual roles at the docks 
 including crane drivers, machine operators and stevedores.\n\nHuge 
 disruption\n\nUnite national office for docks Bobby Morton said: “Strike 
 action will cause huge disruption and will generate massive shockwaves 
 throughout the UK’s supply chain, but this dispute is entirely of the 
 company’s own making. It has had every opportunity make our members a 
 fair offer but has chosen not to do so.\n\n “Felixstowe needs to stop 
 prevaricating and make a pay offer which meets our members’ 
 expectations.”\n\nFurther talks\n\nFurther talks are scheduled to take 
 place at Acas next Monday (8 August).\n\nENDS\n\nNotes to 
 editors\n\nMassive 92 per cent yes vote for strike action at Felixstowe 
 Docks\n\nFor media enquiries ONLY please contact Unite senior 
 communications officer Barckley Sumner on 07802 329235 or 0203 371 
 2067.\n\nEmail: barckley.sumner@unitetheunion.org\n\nUnite is the UK and 
 Ireland’s leading union fighting to protect and advance jobs, pay and 
 conditions for members working across all sectors of the economy. The 
 general secretary is Sharon Graham. \n\nFurther reading\n\nLiverpool docks 
 braced for disruption after MDHC port operatives overwhelming strike 
 vote\nFair Pay for Red Funnel workers \nUnite members at Network Rail join 
 rail strikes over pay\nInterest rate rise spells misery for millions warns 
 Unite\nUnite secures pay rise for Port of Bristol workers\nMassive 92 per 
 cent yes vote for strike action at Felixstowe Docks\nIn latest Tory 
 anti-union attacks transport minister Shapps pledges to drive workers back 
 to the workhouse\nUnite leader says any attempt to make trade unions 
 illegal will be met with “fierce, prolonged resistance”\n\nIn latest 
 Tory anti-union attacks transport minister Shapps pledges to drive workers 
 back to the 
 workhouse\n\nhttps://www.unitetheunion.org/news-events/news/2022/july/in-latest-tory-anti-union-attacks-transport-minister-shapps-pledges-to-drive-workers-back-to-the-workhouse/\nWednesday 
 27 July 2022  \nShare\nToday (Wednesday 27 July) in a lengthy interview 
 with the Daily Telegraph - which is where most proposed government 
 legislation seems to be announced these days - transport minister Grant 
 Shapps announced the latest plans in the government’s campaign to outlaw 
 unions.\n\nShapps said he was looking at banning certain strikes, cutting 
 the right of trade unionists to picket workplaces and “outlawing 
 intimidatory language” used by union leaders.\n\nIn a measured response 
 to these draconian proposals Unite general secretary, Sharon Graham said: 
 “If Grant Shapps had his way we would all still be in the workhouse.\n\n 
 “His intervention is just the latest in a growing list of political 
 attacks on trade unions and the most fundamental rights held by working 
 people.\n\n “Whilst this outbreak is clearly framed by a fashion parade 
 within the Conservative Party, it is also deeply serious and shows just how 
 out of touch our political class are.\n\n “The government has 
 miscalculated. People can see behind the usual narrative of “union bad, 
 boss good”. This is not the 1970’s. The cost of living crisis is the 
 latest episode in a long term war on the living standards of workers.\n\n 
 “For decades wages have been pushed down while profits for bosses and 
 investors have gone up and up. Since 1975, the share of national income 
 that people take home in wages has dropped by 10 per cent of GDP.\n\n 
 “The economy isn’t working and trade unions are the last line of 
 defence for workers.\n\n “When P&O sacked 800 workers at a moments 
 notice, the company did not have to ballot anyone or petition the 
 government to see if they could do it. It’s one law for the bosses and 
 another law for the rest for us.\n\n “I will not apologise for demanding 
 and winning fair pay rises for my members and any action to effectively 
 remove the ability to strike will be met with fierce and prolonged 
 resistance.”\n\nFor more information please contact Unite senior 
 communications officer Barckley Sumner on 020 3371 2067 or 07802 
 329235.\n\nEmail: barckley.sumner@unitetheunion.org\n\nUnite is the UK and 
 Ireland’s leading union fighting to protect and advance jobs, pay and 
 conditions for members working across all sectors\n\nEight-day strike by 
 UNITE Felixstowe dockers expected to disrupt UK supply chain\nOwners 
 prioritise multimillion-pound shareholder dividends over paying decent 
 wages, says 
 union\n\nhttps://www.theguardian.com/uk-news/2022/aug/05/felixstowe-dockers-plan-eight-day-strike-in-pay-dispute\n\nFelixstowe, 
 Suffolk, is Britain's biggest container port and the strike will affect the 
 UK’s supply chains.\nFelixstowe, Suffolk, is Britain's biggest container 
 port and the strike will affect the UK’s supply chains. \n\nDockers at 
 Felixstowe are planning eight days of strike action over pay that could 
 cause serious disruption to the UK’s largest container port.\n\nNearly 
 1,900 workers plan to stop work for more than a week at the Hong Kong-owned 
 port, starting on Sunday 21 August and ending on Monday 29 August, 
 according to the union Unite. The workers voted 92% in favour of strike 
 action last week.\n\nThe union said the latest round of talks with the 
 company at the conciliation service Acas had failed to yield a 
 “reasonable offer”, but further talks are planned for 
 Monday.\n\nProlonged strikes would almost certainly disrupt traffic through 
 the port, adding to the problems facing the UK economy as it braces for a 
 deep, year-long recession.\n\nFelixstowe, on the Suffolk coast, handles the 
 equivalent of 4m 20-ft shipping containers every year from about 2,000 
 ships – including some of the very largest container ships ever made. It 
 is the eighth-largest container port in Europe, according to the EU 
 statistics agency, Eurostat.\n\nThe port employs 2,500 people overall. 
 Unite said the loss of the majority of its workforce, including crane 
 drivers, machine operators and stevedores (responsible for unloading ships) 
 would have a “huge effect” on the UK’s supply chains. However, a 
 source at the port said a strike would not mean shutting it 
 completely.\n\nThe pay dispute is the latest in a series of problems to hit 
 UK transport infrastructure. Travellers through Dover also suffered massive 
 queues last month when the port failed to cope with high numbers of 
 holidaymakers after the end of term for many schools in England and 
 Wales.\n\nWorkers and train drivers on Great Britain’s railways have also 
 gone on several strikes, with further action planned on two days over the 
 next fortnight.\n\nUnite said it had rejected an offer from the employer, 
 Felixstowe Dock and Railway Company, of a 7% pay increase. The union said 
 it was below the 11.8% retail prices index (RPI) rate of inflation, its 
 preferred measure, and that workers received a below-inflation 1.4% pay 
 increase last year. Company figures suggest the average annual pay of the 
 workers involved is £43,000.\n\nFelixstowe is ultimately owned by CK 
 Hutchison Holdings, a conglomerate based in Hong Kong that controls 52 
 ports around the world, handling the equivalent of 88m 20-ft containers. It 
 also owns a series of other businesses operating in the UK, ranging from 
 the retailers Superdrug and The Perfume Shop, the Three mobile network, and 
 water and energy companies.\n\n\nUnite’s general secretary, Sharon 
 Graham, said: “Felixstowe docks and its parent company, CK Hutchison 
 Holdings Ltd, are both massively profitable and incredibly wealthy. They 
 are fully able to pay the workforce a fair day’s pay.\n\n“The company 
 has prioritised delivering multimillion-pound dividends rather than paying 
 its workers a decent wage.”\n\nUnite pointed to dividend payments made by 
 the Felixstowe Dock and Railway Company to its owners. The dividends were 
 worth £100m in 2020 and £42m in 2021, according to company accounts.\n\n 
 https://www.indybay.org/newsitems/2022/08/18/18851629.php
SUMMARY:Victory To British Felixstowe Dockers! Join Action At SF UK Consulate: United We Stand
LOCATION:UK Consulate San Francisco\n1 Sansome St./Market\nSan Franciscoo
URL:https://www.indybay.org/newsitems/2022/08/18/18851629.php
DTSTART:20220822T190000Z
DTEND:20220822T200000Z
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