Wednesday, 22 June 2022
Monday, 20 June 2022
Orgreave Rally and March on Saturday 18th June in Sheffield
The TUC march in London the same day may have resulted in a smaller attendance than would have been the case but there was still just over 300+ in Sheffield on Saturday.
Joe Rollin of OTJC calls for everyone to support RMT this coming week
There was a rally being held for refugees in the same assembly point as for the OTJC events and it was good to see that miners' with their banners were happy to be associated with those present.
It was also good to hear Joe Rollin of OTJC call for everyone to join the RMT picket lines this week - starting Tuesday.
The short march was well received by shoppers and those enjoying a bite to eat and one or two even joined in.
There was a short rally at the end of the march and it was great to be able to applaud Eileen Turnbull and Terry Renshaw of the Shrewsbury 24 Campaign on their victory late last year.
I was able to hand out a good number of Halifax 1842 leaflets for the 13th August special day plus quite a few of the Unite Educations booklets that I have written over the years.
It was great to meet again after so many years Rose of Trentham Pit Camp (1992/3) and to which I took a group of Kurdish women. I am certainly hoping to rekindle that friendship as she is a good lass is Rose.
Eileen Turnbull of the Shrewsbury 24 Campaign |
My piece for a booklet on Bill May, a lifelong socialist
My friend Bill May died last year at aged 95. His son Martin, a great friend of mine, interviewed him in the years leading up to his death. Martin has also asked friends of his to write a few dedicated words on his dad for a booklet he's getting together. These are mine.
I first met Bill and Marjorie May at the start of the century after I moved back to the North East and began making regular trips to Middlesbrough to watch football matches at the Riverside Stadium and meet up for a beer with my long term friend Martin, their son, who I have known since 1986.
On some of
these occasions we were supporting rival teams in Boro v Sunderland but I also
reported for The Morning Star on a number of high profile top flight Boro games
plus matches in the famous 2005-06 season – by which time I was living in West
Yorkshire - when Steve McLaren’s side made it through to the final of the
Europa Cup. I can recall Bill being ecstatic when Boro managed to overcome a
three goal deficit on aggregate in the semi-final to knock out Steaua Bucharest.
Bill and
Marjorie were always good company. Bill would great you with that great big
smile of his and he was always interested in what you were doing. As he was a
socialist like myself then he would ask me what I was doing to further the
socialist cause and be especially delighted when I could tell him of some small
victories. He would ask me what I was writing about and he’d take booklets I
had written for Unite and the next time I saw him he’d make reference to some
points I had made in them.
A couple of
years ago I did an article for the Big Issue North magazine on council housing
and Bill contributed enormously to this, recalling when he had come home from
the Far East, where he had fought in WWII, getting married and him and Marjorie
getting a much valued council house. It was a place to call home and to bring
up a family. The pair later became house owners but Bill remained throughout
his life a passionate supporter of public housing.
Myself and my
son Charlie, aged 9 at the time, were fortunate to be able to attend Bill’s 90th
birthday party and we had a great time. It was also wonderful to see so many
people from different age groups, nationalities and backgrounds that were
present. A sure sign that Bill was loved by so many people.
In 2021, Bill
was good enough to appear in the UNITE Education booklet I wrote on Stanley
Taggart, one of the heroes of the Battle of Stockton in 1933. The photograph
that Mark Harvey took of Bill was taken at the Transporter Bridge and although
he was clearly struggling to get around, but he nevertheless still had a broad
smile and was keen to chat about football and politics. He was a special
character was Bill.
Stanley Taggart
booklet is at:- https://markwritecouk.files.wordpress.com/2021/08/stanley-taggart-book-final.pdf
Big Issue
North article – December 2019
“It was really wonderful in 1951 to get a well looked after
council home that we could turn into a comfortable place to raise a family,”
says Bill May, aged 93.
The Teessider had joined the Royal Navy in 1944 and saw
action on the battleship HMS Nelson, the flagship in the British Far Eastern
Fleet.
After leaving the navy in 1951, Bill and his wife Marjorie
privately rented a wooden bungalow. But they, like millions, wanted somewhere
better.
“We went to Hambleton Council offices and put our name on
the housing list. Within weeks we received news that one of the houses newly
built by the council was ours. We collected the keys and moved in. It had three
bedrooms, a sitting room, radiators throughout, a kitchen and a garden. We were
elated and felt very positive about the future as we now had a permanent place
to call home,” says a smiling Bill, who remained a council tenant with Marjorie
until 1986 when they bought a Harrogate flat. ……………………..
……… But Cunliffe, Daykin, Hedderwick and May remain united
in wanting to see the end of Right to Buy and start a massive council house
building programme. “The divide between people across society is growing
worryingly large,” says May. “We must address a situation where many people are
unable to afford decent housing. Council housing provided for my generation the
bedrock of a good upbringing and it can do so again in the future.”
Full article at:- https://www.bigissuenorth.com/features/2019/12/hearths-and-homes/
Tuesday, 14 June 2022
Read the Sean McGovern - a trade union champion for disabled people book
Sean McGovern – a trade union champion
for disabled people
https://markwritecouk.files/wordpress.com/2022/06/sean-mcgovern-booklet-final-print-june-2022.pdf
FOREWORD BY JIM MOWATT
The main tutorial room in the Unite
National Education Centre in Birmingham is dedicated to Sean McGovern – that
alone is testament to the high regard (and affection) with which our Union’s
members held Sean McGovern.
And Sean was not, as you will discover in
this excellent account of Sean’s life, only a great trade unionist, he was
additionally a very successful campaigner for disabled peoples’ rights and a
formidable political operator. Perhaps Sean’s most significant contribution was
his ability to integrate different strands into coherent campaigning; and to do
all that with integrity and courage.
Mark Metcalf brings to life the
contrasting fortunes which impacted on Sean and the triumphs which Sean
achieved. As with other women and men about whom we have written in this series
of Unite booklets, Sean McGovern was a very effective leader; by definition he
had tons of followers – I was one of them!
You’ll hear from other followers from a
wide variety of organisations in this booklet. Such was the variety of
activities, organisations campaign groups and individuals that he genuinely
supported that the cover of this booklet ought to be a modernised version of a
Pieter Bruegel the Elder landscape as there was so much going on simultaneously
in Sean’s colourful life. For not only was Sean very well read (donating his
extensive library to the union), he was a dedicated follower of fashion from
his expensive footwear to his scarves and headgear.
As Sean McGovern (1957-2020) was a unique
character it is entirely appropriate that this first ever booklet on a disabled
trade unionist is about him. This work follows a very simple format in that it
consists of Sean’s own words accompanied by interviews with some of his family
and great friends. Thank you and congratulations to the author, Mark Metcalf,
for crafting this booklet and bringing Sean to the attention of the next
generation of activists. Sean is an inspiration.
In solidarity Jim Mowatt Unite the union
Events to commemorate Halifax 1842
Wednesday, 1 June 2022
The 2022 Ellen Strange commemoration event on Holcombe Moor to remember all domestic violence victims
Fundamental to the fight: Women on the Waterfront
Fundamental to the fight: Women on the Waterfront
In 2020, members of Women on the Waterfront, the support
group formed early in November 1995, recorded some of their memories of
1995-98 Liverpool Dockers strike
It’s a fascinating listen.......
Fundamental to the fight: highlights from the Liverpool Dockers’ mass meetings 1995-98
Fundamental to the fight: highlights from the Liverpool
Dockers’ mass meetings 1995-98
Between 1995-98 Liverpool dockers were locked out of their
workplace after they refused to cross a picket line. Key to this heroic
resistance over such a lengthy period was the gathering together of dockers in
mass meetings. It gave the workers a confidence bred of their own numbers, and
it enabled the organisers to reach them personally with their educational
appeal and organisation methods.
Taken from over 40 hours of recordings, you can listen to
some of the highlights of the meetings in which strategies, that generated
solidarity worldwide, are debated and voted upon. The 130 minutes starts with
speeches from Tony Benn MP, Jeremy Corbyn and John Pilger at a London rally
before the voices of Liverpool Dockers, including Jimmy Nolan, ring out loud
and clear.