Special report by PEOPLE’S WORLD
MY NAME is Susana Benavides and I currently work with United Voices of the World (UVW), a small trade union that was initially founded to represent low-paid migrant workers in London.
Originally from Ecuador, I came to Britain via Spain and began working as a cleaner. Eventually I found myself working in Top Shop in central London — experiencing bullying and a poverty wage for long hours spent working on behalf of a huge clothing chain owned by a multimillionaire.
In any organisation, the cleaner is always at the bottom of the pile; ignored, forgotten, working silently after everyone else has gone home. However, I came to hear of a union that specifically spoke to people like me, which sought to give cleaners and migrant workers a voice and that would shine a light on a side of work in London that’s often neglected. My colleagues and I joined UVW and launched a campaign for a living wage, one that eventually led to my unfair dismissal for which my employer was later fined in court.
JAMIE DRISCOLL’s group, Majority, with an inclusive approach and supportive training, aims to sidestep many of the problems afflicting Britain’s progressive movement
ANN HENDERSON looks at the trailblazers of the Women’s Trade Union League and their successful fight for female factory inspectors — a battle that echoes in today’s workplace campaigns
Labour must not allow unelected members of the upper house to erode a single provision of the Employment Rights Bill, argues ANDY MCDONALD MP
LAURA PIDCOCK and PAUL O’CONNELL introduces Rise, a political platform for working-class activism


