In the wake of his recent humanitarian visit to Cuba, RICHARD BURGON points to the now urgent need to defend the island’s political sovereignty and its right to self-determination
CWU members are currently facing unprecedented attacks on their job security and terms and conditions, despite being designated key workers and working tirelessly through the pandemic, at a time when our national telecommunications infrastructure has been under more demand than ever.
But BT’s ongoing site rationalisation programme and cost cutting-strategy have not come as a result of the impact of Covid-19. BT has embarked on a genuine ‘race to the bottom’, as it benchmarks the salaries and terms and conditions it is prepared to provide against mostly non-unionised competitors. The current climate of insecure work, low pay and poor conditions, following an erosion of workers’ rights under a government that champions businesses rather than the employee, clearly provides BT with the justification they feel they need to destroy the benefits that the CWU have fought hard to win over the last few decades.
The time has come for both CWU members and the public to back the Count Me In campaign to show BT that a culture of hostility, non-collaboration and lack of respect for their workforce is not acceptable for an organisation that outwardly presents itself as a modern, forward-thinking and ethical FTSE 100 company.
Sara Miah
Assistant Branch Secretary, Branch Communications Lead
and Women’s Officer CWU North Anglia Branch
LOUISA BULL traces how derecognition, outsourcing and digitalisation reshaped the industry, weakened collective bargaining and created today’s precarious media workforce
NICK TROY lauds the young staff at a hotel chain and cinema giant who are ready to take on the bosses for their rights
A just transition to Great British Railways and a clean and safe railway for all is not only desirable but also necessary. MARYAM ESLAMDOUST explains
Almost half of universities face deficits, merger mania is taking hold, and massive fee hikes that will lock out working-class students are on the horizon, write RUBEN BRETT, PAUL WHITEHOUSE and DAN GRACE


