PCS general secretary FRAN HEATHCOTE explains why opposing war is inseparable from defending jobs, wages and public services – and why readers should come to the London Peace Conference on Saturday June 20
WHEN the Civil and Public Services Association (CPSA) published its official history in 1980, it was titled From Humble Petition to Militant Action.
To get to grips with why Margaret Thatcher’s government was so keen to interfere in an internal union election, it’s vital to understand how this bunch of white-collar civil servants became a force to be reckoned with.
After all, by the mid-1980s this question was occupying both Civil Service chiefs and the union’s “moderate” faction — who feared they were losing control of the CPSA to militant leftwingers.
On the 40th anniversary of the Wapping dispute, this Morning Star special supplement traces the long-planned conspiracy that led to the mass sackings of printworkers in 1986 – a struggle whose unresolved injustices still demand redress today, writes ANN FIELD
In the final part of a serialisation of his new book, JOHN McINALLY explains how in 2018, after years spent rebuilding the PCS into a leading force against austerity, a damaging rupture emerged from within the union’s own left wing
In part IV of a serialisation of his new book, JOHN McINALLY tells how austerity minister Francis Maude’s attempt to destroy the PCS Civil Service union totally backfired
In part II of a serialisation of his new book, JOHN McINALLY explores how witch-hunting drives took hold in the Civil Service as the cold war emerged in the wake of WWII


