The Milburn review presents itself as a plan to help young people into work, but Dr DYLAN MURPHY argues it is laying the groundwork for a harsher benefits regime
THERE will be many in the labour movement, who while seeking effective ways to fight the continuing deindustrialisation of the British economy, still cling desperately to the notion that our membership of the EU is somehow or other a guarantee of jobs, even when those jobs are fast disappearing before their very eyes.
Such is the case with the steel industry. Any notion of “social Europe” coming to the rescue should have finally been dispelled in early 2012 when Mario Draghi, the head of the European Central Bank, was able to assure US bankers and investors that “social Europe is already dead.”
Just how dead is now being demonstrated by the European Commission ignoring millions of citizens across the EU who do not wish to see TTIP imposed on member states with all the implications for our public services and is now dramatically underlined by recent EU statements on governmental support for the beleaguered steel industry.
From summit to summit, imperialist companies and governments cut, delay or water down their commitments, warn the Communist Parties of Britain, France, Portugal and Spain and the Workers Party of Belgium in a joint statement on Cop30
US tariffs have had Von der Leyen bowing in submission, while comments from the former European Central Bank leader call for more European political integration and less individual state sovereignty. All this adds up to more pain and austerity ahead, argues NICK WRIGHT


