Close Menu

    Subscribe to Updates

    Get the latest headlines from PapaLinc about news & entertainment.

    What's Hot

    ‘He was my music hero’ – KK Fosu eulogises close friend Dada KD

    In his church, Prophet Owusu Bempah makes fun of former President Akufo Addo.

    Andrew Tate and his brother Tristan ‘will be hauled back to Britain after their trial in Romania’ following rape and human trafficking charges

    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
    • Lifestyle
    • Africa News
    • International
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram YouTube WhatsApp
    PapaLincPapaLinc
    • News
      • Africa News
      • International
    • Entertainment
      • Lifestyle
      • Movies
      • Music
    • Politics
    • Sports
    Subscribe
    PapaLincPapaLinc
    You are at:Home»News»International»EUAN McCOLM: Virtue-signalling row over Coca-Cola proves the unions have too few Jimmy Reids and too many student debaters
    International

    EUAN McCOLM: Virtue-signalling row over Coca-Cola proves the unions have too few Jimmy Reids and too many student debaters

    Papa LincBy Papa LincMarch 4, 2025No Comments6 Mins Read0 Views
    Facebook Twitter Pinterest Telegram LinkedIn Tumblr Email Reddit
    EUAN McCOLM: Virtue-signalling row over Coca-Cola proves the unions have too few Jimmy Reids and too many student debaters
    Share
    Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest WhatsApp Email


    The late trade unionist Jimmy Reid was a unique character in our national politics.

    He was a radical who enjoyed the admiration of supporters and opponents alike, a truth underlined by the fact both Gordon Brown and Alex Salmond attended his funeral in 2010.

    Mr Reid – who moved from the Communist Party to Labour before joining the SNP – became an internationally respected figure as one of the leaders of the Upper Clyde Shipbuilders work-in of 1971-72.

    His powerful speech to workers lingers in the memory of anyone who has heard it.

    ‘There will be no hooliganism,’ Mr Reid told union members, ‘there will be no vandalism, there will be no bevvying, because the world is watching us and it is our responsibility to conduct ourselves with responsibility and with dignity and with maturity.’

    It was always a pleasure in the foreign country of the past to bump into Mr Reid – who remained a supporter of independence until the age of 78 – at a political conference.

    He was erudite, thoughtful and very funny. It was easy to see how he charmed TV viewers in the 1970s when, appearing on Michael Parkinson’s chat show, he challenged the anti-union views of the actor Kenneth Williams.

    In his heyday, Mr Reid fought the biggest possible fights to protect the livelihoods of thousands of workers. He and his colleagues brought about real change, forcing Ted Heath’s Conservative government to invest millions in the Upper Clyde yard.

    EUAN McCOLM: Virtue-signalling row over Coca-Cola proves the unions have too few Jimmy Reids and too many student debaters

    The late trade unionist Jimmy Reid won admiration from across the political spectrum

    There aren’t many Jimmy Reids left these days.

    In trade union news this week, Unite breathlessly announced its latest victory.

    In a statement marked ‘Breaking’, Unite’s hospitality branch announced that management at Glasgow Film Theatre (GFT) had agreed to ‘cut ties’ with soft drinks giant Coca-Cola. Until Monday.

    Unite’s statement explained that the cinema would not sell Coke for the duration of the Glasgow Film Festival, which closes on Sunday evening. The bar will then sell its remaining Coca-Cola and, once that’s gone, will begin stocking an ‘ethically sourced alternative’.

    This move, you will be entirely unsurprised to learn, is intended to encourage others to ‘take a stand in solidarity with the people of Gaza’. 

    Doubtless, the people of Gaza will be pleased to learn that a small group of people in Glasgow are not drinking Coke while watching a  digitally remastered version of Federico Fellini’s 1963 masterpiece 8½ (it’s not bad but it lacks car chases, if you ask me).

    Of course, the deal struck between the GFT and Unite will change precisely nothing, apart from meaning the sale of, in my unshakeable view, inferior cola in the bar.

    Were I in the mood to be kind, I’d accuse the union officials involved in securing this great ‘victory’ of being naive. I am, however, in the mood to be honest and I’m afraid all I see is narcissistic virtue signalling.

    For a start, there’s the laughably portentous language Unite used – ‘cut ties with’ – as if this was some significant breakdown in relations between two big players rather than a decision not to buy any more Coke from the cash and carry because, erm… Zionism?

    But more importantly, this case is illustrative of a crisis in the trades union movement, where many key figures seem to have forgotten their responsibility to workers.

    Doubtless, the distress the staff at the GFT felt at having to serve Coca-Cola to cinema-goers was genuine; the struggle, as the kids say, is real. But it should also have been ignored.

    The hospitality business is one of the toughest there is. Most staff in the industry work very long hours for relatively low wages and I am entirely unconvinced that the time of their union representatives was best used fighting over which soft drink a cinema might be permitted to sell.

    Right now, unions are getting as much attention for the cases they won’t touch as they are for those they back.

    While Unite officials felt it was essential for the good of their members for them not to have to sell Coca-Cola, the Royal College of Nursing (RCN) has turned its back on clear-cut cases where their members needed help.

    Take Sandie Peggie, for example, the nurse currently claiming discrimination and harassment against NHS Fife and Dr Beth Upton, a trans woman, after she was suspended for complaining she shouldn’t have to share a changing room with the trans medic.

    This, you might have thought, was something the RCN would be all over.

    Instead, Ms Peggie, a dedicated professional with 30 years of service, was abandoned by her union.

    It was a shameful decision that shows that ideology trumps the rights of workers so far as the RCN is concerned.

    The nursing union also left nurses in the County Durham town of Darlington high and dry.

    A total of 27 nurses signed a letter to NHS managers complaining about a decision to allow trans woman Rose Henderson to share their changing room.

    Not only did both the RCN and Unison fail to back the nurses, the response from on high in County Durham and Darlington NHS Trust was that they should ‘broaden their mindset’.

    The nurses in that ongoing case have now formed the Darlington Nurses Union, which Sandie Peggie has joined.

    How did unions get themselves into a place where they’ll prioritise the need to remove Coca-Cola from a bar but refuse to support members whose sex-based rights are being trampled on?

    They took the same route as political parties of the ‘progressive’ Left. They attached themselves, then fully committed, to causes which are barely relevant to most people.

    Trade unionists of Jimmy Reid’s era were of the people they represented.

    Those men and women, whether you agreed with their objectives or not, were fully committed to the folk they represented.

    Their solidarity was beyond question.

    Now, as is the case in politics, the trades union movement is dominated by overgrown student debaters who’ve spent next to no time in the real world between graduating and campaigning.

    The shop stewards who ‘won’ the battle against Coke in the GFT and those who abandoned Sandie Peggie and her colleagues in Darlington have lost touch completely with the priorities of those they represent.

    A worker in need of help in the 1970s could look to trade unionists like Jimmy Reid and know they had clever, energetic and decent people on their side.

    A worker in need of help today had better make sure they share the approved

    personal opinions of their union shop steward – or else they can expect to be on their own.



    Source link

    Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Reddit WhatsApp Telegram Email
    Previous ArticleWinfried Schafer rallies Black Stars players
    Next Article ECG’s outstanding liabilities currently stand at GH¢80 billion – John Jinapor
    Papa Linc

    Related Posts

    Andrew Tate and his brother Tristan ‘will be hauled back to Britain after their trial in Romania’ following rape and human trafficking charges

    May 20, 2025

    Hackers steal the most personal information from more than a million vulnerable Brits – with domestic violence victims and families in care proceedings among those hit by attack on legal aid system

    May 19, 2025

    Trump forks over eye-popping amount to family of woman shot dead in U.S. Capitol on January 6

    May 19, 2025
    Ads
    Top Posts

    A Plus questions the hypocrisy of NPP members who remained silent about corruption for 8 years, only to speak out after losing power.

    December 26, 202443 Views

    Here’s why Ghana Airways collapsed in 2004

    November 5, 202440 Views

    Urgent search continues for Paul Barning after he was attacked by shark during fishing competition

    February 23, 202537 Views

    Kenyan Senator breaks silence on her alleged intimate affairs, secret child with John Agyekum Kufuor

    December 21, 202432 Views
    Don't Miss
    Entertainment May 20, 2025

    ‘He was my music hero’ – KK Fosu eulogises close friend Dada KD

    KK Fosu [R] described late Dada KD [L] as his music hero Ghanaian Highlife star…

    In his church, Prophet Owusu Bempah makes fun of former President Akufo Addo.

    Andrew Tate and his brother Tristan ‘will be hauled back to Britain after their trial in Romania’ following rape and human trafficking charges

    The first stadium to feature goal nets closes after 133 years

    Stay In Touch
    • Facebook
    • Twitter
    • Pinterest
    • Instagram
    • YouTube
    • WhatsApp

    Subscribe to Updates

    Get the latest headlines from PapaLinc about news & entertainment.

    Ads
    About Us
    About Us

    Your authentic source for news and entertainment.
    We're accepting new partnerships right now.

    Email Us: info@papalinc.com
    For Ads on our website and social handles.
    Email Us: ads@papalinc.com
    Contact: +1-718-924-6727

    Facebook X (Twitter) Pinterest YouTube WhatsApp
    Our Picks

    ‘He was my music hero’ – KK Fosu eulogises close friend Dada KD

    In his church, Prophet Owusu Bempah makes fun of former President Akufo Addo.

    Andrew Tate and his brother Tristan ‘will be hauled back to Britain after their trial in Romania’ following rape and human trafficking charges

    Most Popular

    Aside from Dodowa, title one hospital began and accomplished below Mahama

    October 17, 20240 Views

    April 3, 2023 – Russia-Ukraine information

    October 17, 20240 Views

    Ghana’s crude oil manufacturing dips

    October 17, 20240 Views
    © 2025 PapaLinc. Designed by LiveTechOn LLC.
    • News
      • Africa News
      • International
    • Entertainment
      • Lifestyle
      • Movies
      • Music
    • Politics
    • Sports

    Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.

    Ad Blocker Enabled!
    Ad Blocker Enabled!
    Our website is made possible by displaying online advertisements to our visitors. Please support us by disabling your Ad Blocker.