The article details the severe bin strike in Birmingham, UK, portraying it as a symptom of a larger political issue. Images show a stark contrast between the clean bin storage area of Unite's regional office and the city's overflowing bins, infested with vermin.
The author criticizes Labour politicians, including Angela Rayner and Liam Byrne, for their perceived detachment from the issue and prioritizing personal interests while residents suffer.
The article draws parallels to the 1970s, alleging a similar pattern of union-dominated Labour governments.
The author condemns the role of Unite, stating their hard-line tactics harm ordinary citizens, outweighing considerations for reasonable solutions.
The core argument revolves around the balance of power between the Labour Party and the unions. The author contends that Unite and Sharon Graham wield more power than Keir Starmer, highlighting Labour's inability to resolve the crisis.
The article concludes that this situation, if unresolved, could set a dangerous precedent for other councils and ultimately destabilize the nation. The author emphasizes the importance of fair compensation while also criticizing the disruptive actions that endanger public health and wellbeing.
Aerial images of Uniteâs regional office in Birmingham show a pristine bin store, surrounded by high walls, spotless and empty of rubbish. Itâs a stark contrast to much of the rest of the city, which is piled high with rotting garbage and reportedly infested with rats the size of cats.
Itâs also a perfect metaphor for this supposed âgovernment of the peopleâ and for the self-serving Labour politicians responsible for this disgraceful state of affairs.
Insulated from the repercussions of their venality and incompetence, it is not they who have to suffer the stench of decomposing food and the filth and faeces that accompanies an influx of vermin. Not their children who have to spend their Easter holidays dodging syringes and dog poo in their local park.
Angela Rayner, Deputy Leader of the Labour Party and Secretary of State for Housing, Communities and Local Government (and living proof that having a long fancy job title is not necessarily commensurate with talent), certainly doesnât have to worry about such things now that she has been offered a fully serviced Grace and Favour apartment in Admiralty Arch.
Nor does the situation seem to be unduly troubling for her comrade-in-arms, Liam Byrne, MP for Birmingham Hodge Hill and Solihull North.
Last month, as residents were already fighting running battles with the rats â dubbed âthe squeaky blindersâ - and wading through more than 21,000 tons of putrid waste, Mr Byrne was on a âfact-findingâ Parliamentary jolly in Japan. He even had the cheek to extend his stay for a âpersonal holidayâ.
Still, at least Tahir Ali, MP for neighbouring Birmingham Hall Green and Moseley, has been busy standing up for the people. Just a shame itâs the people of Mirpur, Kashmir, on whose behalf he has been vigorously campaigning for a new airport in the region.
Like their union paymasters, whose own backyard is so pristine you could practically eat your lunch off it, itâs a case of âIâm all right, Jackâ, and the rest of you can fend for yourselves.
Birmingham's bin chaos is a perfect metaphor for this supposed âgovernment of the peopleâ and for the self-serving Labour politicians responsible for this disgraceful state of affairs
But âtwas ever thus. The last time a Labour government of this ilk was in power, in the Seventies, the country had all the same problems. The common denominator: weak-minded ministers in thrall to the unions; the outcome: crippling strikes and general misery for ordinary voters.
For all the talk of workersâ rights and solidarity with ordinary folk, the policies pursued only ever seemed to benefit a narrow few, and rarely those who worked the hardest or contributed the most. No wonder there was a massive brain drain; anyone who could get out, did, much like the exodus of successful businessmen and millionaires today.
Perhaps thatâs why Iâve always regarded Labourâs grandstanding pronouncements and wild promises with deep cynicism. I was very young at the time, of course, but I remember my father and his mates, who worked at the Round Oak steelworks in Brierley Hill (on the outskirts of Brum, as it happens) striking up the following ditty after a few beers to the tune of the Red Flag, anthem of the Labour Party: âThe working class/can kiss my arse/Iâve got a/foremanâs job at last.â
I wonder if Rayner hums the same tune to herself as she potters around her taxpayer-funded perch in SW1 in her lovely new clothes paid for by Lord Alli.
The sad truth is that the current situation is horrible and shocking and makes us look like a Third World country (The New York Times, NBC News and CNN have all weighed in on Birminghamâs bin problem); but itâs also no less than one would expect from a government whose principles and policies are still rooted in a time when George and Mildred were on the telly and the Bay City Rollers were in the charts.
As for the unions themselves, itâs an example of the âjobs for the boysâ approach that has always been the hallmark of trade unions. Instead of seeing employers â whether in the public or private sector â as jobs providers for their members, they see them as their sworn enemies.
They have no regard for the harsh realities of running a business or organisation. For people like Sharon Graham, leader of Unite, itâs not about finding a reasonable solution that works for everyone, itâs about hard-line protectionism. Her philosophy, as Keir Starmer is discovering to his dismay, is one of âno surrenderâ, regardless of the suffering caused.
After all, what exactly is a âWaste Recycling and Collection Officerâ (WRCO), the role which the council wants to do away with?
Weâre told itâs a âsupervisoryâ role, which makes it sound a bit like one of those other non-job jobs that local authorities seem to be so keen on, such as âskate park attendantâ or âcomposting supervisorâ. It was also only introduced in 2018, in response to earlier strike action. Will these WRCOs really be missed â especially since the council had offered to employ them elsewhere?
Angela Rayner has basically handed Labourâs backside to the unions
But then this dispute is not really about money, or jobs â or even, for that matter, bins. Itâs about who is really running Britain: Keir Starmer â or Graham and her colleagues at Unite.
Looking at the mess in Birmingham, the answer is all too clear. Not to put too fine a point on it, Rayner has basically handed Labourâs backside to the unions. Thanks to her proposed labour reforms â promising to repeal anti-strike laws, making it much harder to fire poor workers, giving people full employment rights from day one and a raft of other measures currently going through Parliament â the Government couldnât stand up to them even if it wanted to.
Graham is now the most powerful unelected politician in Britain and Starmer has little or no leverage when it comes to disputes such as these, of which there will no doubt be many more to come. Rayner can bleat all she likes about âthe people of Birminghamâ being her âfirst priorityâ and how âthe backlog must be dealt with quickly to address public health risksâ, but she more than anyone should know her entreaties will fall on deaf ears.
After all, she used to be a Union rep herself, as she never tires of reminding us. She knows the drill: the more misery strike action causes for ordinary people, the more effective it is in getting employers to cave in. Itâs just how it works â which is why, for all their faults, the Conservatives did their best to rein in the unions.
The irony of âour Angeâ finally getting a taste of her own medicine would be delicious were it not for the stench of rotting rubbish hanging over it.
The Government has nowhere to go over this. Years of mismanagement have left the Labour-led council bankrupt â and now both its workers and residents are paying a heavy price. And there are plenty of other councils in similar situations. Pretty soon this pattern will begin to repeat itself â and the whole country will end up one big, stinking mess.
Personally, I have a lot of time for bin men. They do a difficult, dirty job, and they deserve to be properly paid for it. But thereâs a difference between asking for whatâs fair and reasonable and putting the health and wellbeing of an entire community at risk â a community which itself has not done anything wrong. Itâs shameful behaviour, and if those involved had even a shred of integrity, they would reach a solution. Instead, they would rather ruin the lives of thousands of ordinary people for the sake of their own political power games.
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