In this issue:
Young workers’ protest against social welfare cuts at Dáil
SIPTU President says Budget 2014 requires much renovation
SIPTU Dublin bus drivers to vote on latest proposals next week
Permanent liquidator expected to be appointed to Andersen Ireland Ltd on Monday
SIPTU Home Helps meeting in Galway to discuss new contracts
Special Report
Jack O’Connor states that harsh budget will provoke private sector pay demands
Patricia King tells Conference that 'establishment' will resist collective bargaining
RMT leader Bob Crow addresses Conference
Irish Senior Citizens Parliament Protest
Sinn Féin Mansion House Event
Dublin Lockout – Impact and Objects
SIPTU welcomes Review of Joint Labour Committees
The 1913 Lockout Tapestry
Defending the Public University
DCU is a place of learning not just enterprise
Jack O'Connor calls for Social Solidarity to underpin the rebuilding of the Republic, One Hundred Years on
SIPTU members regret unavailability of some Dublin Fine Gael TDs to discuss budget proposals
Thirty-Seventh Countess Markievicz Memorial Lecture
Successful Fair Hotels Expo held in Liberty Hall
European Social Justice Award Goes to Irish Campaigners
100th Anniversary Wreath Laying Ceremony
End of an Era
Lockout Tapestry and trade union banners exhibition in Dublin
100th Anniversary of the Arrival of the SS Hare Food Ship in Dublin
The New Theatre presents 1913 LOCKOUT
Féile na Samhna
Budget unfairly hits young and old
Zero-hours Contracts
CityWide
The Risen People
TASC is recruiting!
Exhibition
Larkin Credit Union
Fair Hotels
SIPTU Membership Services
Fair Hotel
SIPTU Basic English Scheme
Supporting Quality
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Jack O'Connor calls for Social Solidarity to underpin the rebuilding of the Republic, One Hundred Years on
Delivering the opening address at the weekend event “From Lockout to Bailout” in Nenagh, Co. Tipperary, at the end of September, Jack O’Connor, SIPTU General President,  challenged the myth that the Lockout was the opening salvo of a decade of rebellion against the British oppressor. He said that the accurate historical context for the Lockout was what he called the remarkable mobilisation of working people both in Britain and in the USA in the preceding years, paralleled  in Ireland by the emergence of the Irish Transport and General Workers Union, and that the Lockout was the response of a privileged class against the workers and the poor in Dublin, against the background of the drive towards Home Rule in Ireland.

The way in which the Lockout must be understood, he said, was that the privileged and wealthy merchant classes of Dublin were determined that the poor and workers would not have any mechanism to inform the shape of Home Rule Ireland, and that it was to be carved out by their interests exclusively.

“The outlook and value system which informed public policy-making in the new Ireland which emerged after the Civil War was not informed by the egalitarian aspirations which informed Larkin and those around him” said O’Connor.

“Rather it was informed by the outlook and value system of the William Martin Murphys. The decade of rebellion ultimately descended into the oppressive theocracy characterised by unemployment, emigration and misery. It was the Ireland of the industrial schools and the Magdalen laundries and gave way to the Ireland which prioritised one’s capacity to prosper by taking advantage of others rather than a commitment to the public good, an Ireland which venerated the exploiter, that confused three-card-trickery with genuine entrepreneurship and that took us directly to a decision five years ago, to socialise the debts of private banks and expose the country to between E100bn and E400bn in liabilities”.

Commending the organisers, Gerry Coffey, a community activist in Nenagh and Kathleen O’Meara, former Labour Senator, now a leading advocate in civil society, Jack O’Connor said that events such as the weekend of conversations in Nenagh created an engagement around the issues which is necessary as we rebuild the Republic, an engagement which is critical in laying the foundations for a more sustainable Ireland, built on the values of egalitarianism and social solidarity which informed Larkin, Connolly and others in 1913.

“From Lockout to Bailout” was supported by SIPTU and took place in Nenagh Arts Centre on September 27, 28 and 29th last.
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