RIP Bob Crow — a huge loss to class-struggle unionism

March 11, 2014
Issue 
Bob Crow's commitment to his class was passionate and absolute.

Socialist Resistance -- We are deeply shocked at the news that National Union of Rail, Maritime and Transport Workers general secretary Bob Crow died suddenly of March 11 of a heart attack at the age of 52.

We send our heartfelt condolences and solidarity to his family and friends, and to the Rail, Maritime and Transport (RMT) union and its members. His death is a huge blow to the RMT and to the wider trade union movement and to the cause of militant class-struggle trade unionism.

During his 12 years as general secretary, the RMT has grown in both size and stature. He has been prepared to support strike action to defend the wages jobs and conditions of his members, and has done so very successfully.

As a result of this he has been vilified by the employers, government ministers and the likes of London Mayor Boris Johnson, but has enjoyed strong support among the rank and file of the union. To say that he will be sorely missed is a gross understatement.

Below, is an obituary written by Socialist Resistance member Liam Mac Uaid.

* * *
The conclusion that most union leaders in Britain drew after the defeat of the miners’ strike in the mid-1980s was that militancy, strike action and class struggle didn’t work.

A generation later most of them still hold that view. As a direct result most working-class people have seen their wages driven down in real terms, their pensions shredded and job insecurity normalised.

Bob Crow’s enduring legacy is that he and his fellow RMT members refused to accept the counsels of pessimism and capitulation from the Labour Party, the Trade Union Congress and those union general secretaries who carried on drawing huge salaries while their members’ jobs were cut, outsourced and downsized.

While mebership in those unions were falling, Bob raised the number of RMT members from 60,000 to 80,000. This was done by an uncompromising struggle to defend jobs and conditions as well as organising the most exploited groups of workers, such as the cleaners.

Thanks to their membership of the RMT, they enjoy wage levels above the living wage.

His commitment to his class was passionate and absolute. Under his leadership, drivers on the London Underground have won salaries of £50,000. At a time when skilled workers are being forced to work for poverty wages, that is a real victory for working-class organisation.

There have been two secrets to the RMT’s success. The first is that its members work in a strategically important industry. When trains and the Tube don’t run, British capitalism pays a heavy price in lost production.

The second is that the union had a leadership that encouraged working-class self-organisation and action.

You can’t have successful and continuous strike action unless you’ve built up local and national leaderships that understand that the balance of class forces can be swung in our favour by a willingness to fight. As a result wages in the railway industry have consistently risen faster than the average.

Bob Crow was one of the rare union leaders willing to openly break with the Labour Party. The RMT leadership is supporting the No2EU electoral alliance in the coming European elections.

It is a rare example of a significant union investing money and effort in an open challenge to the main parties that, as Bob often pointed out, all support privatisation, anti-union laws and illegal wars.

He was a defender of the Cuban revolution and a friend of the Palestinian liberation struggle. He was passionately opposed to the Trident nuclear weapons system.

Whereas a Labour Party politician or many other union leaders would have commented on how many jobs this weapon of mass murder creates, he said: “What about when we used to hang people? We had chief executioners -- we had to diversify and find new jobs for them.”

A pugnacious wit is a weapon of class struggle too.

People who worked with Bob say that he was a unifying figure within the union. He gave backing to those who had opposed him and always thought of himself as a worker.

His tragically premature death is a terrible blow to his family, friends and RMT comrades. It’s a loss too for the entire labour and radical movement in Britain and across the world.

His entire life was devoted to defending the idea that a comfortable secure home, a wage on which a working woman or man could raise a family, a dignified retirement and the entitlement to be treated respectfully at work are rights that we fight for and not privileges that can be taken away.

We stand with his brothers and sisters in the RMT in this tragic moment and, like them, we say that the best tribute to Bob’s memory is to carry on his fight.

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