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Walsh branded 'dictator' as BA staff launch strike

Labour Party seeks peace deal to stop poll fall-out from dispute

By dan milmo and toby helm in London

Sunday March 21 2010

BRITISH Airways Chief Executive Willie Walsh's leadership of the airline was branded as an "industrial dictatorship", as cabin crew went on strike for the first time in 13 years yesterday.

Unite's assistant general secretary, Len McCluskey, accused Walsh of being "like a 19th-century mill owner than a 21st century chief executive", while speaking at a rally of hundreds of cabin crew.

Meanwhile, British government ministers were last night making desperate attempts to end the strike as the ruling Labour Party battled to prevent the dispute from wrecking its preparations for the general election, expected in May.

Prime Minister Gordon Brown's officials were in close touch with Tony Woodley, joint general secretary of the Unite union, throughout yesterday, amid hopes that a settlement could be reached that would prevent the action spreading into next weekend. But sources close to the dispute said last night there was no basis for a deal and that no further talks were scheduled.

Yesterday the Tories turned up the pressure on Labour over the strike and its links with Unite by launching a new advertising campaign showing Brown dressed as a BA pilot under the headline "Gordon is doing sweet BA".

The political row surrounding the dispute deepened last night after it emerged that Unite is to give the Labour party £4m (€4.44m) to help fund its general election campaign. The union agreed the deal with the Labour leadership a few weeks ago as Labour desperately sought the cash to mount an effective campaign against the Conservatives. The £4m represents half of the money that the unions have been asked for by Labour. Up to £2m is said to have been requested from Unison, the public services union, and another £2m from the GMB general union.

Eric Pickles, the Conservative party chairman, said: "When travellers are facing the effects of Unite's militant action it is beyond belief that Brown can have the brass neck to keep his crumbling Labour government afloat with cash from these union barons."

Labour concerns about the strike will be reinforced by an ICM poll for BBC Radio 4's Broadcasting House, which shows only 25 per cent of people say the action is justified, 60 per cent say it is unjustified and 15 per cent are undecided.

BA launched a strike-breaking operation of unprecedented scale yesterday, although Unite claimed that the airline had managed to fly only a third of its normal scheduled departures.

The airline claimed that half of the cabin crew rostered to work yesterday had turned up for their shifts and announced the re-instatement of more flights.

But one Unite official said the disruption caused, with hundreds of flights cancelled over the weekend, would be a wake-up call to Mr Walsh. "The next three days will determine whether or not we get back around the table," the official said.

Passengers at BA's Terminal 5 base at Heathrow were greeted by an array of unusual airline names on departure boards, as the likes of Transavia, Astraeus and Titan were brought in to carry passengers to their destinations.

The airline expected to fly 65 per cent of passengers, or about 120,000 people, over the course of the weekend. A spokesman said that operations at London Heathrow were "continuing to go well", with a full schedule operating at London Gatwick.

© Observer

- dan milmo and toby helm in London

Originally published in

 
 


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