If you earn £40,000 you can afford to pay higher taxes, say unions
Last updated at 09:24am on 01.07.08
TRADE union leaders are drawing up a shopping list of policy demands - including tax hikes for the middle classes - in exchange for rescuing Labour from bankruptcy.
Senior union figures are highlighting 'cuddly' measures such as more flexible working rights and free school meals for all primary school children.
But behind the scenes they are also pressing for new rights to strike - and, most explosively, National Insurance hikes for middle earners.
Criticism: Among other things, Baroness Prosser admitted that Gordon Brown is 'no sunbeam'
Paul Kenny, General Secretary of the GMB, say Labour have failed to back the union's policies
The GMB union is understood to want the upper earnings limit on National Insurance to be abolished, making higher earners pay far more.
National Insurance is charged at 11 per cent on an employee's income between £5,460 a year and £40,040 a year, and 1 per cent on anything earned above that.
Gordon Brown will fiercely resist such a move as electoral suicide. But the unions are ready to flex their muscles at a time when the Prime Minister is politically vulnerable and the Labour Party is in desperate financial straits.
Gifts from individual supporters have collapsed in the wake of the cash-for-peerages affair and Labour's catastrophic slump in the polls.
With Labour almost totally reliant on them for funding, the unions want to push for a detailed list of policies in crunch talks with ministers next month.
Labour has had its annual accounts signed off by auditors and they have now been sent to the Electoral Commission for publication.
The figures will show that the party remains about £20million in debt.
Everton FC chairman Bill Kenwright (left) and former Granada boss Sir Gerry Robinson (right) have both criticised Gordon Brown's leadership
Party sources insisted the role of the unions in keeping the party solvent had been 'massively overstated'.
Instead, a string of wealthy businessmen who loaned the party millions of pounds are understood to have agreed not to call in their money now.
One party source insisted: 'As for this so-called list of union demands, it's made abundantly clear to anybody that gives us money that they don't get anything in return except a greater possibility of a Labour government.'
The unions are proposing several measures designed to appeal to Labour's core vote.
Unite, the largest union, suggests that employees are given more rights to flexible workplace leave.
The public services union Unison wants all primary school children to get free school meals and the GMB wants to instal environmental workplace 'shop stewards' to encourage green workplaces.
The GMB - headed by general secretary Paul Kenny - has already voted to cut funding to a third of the 108 Labour MPs it sponsors, saying they have failed to back its policies.
Union leaders are said to be wary of explicitly demanding traditional workers' rights at this stage, for fear of unnerving the Government ahead of next month's talks.
But Unite, which gave £2million earlier this year to Labour, is also said to be preparing a campaign to overturn the ban on secondary strike action, which was introduced by Margaret Thatcher.
Other possible demands include a provision enabling unions to ballot their members by phone or email.
Yesterday former Labour Party treasurer Baroness Prosser warned the party's finances were 'a worse situation than we have been in ever'.
She claimed some donors had abandoned the party because they were only prepared to support 'something that's a winner'.
Lady Prosser said Mr Brown was 'not exactly a sunbeam' but insisted there was no alternative leader who could attract more donors.
Reader views (9)
Do they realise that half of their members now earn around 40k? After the pay extortion for tanker drivers they'll be getting whacked as well... poetic justice?
- Mark, London, UK
Its good to know that the Trade Unions elites are backing the Tory Party by pushing for ludicrous demands.
- Dave, London
Do you even know how much I pay in nursery fees? £788.64 per month. With my husband's salary, we don't get additional tax credits. Then my husband and I each pay £1720 annually for our travel cards. Then there's the mortgage, food, ooh - do we even get to have electricity?!
- Christine, Hornchurch, Essex
Unions really do belong in the Dark ages. I have already paid enough for 11 years of miss management of this once half decent country and now they want more. On yer bike!
- Fly, london
The late 1970s problems are all returning. Thatcher managed to turn around the U.K. economy after the dismal Jim Callaghan years, but due in the meantime to the E.U. having gained control over U.K. banking and working hours/conditions and many other economic levers, a similar U.K. turnaround is not possible thirty years later. No big improvement in the U.K. economy will occur unless/until the U.K. leaves the E.U. The smart politicians are starting to realize that -- which makes it all the more amazing that Gordon Brown is going in exactly the opposite direction with his support for the Lisbon Treaty. Was there ever a politician who was more intent on political suicide?
- Phil Jones, London UK
What happened to democracy? or do the Unions now dictate to the government how to run the country?
- Dave, london
Sounds to me like the Unions want to be the pre-eminent supporters of the Labour Party again. Anyone else would be "class enemies" once more (targeting the Middle Class does tend to suggest this, doesn't it?) - looks like Labour can give a final goodbye kiss to the 'swing-voters' that Tony Blair enticed into the fold.
- Rogan, DFW Texas
This makes "cash for questions" look tame (and legal?) (and democratic?).
- Jeremy E, London
The "middle classes" are already paying through the nose for Labours misguided and expensive social engineering projects and in return labour deny their kids school places etc. Let them make the demands - they will be out of office soon, though not soon enough.
- Steve, Hereford
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