Remember union members have to vote to strike and they will therefor only strike if the situation is unacceptable.
And they like everyone else are also members of the public who have needs. If companies had it their way (private or public) people will be working in unsafe, underpayed conditions. If talks fail the only alternative is strike action.
That is clearly not the case; the strikes are typically based on a low turnout and are quite obviously, in most case, politically motivated.
Reading what some on here have said suggests that some think rail workers should lose the pension pot they've earned, get less money and lose their rights that they signed a contract for.
How would any of that be fair just because others like coppers can't strike?
I think that this has no relevance on nationalisation.
A national company can run like a TOC but without profit going to big business. Nothing else needs to be changed.
No; the intention is to avoid burdening the state with additional pension liabilities that it will not be able to meet. Public sector pensions are going to have to come to an end, with staff getting their pensions in the private sector.
Sorry, but the no-strike agreement is essential for all operations returning into state ownershi[ due to the abuse of the current arrangements.
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Neither does the assumption that unions are out to screw over the employers.

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In my personal experience, the Union Reps were out to screw their own members; they were only ever interested in feathering their own nests and acted like a bunch of hells angels towards the colleagues. They are the ones that ended up as the current middle management in the organisation I am thinking of.
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In that case, expect social unrest of similar or greater levels than the 60's or 70's.
Unfortunately, that is what is anticipated.
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Big business is mistrusted because of the undue influence it brings to bear on the running of the Country.
Exactly the same is said when applied to the unions.
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You may have a point that not all big companies are necessarily bad, but there is the whiff of power without responsibility about them.
Ditto.
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Back on the original topic, I think the main reason people want "British Rail" back is that they remember, or are told about, a soft-focus past where the trains all ran on time, everyone got a seat, there were uniformed staff on every platform to help you with your luggage, tell you the time, make you a cup of tea, etc., a guard and a steward on every train, and so on.
Renationalising the railways will achieve none of this.
I would expect that the timing of the survey was a factor in the results ... a misty-eyed view of the BR unicorn being another.
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No, it's not that at all. The main reason is we were promised lower fares and reduced public subsidies would result from privatisation but the exact opposite has happened. Passengers and taxpayers aren't getting value for money and public debts are rising to unsustainable levels, yet the government goes on pretending rail privatisation has been a success, since the truth would undermine their ideology and put future privatisation plans in jeopardy.
Public subsidy for the railways is being steadily reduced - the policy has been to shift the balance in the financing of the railways back to the user from the tax payer, and in the case of London and SE operations have or are close to being self financed. So the overall burden of the railways is being reduced.
Value for money is improved by eliminating operating costs, which will be harder to achieve under state control due to coercion, but is necessary in order to scale-up activities.
Capital investment is however going to be problematic going forward. Over the last 10 years or so, a lot of the work has been financed by debt, but NR is close to it's credit limit. A lot has been achieved so far with the relatively cheap debt, but additional capacity, particularly were it is really needed, is going to be one or two orders of magnitude more expensive than the little schemes seen so far.
This would be one arguement for having NR under state control so that it could access the currently relatively cheap Government debt financing. However this will not last, and Government expenditure will be significantly constrained in future years. The next phases of the financial crisis will most likely be more devastating than the last, with Government finances taking the biggest hit.
So going forward, if additional capacity is to be provided for the anticipated growth, it is going to require a substantial private sector involvement, with perhaps backers taking ownership of particular corridors. The alternative is yield management, which is already being planned for.
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yeah, it will be because they can't do it and not for the reasons you think. effectively it will be "well i can't have it/do it so no one else can"
they are all ready doing that. sometimes that doesn't work and it needs to be taken further.
not in terms of pay and conditions or working rights no
and i'd be in favour of the unions refusing to pay these members of the public and doing what they can to run rings around said members of the public via whatever means should that ever happen.
or, the state.
no it mustn't. withdrawing the right to strike is a form of slave labour, or at least legitimizing it. there is nothing about a strike that the general public needs protecting from. walk/ride a bike/get the bus. it won't kill you. many people have no option but to do any of those as they have no trains. and it will remind those stuck in a bubble that not everything works all the time.
and there still is
or, maybe it was all the lies told that caused both of those.
Dribble.
If you feel the need to strike, you should probably go and find another job, or perhaps retire to a monastery.
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really? yeah, right. if for example, workers didn't unite to change the conditions of the businesses of the industrial revolution would those businesses have changed or stayed the same? considering change would have cost those businesses more and would have meant what they would have considered, restrictive legislation. if unions weren't needed, they wouldn't exist. its as simple as that.
but some don't. and that some, is some to many. so therefore unions are still needed.
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no, i just see it all as it is . and i realize that people can't always be trusted. therefore we need laws/rules/enforcers to help protect us. employment laws and rules, and unions being the perfect example in terms of this thread.
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no, but privatization has nothing to do with it. other external factors which would have happened anyway do. as mentioned above, NIR (northern ireland railways) has had a lot of growth and its nationalised.
The problem is that the unions are made up of Luddites that are living in the past; the world has changed for the better, but a number of the unions are still peddling the gospel of the Cold War. That is all it is.
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If the private sector is so good. Why does every privatised sector need an industry regulator to over see it and ensure fair play?
We have the vote to prevent or remove the tyrants; tyrants such as Brown, Blair, Foot, Wilson, etc, etc. They are the more dangerous to society, and have done far more damage, perhaps only to be surpassed by the media manipulation of the current set of malcontents.