Thursday 17 May 2007

MANCHESTER BRANCH VICTORY

On Thursday evening the NUJ Manchester branch passed the following motion:

AT A TIME WHEN THE UNION IS SEEKING TO GAIN PUBLIC SUPPORT FOR THE ‘JOURNALISM MATTERS’ CAMPAIGN AND THE ‘DAY OF ACTION’, THIS DIVISIVE AND CONTROVERSIAL ADM RESOLUTION, CALLING ON NUJ MEMBERS TO BOYCOTT ISRAELI GOODS, HAS BROUGHT THE UNION INTO NATIONAL AND INTERNATIONAL DISREPUTE.

ALTHOUGH IT IS ALREADY BRANCH POLICY IN MANCHESTER TO OPPOSE COMPOSITE B, WE JOIN WITH OUR COLLEAGUES IN THE BBC, ITN, OBSERVER AND FOREIGN PRESS ASSOCIATION IN ARGUING THIS RESOLUTION ALSO SERIOUSLY DAMAGES BRITISH JOURNALISTS’ REPUTATION FOR IMPARTIALITY AND INDEPENDENCE.

AS JEREMY DEAR IS ON RECORD SAYING THE EXECUTIVE DID NOT SUPPORT THE MOTION AND HAS MADE IT CLEAR THAT IT IS OPEN TO MEMBERS TO RE-OPEN THE ISSUE, WE URGE THE NEC AT THEIR NEXT MEETING TO DO ALL THEY CAN TO PREVENT THE ENACTMENT OF THIS RESOLUTION.

This was passed by 12 votes to 9 after what one member described as a hard-fought battle with opponents using "every procedural trick in the book" to try to block the motion.

I think this is a sobering example of how our union normally operates. If the meeting had not attracted a bigger crowd than normal, the motion would have been lost. Policies are drafted by a handful of dedicated activists at a branch meeting - who really fancies going along at 7.30pm on a wet Thursday evening ?- and that means they often fail to reflect the views of the mass of members who never have and never will attend these meetings. So how do we change this structure to make it more democratic?

2 comments:

Donnacha DeLong said...

"Policies are drafted by a handful of dedicated activists at a branch meeting - who really fancies going along at 7.30pm on a wet Thursday evening ?"

While I agree that the union's structure needs to change, you expose here the biggest part of the problem - an unwillingness amongst most members to make a little bit of an effort. If people are not willing to give up a little of their time on a wet evening, then they really have no basis from which to complain. Unions are not social clubs and members are not customers - unions are based on solidarity and self-sacrifice and, to be honest, given the amount of time I spend working for the union, I find this kind of argument rather depressing.

Rory Cellan-Jones said...

Those dreadful members who do not show enough solidarity or self-sacrifice to attend branch meetings account for at least 95% of the membership. It would probably be best to sack the lot of them and allow the activists to run things more smoothly..And I think if the NUJ treated its members as customers it might not be such a bad idea....
Or to paraphrase Bertolt Brecht(ok,ok,pseuds corner)"The membership has lost the confidence of the National Executive; the National Executive has decided to dissolve the membership, and to appoint another one"