Anti-austerity march support urged

Union leaders have called on the public to show their support for an anti-austerity march to take place in Dublin on November…

Union leaders have called on the public to show their support for an anti-austerity march to take place in Dublin on November 24th.

At a press conference organised by the Dublin Council of Trade Unions (DCTU) today, the leaders of unions Siptu, Unite, Mandate and the Civil and Public Services Union (CPSU) said the protest was against five years of austerity, which they claimed had not worked.

Speaking about the march - which takes place just 11 days before the budget - Siptu president Jack O'Connor said it was time for the Government to try something else.

“We're arguing that if you have been trying something for a very long time and it has not worked, and the consequences of it not working have imposed immense misery and suffering on citizens, then it's time to try something else."

READ SOME MORE

While acknowledging the Government had "very limited space to manoeuvre", he said it had options.

"We're urging that the remaining burden over the next few budgets would be shifted from the shoulders of working people and onto the shoulders of those who were best able to contribute."

Mr O'Connor said the Government could not "export its way out of the crisis" and said the unions had a task to "build confidence around an alternative that works".

General secretary of the CPSU Eoin Ronayne said trade union leaders had for too long allowed right wing elements to "divide workers who have far more in common that they have that keeps them apart". He said the campaign of which the forthcoming march was a part, would come from a "united trade union movement".

Unite general secretary Jimmy Kelly said the march was just one milestone in a broad-based campaign to demonstrate support for "solutions based on the needs of people".

DCTU president Michael Kelly estimated that the march would draw up to 10,000 people.

Joanne Hunt

Joanne Hunt

Joanne Hunt, a contributor to The Irish Times, writes about homes and property, lifestyle, and personal finance