Len McCluskey speech at CSC Trade Unions for Cuba Conference

Campaign News | Sunday, 3 November 2019

Len McCluskey, General Secretary of Unite the Union, speech at CSC's Trade Unions for Cuba Conference

2 November 2019
………………………………………………………………………………………………

Good morning comrades and friends.

I feel especially proud and privileged to be invited to speak here today.

Here at this conference marking:

• the 60th anniversary of the Cuban Revolution
and most particularly
• the 80th anniversary of the founding of the Cuban trade union federation, the CTC.

But before I go on can I personally acknowledge the presence of:

• Carmen Rosa López Rodríguez, the Deputy General Secretary of the CTC, and the rest of her delegation
and
• my great friend, Her Excellency Teresita Vicente Sotolongo, the Cuban Ambassador to the UK who sadly will be leaving us soon.

Can I also congratulate Rob Miller and his team at Cuba Solidarity Campaign in putting on today’s event? A truly great event as we’ve come to expect from CSC.

Of course I was a child in 1959 but I do remember reports of what had happened in Cuba and how many in the dock workers’ community where I was brought up welcomed the news.

Similar scenes were reported from mining districts when news of the Russian Revolution first reached Britain in 1917, miners on the streets crying tears of joy.

And what news it was to welcome.

A US backed fascist dictatorship, installed to protect US agricultural plantations and mafia run gambling and prostitution operations, had been toppled by a lightly armed, small in number, guerrilla army.

No one in the elite really believed it had happened; they took off for Florida expecting to come back to their mansions and plantations in a couple of months when the Revolution had blown over.

How wrong they were.

Because the Cuban Revolution was not just one corrupt group swapping power with the previous corrupt group – the Cuban Revolution was a socialist revolution embarking on a course of national and international liberation.

That’s what made it different.

I’m sure you will hear here today details of the great social advances that have been made in Cuba since 1959:

• literacy rates superior to many countries in the west

• free education for all from nursery to university

• free health care, low infant mortality and major advances in biosciences.

But the issue that most keenly matters to me is the development of labour rights in Cuba.

From trade union activists being tortured and executed under Batista today workers and their unions, organised by the CTC, have a special place in Cuban life.

Workers and their unions have to be fully consulted and involved in decision making at workplace level.

The CTC and its affiliates are included in the great economic decisions that have to be made by the government.
When the new labour code was being drafted, the CTC organised innumerable workplace meetings of union members who are articulated demands for change and, most importantly, amendment or rejection of the government’s proposals.

You may know that I have often given the government here advice on its labour laws but unfortunately I do not seem to enjoy the same sway with our government as the general secretary of the CTC does with his.

The setting a good example has not been welcomed by Cuba’s northern neighbour.

Since 1962 an illegal blockade of Cuba has been enforced by the US.

It is estimated that this blockade has cost the Cuban economy at least $922 billion

Money that could have been spent to further benefit the lives of Cuban workers and their families.

Although there was an apparent freeze under Obama the blockade remained in place and has been hardened under Trump causing real hardship to everyone in Cuba.

The blockade is of course an attempt at regime change, to bring back big US agrifood industry and the mafia, to return Cuba to the dark ages of Batista.

As socialists, our commitment to international solidarity demands that we stand by Cuban workers, their unions and their revolution.

Building on the unprecedented solidarity work for the Miami 5 by the unions here in Britain Unite was able to mobilise unions in the US to this cause.

Our campaigning work, reaching up to the highest levels of government and into the law courts, helped break the wall of silence and eventually led to freedom for the 5.

International solidarity is course reciprocal and in the past 60 years the Cubans have been to the forefront.

In 1988 members of the Revolutionary Armed Forces halted the South African advance northwards into Angola at Cuito Cuanavale; an action remembered by Nelson Mandela:

The decisive defeat of the aggressive apartheid forces in Angola destroyed the myth of the invincibility of the white oppressor. The defeat of the apartheid army served as an inspiration to the struggling people of South Africa.

More recently Cuba’s international solidarity has taken a more peaceful turn.

Cuban medical brigades have been the first into places of natural disaster or serious epidemic – Pakistan, west Africa, Haiti and Ecuador.

Operation Miracle has restored the sight to 3.4 million people in Latin America, including the Bolivian solider who executed Che Guevara.

Since 1959 Cuba has been a beacon to progressive forces in Latin America and the developing world.

In the early years of this century progressive governments came to power all across Latin America; most recently in Mexico, and down as far as Argentina, many acknowledging their Cuban inspiration.

Times have changed and much of that advance has been reversed by:

• US led attempted regime change in Venezuela and Nicaragua

• the jailing of Lula and electoral loses in Brazil and Ecuador

• soft coup in Honduras and Paraguay.

But it’s not over by any means.

In October this year:

• the people of Ecuador defeated the IMF

• 1 million people in Chile marched against neo-liberalism

• Evo Morales was re-elected as president of Bolivia

• the Left has won the presidency of Argentina

And Cuba stands firm in the face of unprecedented economic attack from the US.

In closing, I’d just like to share a short anecdote with you.

Some years ago, before the time of Evo Morales, a leader of the Bolivian trade unions came to visit our office.

“What would you say is the most important task?” he was asked.

“The defence of Cuba” was his reply.

Comrades, we can demand of ourselves nothing less than that.

Thanks for listening.



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