GFTU BGCM 2019 Minutes
regions. That was my idea for a green new deal for the north. We talk about
climate change as though it is a very neutral thing, but we have been told on
the Guardian by our editors to talk about it as a climate emergency. We should
be talking about this as a war on global warming and if you think about the
1940s when the Government was then faced with a similar national
emergency, a life or death struggle, they did not really care two hoots about
what happened to public borrowing, it just did what was necessary in order to
win the battle against fascism.
My political answer is we need to rethink climate change/climate emergency as
akin to winning and existential struggle, in which case you do not really worry
about counting the beans. Economically, I think it would pay for itself, because
you would put people back to work, you would give them good jobs, you would
raise real incomes in a sustainable way, you would grow the economy and
reduce the deficit and the borrowing, because it is being done at very, very low
levels would pay for itself. I think the green new deal approach really is an idea
whose time has come.
THE PRESIDENT: Thank you very much. Any other questions? Any other points
people would like to make while we have got Larry here?
BRO STEVE GILLAN (POA): I am afraid it is on the Brexit debate again, Larry.
Steve Gillan, General Secretary of the POA. My union remained neutral in the
Brexit debate. We wanted our members to make up their own mind and part of
that was done because the Executive were afraid of what the outcome would
look like if we adopted a policy on this, because I look at social media and I see
during that Referendum there was a massive nationalistic approach to it over
various parts of the country and that was my biggest fear. Personally, I voted
to remain and the reason I did so was for fear of handing this Government total
carte blanche to do what they wanted to do and having a bonfire for workers’
rights. If it had been a socialist government in place then perhaps I may have
looked differently at it, but we have not got a socialist government in place. So
that is the worry that I have, but, more and more, where I live in Essex and
Basildon, around East Thurrock and places like that, if you think fascism is
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