GFTU BGCM 2019 Minutes
could move on and it was decided to do some sort of actual arts festival. This
had been discussed for a while and there had been various versions of this,
some sort of summer festival, a sort of mini leftie Glastonbury, Glastonbury left
field type thing, possibly at Quorn. We did then set out to try to do a three day
festival which was a hybrid between that model of the summer festival, an
academic conference and a trade union conference, so we set out to try to
achieve that. I was then brought on to organise it as a producer, because it
was realised that to organise an event like this requires dedicated staff, it
cannot be done just as an add on. So we started to put it together.
Part of our funding model for this was trade unions buying delegate tickets and
almost no one, no trade union anywhere in the country, bought any affiliate
tickets and that seriously hindered our ability to make a three day festival pay
and as a result we transferred it over to a one day festival and made that work
by just charging members of the public a much reduced fee and made it work
for the GFTU for the audience and then as a result we sold out this one day,
200 odd people. There were 25 to 30 arts groups and various people doing
speeches and discussions and it went on into the evening. The feedback was
absolutely amazing for the day. Some of the feedback you can see on the
website in the testimonials. So it turned out to be a great day.
We then talked about what we could learn from this event and I might, a little
controversially, suggest that our biggest problem was the failure of the trade
union movement to engage with this idea at all. As I say, no union at all in the
country, apart from the Musicians’ Union, sent any delegates, none of our
affiliates, but no one else either, none of the big unions. When we went to the
TUC Conference that autumn it was suggested that a number of unions were
going to send delegates, but they did not. So that is a question – how do we
engage that audience of the trade union bureaucracies, but also trade union
members, how do we engage that audience, but the second question is should
we? What is the point of it? I would say this is sort of part of the discussion
about the service model or the political model, the campaigning model of trade
unions. If we are a service union simply providing technocratic services to our
members, then perhaps supporting an arts festival like Liberating Arts is neither
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