Here’s a selection of pics from yesterday’s demo, including some of the DPAC protestors blocking the road outside Marble Arch tube station. * * * About these ads
Here’s a selection of pics from yesterday’s demo, including some of the DPAC protestors blocking the road outside Marble Arch tube station. * * * About these ads
Okay, so my daughter’s wedding is all done and dusted and went off without a hitch on Saturday – even the weather stayed nice! All of which means I can hopefully now clear some space in my head for thinking about other things like writing and campaigning and marching and protesting….. * * * Which reminds me. There are only five days to go until the March for a Future that Works, or #Oct20 as it’s otherwise known. Look, even the giant ugly countdown clock thingy in the sidebar has finally managed to get its numbers right. * * * I’m not going to repeat everything I said in my Guardian piece last year about the importance of marching against…
Remember March 26th last year when we did this? – Anti-cuts march: Anger amid the carnival Well, it’s nearly time to do it all over again. This year’s march and rally – A Future That Works – will be on October 20th, with demonstrators setting off from the Embankment sometime around 11am, and ending up in Hyde Park several hours later. The march for A Future That Works is happening for pretty much the same reasons as last time, but with a few more thrown in for good measure. It’s been over a year since the last demo don’t forget, and I don’t think back then even the most hardened and cynical among us could have predicted the extent of the devastation this government…
I realise it’s nowhere near as important or as newsworthy as the London mayoral race, but I too have been involved in an election recently, and guess what? I won! Yep, I am now the Regional Convenor for UNISON Eastern region. I’ve been trying to find an explanation of what the post is, because I suspect the title Regional Convenor is probably pretty meaningless to anyone outside of the trade union movement. The best I could come up with is this, from what I suspect is now an out of date UNISON document entitled Partnership working at Regional Level – A Best Practice Guide: Key tasks of regional convenor The regional convenor is elected by regional council delegates and is the senior lay member…
Only one of the statements above isn’t true, but hopefully at some point this year I’ll finally get around to moving this blog over to a self-hosted site and then the title of this post will be entirely accurate. Watch this space (or listen out for the screams of frustration!). So anyway yes, it’s a new year and I’ve got a new job. In fact I started my new job a couple of weeks ago, but it’s all been so hectic what with Christmas and everything I’ve not really had much of a chance to blog about it. The long and the short of it is, I’m not working in the public sector anymore: I’m now working in the women’s voluntary sector. In fact…