#title Brexit and Workers
#author Anarchist Federation (of Britain)
#LISTtitle Brexit and Workers
#SORTauthors Anarchist Federation
#SORTtopics IAF, workers struggle, Immigrants, United Kingdom
#date 2019
#source Retrieved on 2020-04-02 from [[http://www.i-f-a.org.gridhosted.co.uk/wp-content/uploads/2019/07/IFA-international-of-anarchist-federations-journal-2019.pdf][www.i-f-a.org]]
#lang en
#pubdate 2020-04-03T11:24:44




We’ve previously written a few things
about the 2016 referendum which led
to the process of Britain’s exit from the
European Union. As the time gets closer
we look at what the currently uncertain
situation means for workers.

----

Before we get on to the
specifics, we make some more
general points about Brexit. In
Organise 97 (Winter 2016) we
said:

<quote>
Much media space is
devoted to speculation about what
Brexit will mean. There is even
some doubt about whether despite
May’s strong assertions that she
will make Brexit work, that it
will go ahead. She certainly is
taking her time about it. After
all, key sections of the British
ruling class did not want Britain
to leave the EU. They want the
cheap labour and the financial
sector is concerned that it will lose
its central role in international
financial markets. Also, the
Scottish response to the outcome,
which could lead to independence,
would be a major blow to UK
Ltd. One thing is certain: the
working class will continue to
suffer from low wages and high
housing costs, poor working
conditions and job insecurity and
cuts in public services and the
welfare state.

We don’t think the
outcome will offer opportunities
for a ‘socialist Britain’ as some
leftist supporters of exit from the
EU have argued. There may be
less trade with the EU but instead
it will be others, such as China
and India, which will step in. We
have already seen May’s cosying
up to the Chinese [state] and the
London Mayor Khan appointing
an Indian millionaire to be his
advisor on ‘opening-up’ London.
Within days of the referendum,
a Japanese company bought up
a British one. So we are really
just changing one set of bosses for
another. What does matter is the
reasons why most people voted to
leave: immigration. The EU was
about free movement of labour
for capital, but at least there was
free movement. Leaving the EU
can only mean that there will be
pressure to curtail immigration.
The rise in attacks on migrants
from Eastern Europe is a sign
of the mentality of some far-right and racist elements in the
working class. This xenophobia
is a major obstacle to building
an effective working class
revolutionary movement.
</quote>

If we add the centrality
of the Irish border question
to the ongoing headache for
politicians and a major concern
for people living both sides of
the border, the situation has
not exactly moved on from our
initial analysis, in spite of the
blow by blow negotiations.

*** Impact Of Brexit On Workers

Being fought on the
basis of sovereignty with a large
dose of English nationalism,
Leave was always going to
legitimise discrimination against
foreign workers and act to erode
those workers’ rights in Britain
more than Remain would. This
is because European legislation
offers some protections to
migrant workers from within
the EU and also includes some
protection of human rights
of non-EU people, as well as
the ‘freedom of movement’
afforded by the treaty and in the
Schengen area.

Of course, the European
Union is a capitalist institution
working in favour of the bosses
to keep workers exploited
efficiently. Capitalism likes free
movement of people so that
the workforce can go to where
the work is at its own expense.
Because of obsession with
sovereignty and national identity,
migration has dominated the
discourse of Brexit. However,
those in charge of capitalist
economies like Britain’s, which
has moved towards knowledge-based (quaternary) industry, are
still going to want to manage
the workforce required to
support it. So at the same time
as putting massive pressures on
workers with fewer skills or less
education ‘at home’ bosses
will also continue to look
globally for workers who can
fulfil the needs of the modern
economy. Ideally it wants
people who will not need too
much healthcare, can look after
their family with what they are
earning, pay taxes, whether they
are British or not. Brexit in no
way means moving back to a less
knowledge-based economy.

As well as in industry, a
real crisis will continue to exist
in services, especially health
and social care because the
neo-liberal state and business
alike do not really want to pay
to support people at home
who are ill, have a disability or
are older with greater health
needs, that means they are less
productive. The state (especially
under the Conservatives) is
not prepared to pay more to
local authorities and may be
more than prepared to see them
cut services further leaving
people to fend for themselves,
using this as a justification to
bring in privatised alternatives.
Controlling the workforce
overall includes bringing
people in from abroad with
more precarious positions –
tied to the employer for fear
of losing residency status or
with controlled periods of
employments – something
Brexit will help make easier.
Non-EU workers are already
bound to their employer unless
they can find another job quickly
and easily. This was a major part
of the beef at Fawley oil refinery
(the 2009 struggle that led to
Gordon Brown’s oft misquoted
‘British Jobs for British
workers’) as Italian workers
were essentially indentured even
though they were EU,
kept on-site in portacabins
earning vastly less.

Even if Britain remains
in Europe there would still
be the continued threat of
multinational (e.g. American-owned) companies being invited
to run the NHS and other
services. With a suitable Brexit
agreement, and even with ‘no
deal’, it may simply mean that
EU companies will be able do
this as well, with favourable
tax conditions if they play
the game and don’t insist on
workers’ rights alongside being
allowed to operate in UK. Some
of the industries that would
no doubt be interested would
be in construction, energy, IT,
research, education, as well as
the health and care providers.
This is a gamble though as they
will need to make the wages
attractive enough so that it is
worthwhile for someone to work
in UK while having no right to
stay outside of the job, relative
to opportunities for work in
the person’s home country or
another EU country where they
would have the right to settle. A
lot of the above speculation will
depend on whether Britain stays
in the Customs Union as this
will influence how goods move
around and this in turn will
influence where businesses need
workers to reside to make profit.
It will also depend on how freely
the EU will allow its member
states to trade with Britain post-Brexit.

On the other hand,
multinationals based in Britain
and British-owned companies
alike will not hesitate to move
abroad if more advantageous
to them than staying. Even
small British-owned companies
already operate abroad. When
US companies like Motorola
abandoned their production
lines in Mexico for Asia, British
companies quickly moved in
to pick up the factory space
and the skilled local workforce
– such was the flexibility that
globalisation allowed. British
companies could decide to move
some or all of their operations
to Europe if profitable and
if allowed to do so, with the
support of the British state.

*** Migrant Workers

Overall European
migrants make up 5% of the
population in England and
an estimated 3.5-3.8 million
EU citizens in the UK will be
required to apply for settled
status post-Brexit. For EU
workers in Britain now, there
is massive uncertainty about
residency status as it’s not clear
how and if they will be allowed
to stay after Brexit. Again the
situation for non-EU migrants
in instructive. Non-EU workers
can generally get a visa to stay
in UK for up to 6 months.
However people from non-EU
countries are already making
difficult choices if they are
allowed to stay and work longer,
some working overtime to hit
the required wage threshold
to be able to work in UK on
their own or with family (which
is a higher threshold). Also,
it is probably not common
knowledge to many British
people that the minimum annual
earning threshold for non-EU
workers was raised pretty well
overnight in 2016 from £25k
to £35k leading to many US
and Australian workers having
to leave (as reported in the
media at the time), which was
subsequently lowered back to
£30k in 2017. Is very likely that
the government will fiddle with
the rules a lot like this after
Brexit making relocating to UK
very risky for lower paid workers.

The body that has
made the most detailed
recommendations about
European Economic Area
workers coming to UK post-Brexit, the Migration Advisory
Committee (MAC), published
a report in September 2018 –
recommendations from which
are not substantially affected
by May’s most recent Brexit
‘deal’. The headline from the
MAC was ‘No preferential
access’ for EEA citizens after
Brexit (something lovingly
rephrased by Theresa May in
November 2018 as stopping
EU migrants “jumping the
queue” versus workers from
Australia or India). It also
lumped workers of different
occupations or skill level into
the same scheme except possibly
a separate seasonal agricultural
workers scheme. Any low-skill
gap would apparently be filled
by family migration linked to
other workers (e.g. spouses) and
an expanded Youth Mobility
Scheme (allowing younger
people to come to UK for 2 years
‘working holiday’ from named
countries) which seems unlikely
to be fulfilled in practice since
it is known that many YMS
migrants take higher skilled
posts albeit on a temporary
basis. So the main change after
Brexit is for the category of
‘Tier 2’ sponsored workers to
include European in addition
to non-European workers with
the removal of a cap on the
annual number of visas which
is currently 20,700 people
at the £30k level mentioned
above (rising to £60k above
the threshold), plus some other
amendments. These are precisely
the practically indentured
workers mentioned above and
this recommendation would put
most skilled migrant workers in
the same boat, once freedom of
movement in the EEA is lost.
However, in order to placate the
anti-immigration lobby, May
subsequently suggested that
visas for lower skilled workers
could be limited to 11 months
and have restrictions on families,
which would act to prevent or
discourage settlement.

Yet Another recent
development was a pilot project
in November 2018 that the
government launched, focussed
on universities, health and
social care, which they are
using to work out the scale of
the task, how to administer the
scheme, and to fast-track some
key workers the state does not
want to lose. These are already
workplaces with considerable
casualised and/or mobile
workers. 16% of university
researchers are from other EU
states and 23% of academic
staff in biology, mathematics
and physics are EU nationals.
Furthermore, EU immigrants
make up about 5% of English
NHS staff overall, 10% of
registered doctors and 4% of
registered nurses. However, a
major criticism was that the
pilot scheme started with the
worker only and not family
members, leading to criticism
from both Wales and Scotland
health secretaries, plus trade
unions criticised the £65 fee and
are demanding that employers
pay this on behalf of the
individual, such that the fee has
already been covered by some
institutions.

*** ‘British Workers’

Workers who are British
citizens will face ongoing
economic pressures due to
austerity as now, worse if the
economy takes a dive. And there
are a good number of gender-related workplace issues that
are created by Brexit. Although
incorporated into the 2010
Equalities Act, equal pay for
women arises from the 1957
Treaty of Rome. Rights of
part-time workers (pensions,
parental leave entitlements)
and protections for pregnant
women at work also come
from the EU. Imposition of
employment tribunal fees was
fought using EU law by Unison
in 2013 on the grounds of it
being discriminatory because the
majority of low paid workers are
women. After Brexit, it is quite
possible the UK government
could try and amend the law
in the interest of the economy.
Furthermore, the government
has already indicated that
women might need to choose
home over work in order to look
after elderly relatives post-Brexit
if there is a social care staffing
shortage! This kind of statement,
from the Department of Health
in August 2018, only shows how
controlling the state is prepared
to be if necessary.

While we don’t yet know
what will happen, it’s clear that
Brexit has serious consequences
for workers. The situation for
lower paid workers who might
consider coming to UK after
a break with the EU looks
particularly grim with a constant
eye having to be kept on wage
levels and time worked. Even
higher paid workers are likely to
have jobs that are tied to their
employer, and risk
losing residency if their
employment ends, so taking
industrial action will be riskier.
At home, women are likely to be
adversely affected and equality
legislation could well be put to
the test.

Although quite speculative,
it seems hard to see how the
state will control migration to
such a fine degree (such as work
visas of less than a year) without
additional checks by NHS and
other bodies, which could end
up making introducing national
identity cards for the whole
population more likely. The
last time a national ID scheme
was proposed and defeated
(by No2ID and the anarchist
campaign Defy-ID in 2005-9), it was migrants (notably
asylum seekers) who ended
up with biometric ID cards - and biometrics were added to
passports around the same time.
Furthermore, the move to more
electronic record keeping in the
NHS and e-Gov means they
are more able to track individual
entitlements, although not
without some opposition to the
‘hostile environment’, against
workers becoming ‘border police.’

*** Opportunities

On the brighter side
there may be opportunities to
fight for better pay, if workers
stick together. In our workplaces
and political organisations we
need to keep alert and see how
we can support each other.
Workplace meetings are a good
start, especially so that migrant
workers are not isolated. While
we cannot do much about the
process of Brexit as this is in the
hands of the politicians, we can
get ready for its consequences.
This should include being ready
defend co-workers and comrades
who may face leaving the UK if
they fail a yet to be determined
residency test, mounting anti-deportation campaigns it
comes to that (anarchists who
have prior experience with No
Borders and migrant solidarity
have a lot to give here). We
also need to keep an eye on
what is happening in other
countries. Whilst workers have
experienced relative freedom
of movement in the EEA, and
with more countries being part
of the EU, it should have been
easier to point out common class
interests, although the British
Left has failed to make much
of this recently, being focussed
on domestic politics and the far
right. On a practical level, having
the EU has arguably made direct
resistance easier – coordinated
action against borders and in
support of migrants (within
and from without the EU) and
against international economic
summits of the political class.
Anarchists have been at the
forefront of this transnationalism
and our own international
blossomed in this period to
include the Balkans, for example,
so we hopefully have something
to build upon.