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Advocating for Public Services in Scotland

The Scotland Communications & Campaigns Committee aims to address the challenges of cuts, privatisation, and ideological opposition to public services. We promote key messages that highlight the importance of investing in public services and challenge austerity measures. Join us in advocating for a strong and accountable public sector.

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Advocating for Public Services in Scotland

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  1. Scotland Communications & Campaigns Committee Key messages – Tell a pal

  2. Challenges Scotland Communications & Campaigns Committee Key messages • Cuts and privatisation. Ideological opposition to public services • Co-ordinated lobby to cut pay and pensions • Concerted plans to undermine trade union rights and organisation. • Explicit rolling back of the welfare state. • Strategy designed to make changes irreversible

  3. Challenges Scotland Communications & Campaigns Committee Key messages • Survey 2010: Most members believe there is waste in public services • Half believe huge cuts needed because of national debt • It is likely many members believe pay restraint needed because of financial situation

  4. Positives: UNISON poll March 2015 Scotland Communications & Campaigns Committee Key messages • If govt was to raise £2bn by cracking down on tax avoidance, 58% of Scottish public believe the money should be spent on improving public services. Only 19% said it should cut borrowing and only 17% said it should be spent on income tax cuts • 68% believed that ‘public sector organisations (such as local councils and the NHS)’ are accountable to the public • 72% believed all organisations seeking publicly-funded contracts should have to pay at least the living wage

  5. What the experts say Scotland Communications & Campaigns Committee Key messages The economists who actually predicted the crash …Prof David Blanchflower, former member of the Bank of England’s Monetary Policy Committee: “Austerity is simply bad economics…. Austerity is all about spending cuts, which hurt the poor and the vulnerable. This makes the UK government’s recently announced £12bn of extra welfare cuts an unnecessary disgrace in a rich country.” Nobel prize winner Joseph Stiglitz:“GDP per capita in the UK is lower than it was before the crisis. That is not a success”Nobel prize winner Paul Krugman: “Spend now, while the economy remains depressed; save later, once it has recovered. How hard is that to understand?”

  6. Some key messages Scotland Communications & Campaigns Committee Key messages • Country not broke – it’s just the money is in the wrong place.(Equality Trust figures) • The richest 1,000 in the UK have doubled their wealth over last 10 years to £547bn, getting richer at the rate of £892.55 a second. • This is more than the combined wealth of the poorest 40% of UK households (£452 billion) - 25.6m people. • The increase alone last year (28bn) could pay for 1,889,963 Living Wage jobs for a year

  7. Some key messages Scotland Communications & Campaigns Committee Key messages • Nothing inevitable about cuts – they do not make economic sense – they are a political choice • Economy depends on healthy public sector. Public sector workers spend most of their money in their local communities • Austerity is not working. The debt has increased from 1 trillion to 1.5 trillion since 2010. • Post WW2 debt was over three times higher yet we could build the NHS, housing and infrastructure • Investment and growth, not cuts, reduced the debt in the 1960s/70s

  8. What can we do? Scotland Communications & Campaigns Committee Key messages • Get key messages out to members and the general public • Challenge the Tory myths • Publicise UNISON’s alternative budget • Respond to press and media distortions, especially in the local media • Lobby elected members and MPs • Build public service alliances at local level

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