CAUSING CONCERN
UNAUTHORISED STRIKE IN BRITAIN SOMEx FRAYING OF NERVES UNDER WAR STRAIN. DEMAND FOR STATEMENTS ON POST-WAR POLICY. (Bv Telegraph—Press Association —Copyright) LONDON, September 27. Britain is passing through a somewhat difficult stage domestically at present. It is the outbreak of unauthorised strikes, which is becoming so persistent that it cannot be airily dismissed. In the period from August 5 to September 18 there were 230 unofficial strikes, involving the loss of 270,000 working days. Today comes the news that for 10 days 9000 engineering workers in the arms firm of Vickers have been on strike over pay, and there is stated to be no glimmer of the strike breaking. In order that people abroad may maintain a proper perspective of this position, it should be borne in mind that last week’s manpower debate in the House of Commons showed that Britain has reached the limit of her mobilisation of manpower and womanpower. The degree of mobilisation exceeds that of any other country engaged in the war, whether ally or enmy. What is the reason for the present phase? This question is occupying many minds at present. It has been asked whether the Government is requiring more of the country than it is capable of doing to overthrow Nazism.
The “Economist” seems to put its finger on the spot when it says that “frictions of the fifth year of war mirror the hard labour of the four that have gone. Workers, managers, employers and administrators have undergone great physical and mental strain, not comparable in any way to the suffering in occupied Europe or war-wracked Russia, though more prolonged, but sufficient to make it understandable that there is far more unrest than has appeared. The causes of most of the strikes headlined in recent days are local and personal. They concern the grievances of individuals or the exasperation of relatively small groups of workers. They are important because they may be symptomatic !» of greater unrest to come. They undoubtedly represent a serious warning, but they should not be over-estimated.” Referring to the position in the coal, shipbuilding and transport industries, it adds that the increase in working days lost “is not yet evidence of serious labour unrest, but of widespread fraying of nerves and goodwill The workers are vexed by war time conditions and troubled about their prospects after the war; the absence of Government decisions on post-war policy causes scepticism and alarm.”
There is an increasingly growing wide-spread demand for more definite Government statements on post-war policy, and a general hope that Mr Churchill will soon be able to find time to turn his attention to the home front in addition to the world front.
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Wairarapa Times-Age, 29 September 1943, Page 3
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447CAUSING CONCERN Wairarapa Times-Age, 29 September 1943, Page 3
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