We believe in UCU democracy for all members and think that UCU's democratic structures can be improved. If you agree with us and want open, transparent decision-making for all UCU members, please read our posts below.
Below is a list of candidates who are standing for election to UCU’s NEC. Some are members of the Campaign for UCU Democracy, some are independents, and some are members of UCU Commons. We believe that these are all people who would make a positive contribution to the work of the union, and that their views broadly align with our own. We strongly encourage you to vote for these candidates, and these candidates alone. We do not recommend voting for any candidates who are not listed here.
You will note that in some elections we are suggesting that you preference specific candidates. In other elections we haven’t done this, but ask that you vote for all of the listed candidates, following your own order of preference.
Voting is by post, and ballots will open on 27 January 2025 and close on 3 March 2025. If you haven’t been sent a ballot paper, please contact UCU’s Democratic Services team.
Trustee (3 seats)
Preference
Dr Angela Roger (University of Dundee)
1
Dr Joanna De Groot (University of York)
2
Adam Ozanne (University of Manchester)
3
Vice president from the higher education sector, becoming president 2027-28
Dyfrig Jones (Bangor University)
Honorary Treasurer
Andrew Feeney (Northumbria University)
Midlands FE (1 seat)
Alison Greaves (Coventry College)
North West HE (2 seats)
Preference
Dr J. Michelle Coghlan (University of Manchester)
1
Dr Matthew Barnard (Manchester Metropolitan University)
2
North West FE (1 seat)
Mr Stuart David Bond (Runshaw College)
President of UCU Scotland (1 seat)
Christopher O’Donnell (University of the West of Scotland)
Honorary Secretary of UCU Scotland (1 seat)
Ann Gow (University of Glasgow)
South HE (4 seats to include at least one woman)
Preference
Denis A Nicole University of Southampton
1
David Bretherton University of Southampton
2
Jackie Grant University of Sussex
3
South FE (1 seat)
Richard Coyle (Mid Kent College)
UK-elected members HE (3 seats)
Preference
Mark Pendleton (University of Sheffield)
1
Adam Hansen (Northumbria University)
2
Sophia Woodman (University of Edinburgh
3
UK-elected members FE (2 seats)
Preference
Josh Spears (Darlington College)
1
Linda Littler (Luminate Education Group – Leeds City College)
2
Representatives of disabled members (1 seat HE)
Bijan Parsia (University of Manchester)
Representatives of LGBT+ members (1 seat HE)
Dr Matilda Fitzmaurice (Lancaster University)
Representatives of Black members (2 seats to include at least one woman)
Pauline Rattery (Novus) [woman]
Dr Victoria Showunmi (University College London) [woman]
Representatives of migrant members (1 seat)
Ariane Bogain (Northumbria University)
Bruno Ferreira (Ealing Hammersmith and West London College)
Representatives of casually employed members (1 seat FE)
On 12 November, the University and College Union (UCU) launched a consultative ballot on a pay offer from the Universities and Colleges Employers Association (UCEA) – ranging from 2.5% to 5.7% – alongside terms of reference for negotiations on pay-related issues, which includes a pay spine review, contract types, equality pay gaps, and workload. With the ballot closing at 5pm on 3 December, members must decide whether to accept the pay-related terms (even if the pay offer is rejected) or whether to pursue industrial action over pay. And if you haven’t voted yet, I urge you to do so after reading this, while there’s still plenty of time, and to encourage your fellow UCU colleagues to do so too.
This is not a decision to take lightly. UCU’s Higher Education Committee (HEC) has recommended rejecting the pay offer while accepting the terms of reference.
In my view, UCU members should carefully weigh the broader context of sector finances, political realities, and union capacity before deciding. Striking over pay in the current climate risks hurting both members and the sector without delivering meaningful gains, while avoiding layoffs is the burning issue of the hour and, arguably, where effort should be concentrated.
What’s at Stake?
As HEC has already voted to reject the pay the offer and accept the terms of reference, arguably the really crucial question on the consultative ballot is this: are members prepared to take industrial action or not, and consequently, should an industrial ballot be launched?
Given the parlous state of HE sector finances, and the Labour Party’s priorities, it is unlikely that industrial action this year would lead to a significant uplift in the pay offer, nor lead to a further intervention from the Labour Government on the HE funding model (other than what has been announced so far). The most foreseeable outcome is that UCU would kiss goodbye to negotiations on a pay spine review, contracts, equality pay gaps and workload – progress which, particularly in terms of workload and the pay spine, could compensate for the lack of an improved pay offer.
Avoiding industrial action this year and focusing on the pay-related negotiations could improve working conditions in the sector. It would also allow time after years of continual action, to heal, direct attention to local issues, and build branches so that members are not committed to endless rounds of performative strike action, but rather have the density, reps and activists needed to make future action a more credible threat.
HE Finances and Pay
Projections from the Office for Students indicate that 40% of HE institutions (HEIs) will be in deficit this academic year, a share that could rise to 72% of the sector in 2025-26. In short, HEIs are on precarious financial ground – post 92 institutions especially, who have not benefited as have pre-92s from the roughly 5% windfall following a drop in USS contributions. Whatever projected income they are due to gain from the Labour’s announced one-year hike in student fees from £9,250 to £9,535, much of this will be wiped out by the increase in National Insurance contributions.
In this context, even a flawless campaign of industrial action is unlikely to yield substantial pay increases. And the risks are significant: an improved pay award could come at a cost: deepening HEIs’ deficits and potentially leading to further redundancies or cuts to vulnerable courses.
This is not to dismiss the issue of pay stagnation. UCU members have endured years of below-inflation increases. But striking on pay now – against employers already facing existential financial pressures – may worsen the sector’s problems without delivering solutions.
Strikes Targeting Government?
Officially speaking, an industrial dispute over pay is between UCU and the employers’ representative, UCEA. However, in some quarters, notably among UCU Left and fellow travellers, the notion that strike action could be unofficially levelled at the government is doing the rounds. Related to this, is the idea that if other unions joined the fray, the UK government might face coordinated strikes and be forced to capitulate.
However compelling such narratives may sound, we should not overlook the political climate that makes such an eventuality unlikely. The Labour government has a comfortable majority in parliament and, so far, is demonstrating considerable discipline when it comes to voting in Westminster and its agenda more broadly. Labour has proved willing, for example, to hold firm on its decisions – e.g. the scrapping of the winter fuel allowance for pensioners not on pension credit or benefits, or the changes to inheritance tax for farmers – in the face of considerable criticism.
On the plus side, Labour has shown an appetite to resolve trade disputes with nurses and resident doctors (previously named somewhat misleadingly “junior” doctors), with the latter accepting an excellent deal from the Labour government amounting to a 22.3% increase over two years. Some will argue that this indicates Labour’s willingness to strike a deal with unions in ways that the Conservatives were not. Of course there’s some truth in this, but the problem with this comparison is that the nurses’ and resident doctors’ unions, Royal College of Nursing (RCN) and the British Medical Association (BMA) respectively, negotiate with the government on pay, not an employers’ representative as is the case with UCU. So, any dispute on the pay offer could not be legally resolved by Labour, only by UCEA, even if there is undoubtedly an indirect relationship between the HE-funding model – which the UK government sets – and HE staff pay.
Entering a pay dispute with UCEA which really targets the government runs the risk of an irresolvable dispute, legally and formally. UCEA would argue that its hands are tied and that it cannot change government policy, and the government has no legal or official basis on which to negotiate on HE staff pay. In this scenario, then, there could be no negotiation talks. Ex-Education Minister Robert Halfon’s remarks in August 2023 amid UCU’s marking and assessment boycott (MAB) are instructive here of Labour’s likely response: “the government plays no formal role in resolving such disputes”.
If UCU were able to grind universities and other HEIs to a halt, i.e. “stop the factory”, and prevent students from graduating and progressing (as was attempted, ultimately unsuccessfully, during the 2023 MAB), one might picture the government interceding to protect students. But with UCU’s union density being what it is – around 30% of the sector and not showing a major upturn in growth – the idea that HEIs could be shut down in any serious way seems vanishingly slim, and UCU has not managed it since its inception in 2006.
UCU could try to make the case that the HE funding model be revised, but given that Labour has rejected scrapping tuition fees, and that HE is not a Labour priority over say the NHS, adult social care, and schools, the odds of forcing government concessions are also slim, beyond the one-year fee increase prior to promised HE reform – to be set out next summer, according to Secretary of State for Education Bridget Phillipson.
Another problem with the comparison between UCU and the nurses’ and doctors’ unions is the impact on the public. Mass industrial action from NHS workers impacts the public’s medical treatment and care. As a result, it places much greater pressure on the government than HE staff strikes. Learning objectives may be affected, which can potentially impact student performance, but in most cases the loss of some teaching – lectures, seminars, laboratory time and so on – does not prevent student graduation and progression. In addition, HEIs often put in place a range of mitigations following industrial action. From strikes to the MAB, our actions are not a matter of life and death.
A General or Coordinated Strike?
A recent blog argues that there could be something like a united front between HE Unison, who are balloting their members this November, and UCU. Optimistic as this is, if Unison were to vote for industrial action, UCU would likely be lagging behind Unison’s action by several months if it decided to call an industrial ballot. Currently no ballot has been called and there seems little appetite among UCU members for industrial action thus far (burnt out undoubtedly from the MAB, and near-annual strike action – action so often demanded as crucial by the self-declared ‘Left’ of the union – which has seen mixed and often disappointing results on pay in recent years, although UCU notably had a considerable ‘win’ on USS pension in 2023 as the cuts from 2022 were reversed).[2] On 24 September this year, a national Branch Delegate Meeting (BDM) showed the highest proportion of delegates (46%) were against industrial action, with 45% supporting industrial action – a figure just below half of members and echoed by the results of the July BDM earlier this year. In this scenario, where an industrial action ballot is unlikely to succeed, it makes sense for a union to keep its powder dry and not to expend either the political or economic capital on such a venture.
While coordination between unions in the same sector of course makes sense, recent history suggests that coordinated strikes do not necessarily lead to clear wins in any obvious way. In the winter of 2022-23 – which some commentators started to dub a new “winter of discontent” comparable to the 1970s era of strikes – UCU, Unison and Unite HE branches co-ordinated their strike days and industrial action.
If ever there was a moment of something like a general strike in recent history this was it, as not only HE staff, but also railway staff, London tube drivers, nurses, ambulance workers, teachers, postal workers and BT Group staff all went on strike over the period. This momentum clearly placed pressure on employers and the government but it did not generally lead to inflation-matching pay offers. Railway workers received an offer of 5%, nurses a one-off payment for 2022-23, and 5% for 2023-24, while UCU was offered a range of 5-8%, with most academic staff receiving 5%. There were exceptions, with the government offering criminal barristers a phenomenal 15% pay rise in October 2022.
An Alternative Strategy: Saving Jobs and the HE Sector
Rather than striking on pay from a sector in financial crisis, a national campaign centred on saving jobs and preventing further redundancies in HE is arguably more necessary. Many may even wonder why indeed UCU does not strike nationally over redundancies given the scale and number that have happened over the last two years, but the law is not helpful to UCU on this front. There is no legal way to take industrial action in relation to any other institution’s redundancies other than one’s own as solidarity or secondary (also sympathy) action is unlawful in the UK under the Trade Union and Labour Relations (Consolidation) Act 1992. Hence, national industrial action in the strict sense cannot be called over redundancies.
However, a national campaign could be drawn up, in which local branches affected by redundancies with industrial action mandates coordinate national and regional strike days and adopt messaging targeted at government policy and its funding model for HE. Think local strikes, national messaging and coordination. UCU’s Reclaim HE campaign has functioned along these lines to some extent (particularly with regards to the funding model), but a newer or enhanced HE campaign – as the crisis deepens – could focus more tightly on jobs and the crisis in the sector: e.g. “Save our Education, Save our Jobs”.
The union could consider organizing largescale demonstrations in major cities, akin to the 2010 “Fund Our Future” rally. Further underscoring the HE crisis without hurting members’ pockets (as would strike action) is no bad thing, though the real hard graft of lobbying and discussions inside Westminster – given Labour accepts that there’s a crisis and has promised HE reform next summer – will probably be more critical for HE policy reform. UCU must seek ways of involving members and, as meetings unfold in the run-up to next summer over Labour’s HE priorities, UCU should consider holding its own debriefings and consultation with members on evolving policy ideas.
Moving Forwards
In conclusion, there seems little to be gained from striking over pay while the HE sector is cash-strapped and Labour’s priorities are what they are, and unlikely to budge any time soon. We do not have the impact on the public (and leverage over the government) in the ways that nurses, resident doctors, schoolteachers and railway workers have; furthermore, industrial action on pay risks deepening, rather than lessening HEIs deficits, posing risks to staff jobs, and vulnerable courses; it would also mean tearing up progress on potential improvements on the pay spine, contract types, equality pay gaps and workload.
Alternatively, a national campaign focused on saving jobs, and the HE sector – with national and regional coordination between branches facing redundancies – seems viable and would not hurt progress on casualisation, equality gaps, workload and the distribution of pay. It is pragmatic to seek some progress on working conditions and to avoid an adventurist campaign which risks members’ money on an irresolvable dispute.
Aside from this, I am not convinced that UCU members are willing to undertake industrial action (I could be wrong, but I would place good money on fewer members – less than 45% – having an appetite for industrial action than delegates at the last two BDMs). Members are burnt out. And it is not UCU’s leadership or bureaucracy which has failed them. Myths of heroic martyrdom, the sweeping impact of strike action, the worship of the ever-hardening line and an overestimation of UCU’s labour power – repeated ad nauseam and quite often shouted by a select group of UCU activists (generally in the absence of serious political analysis) – have sold UCU members down the river. We need to change the record. We need rank and file members to vote in the current consultative ballot, and in the upcoming NEC elections for good progressive candidates who prioritize and do not sideline the concerns of the broad membership. We need members to engage with their branches, and to join branch, regional, and national committees.[3] We need ordinary members to help their branch committee members think strategically about their own and the union’s interests.
We do not need revolution. We need tangible gains in our workplaces. We need to learn what a win looks like (in unions it is nearly always partial and incremental). This requires honest communication with members about the union’s capacity and the political realities of the moment. This must include an analysis of employers’ circumstances, even if we disagree with them. Turning senior management teams into bogeymen – even if at times they anger or disappoint us with questionable decisions – will not help us; redundancies do not pass without reputational damage, and in today’s market-driven HE sector, reputation matters. We need to learn the art of patience and to spend more time building and organizing within the union. We must choose our battles, having considered all options. And we must choose our moment to strike (pun intended) wisely.
[1] I thank various colleagues for reading this, but particular thanks must go to Michael Abberton and Renee Prendergast for their feedback, suggested edits and comments (I have borrowed the odd sentence or phrase from you both).
[2] The notion that UCU Left, or those who commonly self-describe as the independent left are any more leftwing than members of other groups or factions like Campaign for UCU Democracy (CUCUD) or UCU Commons is a fallacy given that CUCUD and Commons contain members across the left-spectrum, holding broadly socialist to centre-left views, with affiliations to socialist organizations, other trade unions, various charities, the Labour Party and the Green Party among others.
[3] I make no bones of my affiliation with and advocacy for Campaign for UCU Democracy (CUCUD), a group whose members are committed to serving and representing the broad membership and using an evidence base – e.g. through surveys and e-consultation as well as meetings – for union deliberation. I am also a supporter of UCU Commons and any independents who aim to serve and reflect the broad membership of the union. Commons share a similar view of union democracy to CUCUD, but lay particular emphasis on equality issues, especially with respect to trans rights. My critique of UCU Left, and some members of the independent left, concerns their tendency to focus on a narrow band of activist views typically presented in meetings (whether in a branch, committee or at UCU’s annual Congress), and to dismiss mechanisms like surveys and e-consultations which allow us to listen to the broad membership.
Below is the text of an email sent out earlier this week to many FE branches in England – you lucky, lucky people in Scotland and Wales are well out of this particular fiasco. Not all the signatories are (can you be a member of a faction lite?) aligned with UCUD but we all stand together in the face of some ‘challenging’ decisions made by the FEC.
UCULeft dominates the FEC at the moment and the strategies outlined by Adam Ozanne and John Kelly in this document The Trotskyist Politics of ucu Left are on full display in some of the recent decisions taken by the FEC.
We have fought this battle before; national bargaining would be brilliant but striking to that end is impractical and in all probability illegal!
Have a read and then for the love of God vote in these elections – Feb 2024!
We are writing to you as current members of UCU’s UK Further Education Committee (FEC), as FE candidates in the current National Executive Committee (NEC) elections, as activists and reps. We need your help to win.
The issue we face is not about personalities or political purity, is not about fine words and fancy speeches, the motion we ask you to pass is about the application of common sense – what is trade unionism if it is not about practical and common-sense ways to improve our working conditions? We need a way forward that will work and not just appeal to our need to do ‘something’. We need strategy and focus and crucially we need to be clever to win. But most of all this is about logical arguments.
Background
At the FEC meeting last Friday, 2 February, it was decided by the UCU Left (UCUL) majority to move to a national aggregated ballot in England before the summer break and to commence strike action in September over three demands (pay, workload and binding national bargaining).
UCUL FEC members ignored advice from senior officials as to legal risks involved, failed to consider branch exclusion criteria, and dismissed a comprehensive committee report laying out a clear and coherent FE strategy. A detailed summary of the issues described is attached.
Consequences
There are potential serious consequences to these FEC decisions, branches with low membership, low capacity, and low support for strike action will all be balloted. UCU will be forced to disclose low membership density and low support for the strike to those employers. This will set back UCU organising efforts in FE and damage UCU’s leverage and power in the FE sector.
These FEC decisions go directly against decisions taken, by you, at the Special FE Sector Conference (SFESC) in April 2023, which had the biggest ever spread of FE delegates. It was agreed that members and branches must be consulted before a move to an aggregate ballot, and to maintain the maximum degree of branch autonomy in national campaigns.
We now urgently need a fresh SFESC, as soon as possible, to review the decisions made at FEC and to debate and agree a strategy for FE. And for that we will need your support.
Call to action:
The arguments are clear. In UCU we employ experts, people with legal knowledge and years of practical experience. Their advice is clear: listen to it. UCUleft too often rush in with passion and rhetoric and this results in confusion and setbacks. We want to win.
Help us win by holding a quorate branch meeting of your members ASAP with a view to requisitioning a special sector conference. This is our sector and we do not want a small group taking our members into something they are not ready for.
We attach a model branch motion to be discussed and hopefully passed at the meeting. Do get in touch if you want us to come and address the meeting and use the detailed report attached as needed.
Once we have 20 FE branches officially requisitioning a Special FE sector conference, it will be scheduled, and we can debate these key issues together.
This means that the branch meeting needs to be held by Thu 29th February at the latest.
As outlined in the report to FEC, the UCU demand for binding national bargaining is one which will take several years to achieve. It will require much greater levels of support from members and branches, targeted organising work, building upon the success of the Respect FE campaign model used for the past few years.
We are not giving up on national bargaining – far from it. The motion is simply asking for time to build for success. We want to win an aggregate ballot, not rush into one which will undermine our ability to achieve meaningful sectoral bargaining. Help us to win.
Helen Kelsall – UCU FEC
Chair Trafford and Stockport College Group
I’ve only included my name as I haven’t had to time to check with others
This is the motion we are asking branches to pass
Requisition of an online Special FESC
This branch notes:
1. The willingness of members to fight on pay, workloads, and national bargaining.
2. The success of the Respect FE strategy coordinating branches in dispute.
3. This branch’s willingness to campaign and take action in support of national and local demands.
4. The new FEC strategy of ‘levelling up the sector’ and move to a national aggregate ballot.
5. The lack of debate of, detail and branch involvement in, that strategy.
This branch believes:
1. Branches are essential to the proper functioning of UCU democracy and decision making.
2. Strategy should be debated and democratically agreed by branches.
3. A Special FESC is needed as soon as possible.
This branch resolves:
To requisition a Special FESC under rule 16.11, online, to debate FEC’s ‘levelling up the
sector’ strategy and decide next steps, including whether to move to an aggregate ballot.
143 words
We also provided this document to give additional information:
WHAT HAPPENED AT THE SPECIAL FEC MEETING FRIDAY 2 FEBRUARY 2024
Motion and amendments from UCU Left faction carried – national aggregated ballot before the summer break and strike action in September over three demands (Pay, workload and binding national bargaining).
Legal Advice Ignored
FEC majority (UCU Left faction) ignored advice from senior lay officers and officials as to legal risks involved:
UCU has not organised an aggregate ballot on national binding negotiating agreement before.
Initial advice is it will be illegal to have an aggregate ballot on what FEC wants.
Can’t have a dispute with AoC, DfE or UK government.
Disputes must be with each employer.
Need specific advice on grounds of dispute.
Open to challenge by employers saying we’ve met some of your demands.
If get it wrong the whole ballot is in danger.
Plans are Unclear
FEC majority (UCU Left faction) did not confirm branch exclusion criteria.
FEC majority (UCU Left faction) did not confirm any way to test support for an aggregate ballot with members before calling it despite 2023 special FE sector conference (SFESC) policy:
Motion 3 resolved a consultation of members before moving to an aggregate ballot.
Motion 4 resolved a consultation of branches and members before moving away from Respect FE.
Motion 5 resolved no aggregated ballot until the above campaign has been given sufficient time and resources to achieve its aim, a minimum of at least 1 year and this decision has been put to a sector conference.
Motion 7 resolved the maximum degree of branch autonomy in national campaigns.
FEC majority (UCU Left faction) did not agree to call a SFESC in 2024 to debate and agree the new strategy.
Advice from Head of FE Ignored
In his report, the Head of FE recommended to FEC they call a Special FESC in April 2024 to debate either a New Deal for FE or levelling up the Sector. By majority the FEC voted against calling a SFESC to debate either strategy. This runs counter to Special FESC policy from April 2023.
UCU Head of FE recommendations (except 4) fell. Recommendations in Head of FE report is a summary of a larger strategy document which builds on existing Respect FE campaign, policy, feedback from branches, and the recent FE reps survey. Key themes from FE reps survey were:
Reps consider it very important UCU builds branch capacity, recruitment, and density.
Regarding the prioritisation of the three-core industrial and campaign demands, reps prioritized:
Workload
Pay
National Bargaining
Regarding how close the union is to winning on the core demands, it’s an even split, with only a minority of reps saying we near securing the demands.
There is very strong support for branch autonomy and the capacity to make local deals.
On the question of how members (in the coming pay round) are likely to react to pay offers similar to this year, 60% say their members will accept.
Regarding confidence levels of winning an aggregate ballot on national bargaining, it’s split with no clear majority either way.
The Head of FE reported that analysis from branch feedback, the reps survey and the two sector conferences in 2023 indicate approximately 40 branches want to move to an aggregate ballot at this time. There are approx. 220 colleges in England and 150 members of the AoC. 32 branches were successful in beating the 50% ballot threshold in autumn 2023. There is no critical mass of branches at this time.
IMPACT
FEC majority (UCU Left faction) decided on a major change to the strategy (aggregate ballot, no exclusions, no consultation with members) against advice from senior lay officers, officials; previous policy; and FE reps survey feedback.
FEC majority (UCU Left faction) changed the campaign name from the well-known ‘Respect FE” to the slogan-heavy ‘levelling up the sector: leave no one behind’.
If implemented, this new untested strategy, would prevent FE branches from negotiating and settling pay and conditions deals locally with their employers in 2024/25. All branches would be forced into a single national dispute with no exit strategy set out. The FEC would then decide on the running of the dispute and settlement instead of branches and members contrary to policy. This is a top-down approach instead of a member-led approach.
There has been no branch involvement in the decision to call for a new strategy and aggregate ballot in 2024. There has been a complete lack of debate and a lack of detail on the new strategy.
Branches with low membership, low capacity, and low support for strike action will still be balloted, with UCU forced to disclose low membership density and low support for the strike to those employers. This will set back UCU organising efforts in FE and damage UCU’s leverage and power in the FE sector.
UCU would have lost a national aggregate ballot in 2023 based on recent ballot figures for the 2023/24 campaign, despite more central union resourcing than ever before dedicated to it.
Including all branches in a 2024 national aggregate ballot, and not running any consultation with members, makes it even more likely UCU would lose this aggregate ballot and set back the progress made by UCU.
KEEP CURRENT STRATEGY
The UCU demand for binding national bargaining is one which will take several years to achieve for the reasons set out in the Head of FE strategy document. It will require much greater levels of support from members and branches, targeted organising work, building upon the success of the respect FE campaign model used for the past few years. It will also require a flexible approach, in line with policy, to enable branches to continue to negotiate and deliver deals for their members locally in the meantime.
The Respect FE campaign has worked and gets stronger and larger every year. Members are willing to campaign, and take action on pay, workloads and national bargaining based on national and local demands. The alternative is not giving up on national bargaining, it is simply asking for time to build to make it successful. We want to win an aggregate ballot when we hold one, not just posture about it in a way that will undermine our ability to achieve it.
HEAD OF FE STRATEGY DOCUMENT SUMMARY
This paper sets out the basis for a New Deal for FE. The New Deal brings together an industrial, political, organising and comms strategy, it builds on the experiences of Respect FE and the many local successful campaigns in the past few years.
The New Deal has branches at its heart and is built on developing a joined-up strategy that will take the union forward to maximise the opportunities for winning an aggregate ballot over the next two years. The aim is to put UCU into a position where we are confident that there is a high prospect of success and fundamental change.
Politically, the current divisive UK government has run out of ideas and the mood in the country is one of change. Labour has the most realistic prospect of winning a House of Commons majority and securing our campaign objectives of a New Deal for FE. We will influence their manifesto and present a cogent case for supporting fundamental change in FE. That starts with closing the pay gap with teachers, a minimum national starting salary of £30K, simplifying and increasing FE funding, and looking closely at an existing post 16 national agreements like the Red Book in sixth form. Fully funded and binding national bargaining is the aim of this political work.
Our industrial demands resonant, are relevant and are the basis on which members can unite and the union can build. However, we must recognise that members want to address years of pay austerity and unmanageable workloads as a priority. We know also that the AoC is fickle and relatively powerless. We need to force sufficient numbers of employers to enable the change that’s needed at national level and that will not be via the AoC or the NJF in its current form.
The union in FE is building and going from strength to strength but we have not developed, aligned, or embedded a strategy that can win.
Our organisational capacity at branch level is not consistent. Our membership peaks and troughs and is widely spread. Our rep’s network is variable. We need to implement a growth plan for more reps, more training and development, more members, more density and more local campaigning and wins.
We need a road map to national bargaining that goes at the pace a significant majority of branches can move at and which joins up the various strands that make up a New Deal for FE. Analysis of voting patterns at FE sector conferences, feedback from branch briefings and the recent FE reps survey, indicate there are currently around 40 branches that support a move to an aggregate ballot on national bargaining now. By any objective indicator that is not sufficient to secure the union’s strategic ambitions. But it is a good place to start.
There are unavoidable legal challenges in establishing a national aggregate ballot on binding national bargaining. We can’t have a dispute with the UK government, the DfE or the AoC. The grounds of the dispute will need to be legally tight and the demands on the employer’s deliverable and not subject to successful challenge. Getting this wrong will take us backwards.
My view is that the union is not currently able to move to a national aggregate ballot with a realistic prospect of success. Doing so too soon will undermine rather than improve our chances of securing fundamental change. We need to build and articulate a new strategy based around a New Deal for FE.
I recommend FEC calls a Special FESC at the end of April/beginning of May to consider branch feedback and build the New Deal for FE strategy and campaign.
REPS’ SURVEY SUMMARY RESULTS
Reps consider it very important UCU builds branch capacity, recruitment, and density.
Regarding the prioritisation of the three-core industrial and campaign demands, reps prioritised:
Workload
Pay
National Bargaining
Regarding how close the union is to winning on the core demands, it’s an even split, with only a minority of reps saying we near securing the demands.
There is very strong support for branch autonomy and the capacity to make local deals.
On the question of how members in the coming pay round are likely to react to pay offers similar to this year, 60% say their members will accept.
Regarding confidence levels of winning an aggregate ballot on national bargaining, it’s split with no clear majority either way.
NEXT STEPS
Branches are essential to the proper functioning of UCU democracy and decision making.
We need a member-led, bottom up, organising approach and branches must demand to be consulted and make the final decisions on strategy.
Strategy should be debated and democratically agreed by branches.
A special FE Sector Conference must take place as soon as possible.