(10 years, 10 months ago)
Commons ChamberMy hon. Friend may not recall that at that time a number of employers’ organisations, including Aims of Industry, were trying to influence industrial relations.
I thank my hon. Friend for that intervention.
So we have evidence that the Government and the security services were working closely with television production companies, newspapers and secretive organisations that were the forerunners of today’s blacklisters to produce propaganda to discredit trade unionists. The present Government posted a response to the e-petition on the website, claiming that the withholding of the information was due to an “intelligence and security instrument”. Why? This was a strike organised by building workers 40 years ago with the aim of improving their pay and conditions of work.
If Members want to know the thinking of industrialists at the time, they should read Lord McAlpine’s book “The Servant”. He wrote that the servant
“must have his own network of informants and men who will assist him. The servant must always know how to use the network of the State.
Dealing in deceit, as the servant must, great caution must be required. Avoid small deceits: like barnacles on the bottom of a ship, they build in the minds of people whom you may need to convince in a large deceit”.
What greater deceit can Members imagine than depriving those young men of their freedom and liberty?
The Stasi published their files after the Berlin wall came down in 1989. I think that we can publish ours now.