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Labour and the unions: a relationship worth saving?
The Labour Party, under the control of its right wing, has long sought to be free of its link to the unions — should the left still be fighting this, or looking at extraparliamenarry routes to working-class influence, ask NICK WRIGHT
Chancellor James Callaghan, then PM Harold Wilson and assistant general secretary of the TUC Vic Feather watch the Durham Miners’ Gala in 1967

IT’S COMPLICATED. All relationships are. But the partnership for life between the trade unions — the working-class organisations that created the Labour Party — and the party itself has entered a new stage in which some, on both left and right, are questioning whether that relationship in its present form can survive.

On the right of the party — in Parliament and in the party apparatus — there is a clear sense that the powerful presence of trade unions in decision-making, candidate selection and policy formation now represents a threat to its 21st century project to decouple Labour from a politically engaged working-class movement and  permanently occupy the centre ground.

Over a century, with occasional interruptions, Labour’s leaders enjoyed a comfortable relationship with right-wing union leaders who were content to allow the parliamentary party to determine policies.

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