dublin |
worker & community struggles and protests |
event notice
Thursday April 23, 2009 14:37
by Des Derwin - Dublin Council of Trade Unions
healthcampaign at gmail dot com
Mandela House, 44, Lower Gardiner Street, Dublin, 1.
May Day on 9th May
Dublin Council of Trade Unions
May Day March 2009
ORGANISE TO DEFEND!
No to pay, health, education and social welfare cuts
Tax the wealthy
Organise all workers into trade unions now
Assemble 2.00 p.m. Saturday 9th May 2009
Garden of Remembrance
Parnell Square
Dublin, 1
Trade union speakers
March with your trade union or community organisation
Bring your banners
by Worker
Thu Apr 23, 2009 15:51
Might make the mayday march a bit better than what it has become,a drab colelction of aging bureaucrats.
by mickb
Fri Apr 24, 2009 15:40
Looks like a good leaflet Des . I'd like to see indymedia have a presence on the march this year .
by Steodonn
Sun Apr 26, 2009 22:03
Remember the crimes of ICTU. With these at the helm our objectives will never be completed . This Mayday should be one for a change of the trade union movement in Ireland is run.
SAY NO TO ICTU
SAY NO TO SELLOUTS
by D_D - DCTU
Mon Apr 27, 2009 12:56
F*&$!! Bad clash of the ash. I'll be in touch and also raise this at our end. Not the fault of the first march.
We can work it out.
DD
by Traditionalist
Fri May 01, 2009 11:09
...should this march not be held on May Day? I know the unions are slow to respond to events, but in this case they've had a good bit of notice. About a century, in fact!
by Godot
Fri May 01, 2009 13:15
The 'May Day' events in the Republic were pushed back by a week to accommodate people who wished to travel to Belfast for their 'festivities'. It's a ridiculous decision.
by Say no to drugs.
Fri May 01, 2009 14:33
Yes, the "legalise cannabis march" is SO much more important that workers rights. People's right to get stoned definitely supersedes that of decent pay for housing, food, and so on. Which one will you be at? I know where I'll be.
by benny
Fri May 01, 2009 14:42
Mayday is an international distress signal. It is appropriate to the Irish scene. Year after year the parades are poorly attended and the speeches through megaphones are uninspiring regurgitations of the same stuff. Look to the continent, where Mayday parades are huge, with lots of banners, street theatre, floats (!) and lively music. You get occasional running battles with the police some places - but that's another story.
Irish Mayday parades are dreary and poorly supported. Most trade unionists prefer to stay at home, go to sports events or go on day trips.
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