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Destroying the best of Britain

John Pilger

Published 08 May 2008

Watching Durham miners, defeated but unbowed by hunger and debt, march back to the pit in 1985, led by their women, was a glimpse of Britain at its best

When I first came to live in Britain, much of ordinary life was premised on a sense of community. It was mostly undeclared; occasionally, it would become vivid, even heroic. Watching Durham miners, defeated but unbowed by hunger and debt, march back to the pit in 1985, led by their women, was a glimpse of Britain at its best. In spite of Thatcher and Blair, that communal decency survives, though you may have to look for it. A good place to look is a local post office.

Local post offices, from the Highlands to the Pennines to the inner cities, are where precious parcels begin their epic journey to the other side of the world, and pensions, income support, child benefit and Incapacity Benefit are drawn, and Freedom Passes are issued, along with Lottery tickets and Mars Bars. I often walk down to my local post office just to browse, watching the kindness that Shailesh and Smita Patel hand out to the elderly, the awkward, the inarticulate, the harried. If an elderly person has failed to turn up on pension day, he or she will get a visit from Smita, with groceries. Smita has been doing this for most of 20 years.

Their post office, in Abbeville Road, Clapham, is one of 169 London branches due to close in May. That is a fifth of all post offices in the capital. Some 2,500 post offices are expected to be shut in Britain by the end of 2009. This includes rural and remote areas, where the post office is quite literally the heart of a community. The Patels in Abbeville Road have had just six weeks to mount a campaign. They have collected 4,500 signatures and packed a local church hall. My neighbours have little doubt about what will happen to "Abbeville Village" if the post office's shutters come down. A proposed betting shop is Lambeth Council's idea of community - or yet another estate agent.

The whole wilful destruction is a new Labour classic and shows why, in a nutshell, even the ever faithful have turned on them. Having already closed 6,000 post offices since it came to power in 1997, more than any other government, it issues press releases saying it wants to "help the Post Office modernise, restore profitability . . . invest in new products and look at innovative ways to deliver services". We know what this means. It was left to a member of the Scottish Parliament, Fergus Ewing, to say it: "Senior management are preparing the ground for a huge sell-off of the postal service."

Note the way they are doing it. For each branch marked for closure, the six-week "consultation process" is so "shrouded in secrecy", says Peter Luff, chairman of the Commons business, enterprise and regulatory reform committee, "that by the time it gets to a public consultation stage, the decision on a Post Office branch is a fait accompli". When Royal Mail managers faced a public meeting off Abbeville Road, they got their facts wrong about the services provided by the local branch, and they seemed to have no idea of its cost base. Neither could they explain why the alternatives were post offices themselves marked for closure. Their chief executive, Adam Crozier, is the man responsible for cancelling the second mail delivery and introducing inept "flexible" work practices that have demoralised what was once the most loyal workforce in the country. For this, he saw his pay package rise by 26 per cent to £1.25m last year. That is £1,000 for every hour and 27 minutes he is seated at his desk.

The "S-word" is subsidy. While new Labour is happy to subsidise Crozier's fortune, a failed bank, colonial bloodbaths in Iraq and Afghan istan and a culpably useless Trident nuclear weapon system costing up to £20bn, it refuses to subsidise a true public service that costs, in relative terms, peanuts.

On 19 March, just 20 Labour MPs voted against the government on a motion calling for a delay in closure of post offices. My local, Labour MP, Keith Hill, made a speech in which he called Abbeville Road post office a "lifeline of human contact". He also called it "one of that 30 per cent minority of profit-making, commercially viable post offices", which he compared favourably with those post offices providing only a public service. He was not against closing branches, he said, but it "makes no sense" if they made a profit. Charles Darwin would have understood the logic.

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9 comments from readers

greed n power
08 May 2008 at 12:53

I have a lot of time for J P's views...I like to add to the above, being from New Zealand where the globalisation experiment started, that I see that the 'new Labour' regimes in Britain and also in NZ are systematic in their approach to dismantle state owned enterprises.

The only reason for this can be to clear the market for multinational corperations to implement their dominion in our economies...

gcarth
08 May 2008 at 18:09

Politicians and parliament are becoming redundant: It is big business that runs the country and pulls the strings. Profits are considered paramount and both the Tories and Labour subscribe to this view - there is no such thing as Labour or Socialist anymore. We have Two Tory parties and a soft Tory party in the Lib dems. Therefore, anyone considering voting Tory at the next General Election because they want to see a change and an improvement in our affairs and an improvement in our communities, want their heads examining, quite frankly.

Logically the only way to stop the erosion of our public services is to curtail the private sector.

antileft
09 May 2008 at 04:26

"there is no such thing as Labour or Socialist anymore. We have Two Tory parties and a soft Tory party in the Lib dems.

This is true. Ah isnt it great- the only lefties are the hairy old fools like above who write for the NS.

"Logically the only way to stop the erosion of our public services is to curtail the private sector."

And yet, public services have improved in the last 10 years, as the private sector has got involved. How strange...

Broken Heart
09 May 2008 at 07:14

Why is the country waking up too late to save the Post Office SERVICE!

Why do the majority of the population think that only underused, non-viable post offices are being closed - at least until it happens to their branch!

At least CAPOC are trying to get the message out.

the guntz
09 May 2008 at 15:01

Community back in the mid Eighties? Here near Claphan (Stockwell) we even had public toilets! In late '88 Lambeth Council shut down half a dozen in one foul budget cutting swoop and many more have followed. And the Lambeth record to date remains absolutely abysmal.

http://www. recycledbogrollblues.blogspot.com

Post Offices are now threatened in the same way. At Camberwell Green the Post Office is just about up and running. It is the grottiest Post Office I have ever had to use - dirty, unkempt, unpleasant in the extreme to have to spend time in. It just about performs its valuable counter services functions. What it needs is re-decoration and general improvement. It wouldn't exist around Sloane Street in the pig-sty mode it does at Camberwell Green.

rajeeve
11 May 2008 at 07:51

John, everywhere it is the same. All the old public spaces where something of the human touch remained, starts getting closed and sold off to something or even anything far distant from the public.

antileft
11 May 2008 at 11:39

Oh Pilger why oh why do you stay in the country? Surely, youve got to one day bite the bullet and put your money where your mouth is? Move to Cuba, Pilger, like youve always wanted to. Become an (AHEM!) independent journalist there. Go on Pilger- youll be happier. And so will we.

ldopas
16 May 2008 at 17:46

Like antileft, I too wonder why you stay here John, in this wasteland of evil. Or as I see it a pretty fair and tolerant society, room for improvement, but better than most.

See while tears well up in my eyes for the picture you paint, I have one big issue (no pub intended!).

That is; I actually remember the 1970s. And I remember what a goshdarn pit this place was. Which incidentally helped neither capitalist or worker.

So my memories of actually living through these periods without blinkers, is we came out of pergatory in the 70s, had a very bumpy ride in the 80s to fix it.

And now arrive in 2008, not perfect, but with a stable economy that even a labour chancellor couldnt screw up for ten years. Until, that is, he became pm!

gajahmerah
03 June 2008 at 14:35

In the Netherlands the post office is already dead because TNT (the privatised postal company) and ING (the privatised bank) find it unprofitable. Instead they will provide postal and other 'social' counter services via news agents. I suppose the government pays them for that trouble. What's the problem with that?

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About the writer

John Pilger, renowned investigative journalist and documentary film-maker, is one of only two to have twice won British journalism's top award; his documentaries have won academy awards in both the UK and the US. In a New Statesman survey of the 50 heroes of our time, Pilger came fourth behind Aung San Suu Kyi and Nelson Mandela. "John Pilger," wrote Harold Pinter, "unearths, with steely attention facts, the filthy truth. I salute him."

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