Derek
Robinson (born 1927) is a British trade unionist. Formerly a convenor and shop
steward within British Leyland for much of the 1970s, he was commonly known as
"Red Robbo" in the British press.
Robinson
began work in the motor industry as an apprentice at Austin in Longbridge during the Second World
War. He soon became a member of the Communist Party of Great Britain and the
Amalgamated Engineering Union (AEU), and stood as a Communist candidate in four
consecutive General Elections in Birmingham, Northfield between 1966 and 1974,
but lost his deposit on each occasion, only managing to receive over 1% of the
vote once, in 1966.
British
Leyland was the result of a series of mergers between different British motor
vehicle manufacturers. By 1975 Robinson was the union convener of the
Longbridge plant in Birmingham ,
having worked his way up from the shop floor to serve as the deputy of the
previous convenor, Dick Etheridge, a fellow member of the Communist Party. With his network of representatives in the 42
different Leyland plants around the country, he led a long-running campaign of
strikes around the company which he argued were in protest at mismanagement.
In 1975,
British Leyland became bankrupt and was nationalised by the Government. In 1977 a new managing
director, Sir Michael Edwardes, was appointed. He aimed to find a resolution to
the ongoing industrial disputes and turn the company around. Robinson, for his
part, supported the development of the policy of "participation", in
which convenors and stewards would work together with company management.
Robinson had seen the idea of "participation" as central both to his
political aims and to making British Leyland a success, stating: "If we
make Leyland successful, it will be a political victory. It will prove that
ordinary working people have got the intelligence and determination to run
industry".
During the
1970s, union organisation in British Leyland was split between the largely
Communist Party-oriented stewards under Etheridge, and later Robinson, at
Longbridge, and a smaller number of Trotskyist stewards based at the more
militant Cowley plant. Many of the individual workers, however, took a more
militant line than that espoused by the CP officials. An article by Frank
Hughes in Workers' Liberty
suggests that Robinson, by supporting the introduction of the measured day work
system in place of piecework and by encouraging the adoption of
"participation" in fact destroyed the relationship between stewards
and the shop floor and left them unable to control unofficial strikes.
The
filmmaker Ken Loach suggested that Robinson was unfairly smeared by the press
of the time; contrary to their depiction of him controlling strikes at will,
Loach claimed, he in fact spent much of his time attempting to prevent
unofficial strikes. This viewpoint was examined by Loach in part of an
(untransmitted) documentary film series, Questions of Leadership (1983).
Margaret Thatcher later described Robinson in her memoirs as a "notorious
agitator". Many years later,
Robinson commented "The pressures were immense but were it not for the
ideological understanding that I had, I could very well have ended up with a
nervous breakdown".
A 2002 BBC
documentary series by Peter Taylor revealed that in the late 1970s MI5 had been
attempting to undermine Robinson through an agent they had placed amongst his
union officials; Edwardes stated that he had been "privileged to read
minutes of meetings of the [...] joint committee of the Communist Party and our
shop stewards", which had been passed to him via the Government.
Robinson
was eventually sacked by BL in November 1979 for putting his name to a pamphlet
that criticised the BL management, and refusing to withdraw his name from the
pamphlet when asked to do so. A ballot on a strike in sympathy of Robinson and
opposed to the dismissal was held but the motion not carried, votes being
14,000 against a strike and only 600
in favour. Taylor 's
documentary suggested that this was a result of the MI5 agent's activity, with
Edwardes acknowledging that the removal of Robinson was in some ways necessary
for the company's preparations to bring the new Austin Metro into production.
Longbridge was being substantially redeveloped and expanded for the new car,
whose assembly was heavily automated in comparison to previous models and job
losses would have been inevitable: "It was planned only in the
sense...well, the answer is 'Yes', from a strategic point of view we knew that
we couldn’t have the Metro and him. Whether or not we wanted him to go, his
actions made it inevitable that he would have to go".
Robinson
worked as a tutor in trade union studies during the 1980s and 1990s, and was
national chair of the Communist Party of Britain for a period in the 1990s.