Joe Higgins (Socialist Party)
candidate EU elections
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Joe Higgins
about this person Joe Higgins
Joe Higgins is a long time activist in the labour and trade union movement. Elected to Dublin County Council in 1991, he was a leading fighter against corrupt land rezoning in Dublin and for planning in the interests of communities rather than for speculators and major developers.



Joe Higgins was the Chair of the Federation of Dublin Anti Water Charges Campaign which won massive support and forced the Fine Gael/Labour Government to abolish water charges in December 1996. Minister for Social Welfare, Mary Hanafin, said last year that had abolition not happened, each household in Dublin would be currently paying €700 per year in water charges.



Joe Higgins was elected to the Dail in 1997 and for the next ten years was a leading opponent of the right wing policies of the Fianna Fail/Progressive Democrat Government. He frequently challenged the then Taoiseach, Bertie Ahern, on a wide range of issues including land speculation and profiteering in the housing market, Government support for the invasion and occupation of Iraq and in defence of workers’ rights.



In 2003 Joe Higgins was sent to Mountjoy Jail for a month over his opposition to Bin Tax, a new stealth tax on Dublin householders.



In 2005, with the Socialist Party, he exposed the horrific abuse of migrant workers by Gama Construction and struck a major blow against the ‘race to the bottom’ when that company was forced to pay unpaid wages of around €30million to its worker



Joe Higgins was a key Leader of the opposition to the Lisbon Treaty last year because it would facilitate further privatisation of crucial services like Health, push the militarisation of the EU, increase arms spending and institutionalise the right of bad employers to attack agreed wages and conditions for entire industries.
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Issue Lisbon Treaty
04.06.2009
By:

Is it true if the Lisbon treaty were to go true that there will be restrictions on workers right to strike.
answer sent by Joe Higgins
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05.06.2009
Joe Higgins
Hi Ruth ,

Thanks for your question. What the Lisbon Treaty does is to institutionalise the Charter of Fundamental Rights. This sounds impressive and is designed to be so. The Charter of Fundamental Rights makes clear, however, that the rights it endorses are subject to the Treaties of the EU. These treaties gives business the right to trade and make profits but put that right above the right of workers to maintain a decent negotiated wage and working conditions in any particular industry. Recent cases ruled on by the European Court of Justice such as the Laval case in Sweden and the Rufert case in Germany gave contractors the right to undercut agreed rates of pay in a particular industry. A strike therefore against an attempt to hire workers at rates below the going rate would, according to the ECJ, not be permitted. If rates of pay are fixed by legislation rather than negotiation in a member State, contractors would not be permitted to legally undercut them although in practice this happens all the time for example in the construction industry. We argued these points endlessly in the campign leading up to the Lisbon Treaty and will do so again.

sincerely, joe higgins
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