Whiskers
It's a small world
- Joined
- 21 August 2007
- Posts
- 3,266
- Reactions
- 1
Whiskers, given that you are so disapproving of Mr Joyce's actions, how exactly would you suggest he could have resolved the situation?
The short answer (as Eager has suggested), take the EBA dispute to FWA himself ages ago and accept the umpires decision.
If the unions demand for 'job security' as per the Qantas sale act was/is so 'unreasonable' he surely would have succeeded in getting a ruling in his favor.
But, I think he knew he would not succeed, just as he knew he would not succeed taking action under s424 himself.
But, isn't the big picture about Qantas allegedly circumventing the intentions at least, if not the strict interpretation of the Qantas Sale Act (and maybe other laws) to offshore more operations and wanting to get rid of the Qantas sale act or significant parts of it to be abe to operate more from cheaper offshore bases... and an upcoming BILL to change the Qantas Sale Act to 'specify' that most of the heavy maintenance, flight operations and training be retained in Aus?
If he wants to change FWA and the law under which he is governed, then he'd be better off doing some lobbying (to which the appearance of Franklin on the share register may be an indication) and biding his time until a change of government, if he thought the opposition would be more sympathetic to his cause.
The bottom line of his shutting out the unions, grounding the fleet and forcing the gov to act under s424 is that;
- he was forced by FWA to lift his lockout before any union employees lost pay or retracted what he said was unreasonable demands.
- the estimated cost of the lockout is going much higher than he predicted, via the ACCC warning to completely compensate passengers for missed connections and tours etc.
- he has the gov and some inductry groups off side for the particularly bad timing of the lockout in terms of CHOGM, the Melbourne Cup etc.
- But most importantly, the whole dispute is back in FWA where he could have taken it himself ages ago, but for his strategy hoping to, but failing to have those so called 'unreasonable' union demands about job security as per the Qantas Sale Act beaten away.