Ford machinists’ strike, 1968: an inspiring demand for women’s rights

Posted on June 6, 2008
Filed Under Employment Work, London, Opinion Comment, WLM / Feminist History | Comments Off

In 1968 Rose Boland, the leading steward in the Ford machinists’ strike was interviewed for Socialist Worker by Sabby Sagall. Here he recalls the importance of the dispute and we reprint an edited version of the interview.

Some 850 women sewing-machinsts at Ford Dagenham in east London struck against sex discrimination in their job grading on 7 June 1968.

The strike gave a huge impetus to the women’s movement and gave rise to the National Joint Action Campaign for Women’s Equal Rights.

In the years that followed, women’s trade union membership soared.

The Ford women had been placed in the unskilled B grade although they did the same work – making car seat-covers – as men placed in the semi-skilled C grade. The women, moreover, were paid 87 percent of the male rate.

The strikers were soon joined by the women at Ford’s Halewood in Merseyside.

The three week strike brought Ford’s entire car production to a standstill.

Such was the impact of the action that in the middle of it, the strike committee was invited to tea by Barbara Castle, employment secretary in Harold Wilson’s Labour government.

And the women’s confidence had grown so much that during the meeting Rose Boland raised the issue of equal pay for the first time.

The Ford women won 92 percent of the men’s rate, though it took another 16 years to win the regrading.

The strike ignited a spark that lit a flame that burns to this day. Their struggle remains an inspiration to millions of women fighting discrimination and poor working conditions.


Do you see the struggle for C grade as a struggle against sex discrimination?

To what extent are the women prepared to fight for recognition of their skills? Will they go on strike to achieve equal pay?

Why do you think women are discriminated against?

Do you think there was government pressure on the court of inquiry not to grant recognition of your skills?

Do you feel you are giving a lead to the millions of other underprivileged women?

Do you think the working class should vote Conservative in the next election or try and create a new alternative?

http://www.socialistworker.co.uk/art.php?id=15057

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