TRAMWAY DISMISSALS
CASES IN CHRiSTCHURCH (By Telegraph—Press Association.) CHRISTCHURCH, This Day. The recent dismissal of three men from the traffic staff was mentioned at a meeting of the Tramway Board yesterday. The three men dismissed all belong to the group commonly described as "loyalist," in that they supported the Tramway Board as against the union in the tramway strike of 1932.
The report of the works and traffic committee simply mentioned that to deal with the surplus of men three men had been dismissed.
Mr. J. Mathison, who was president of the union at the time of th° strike and who is now a member of the board, said the board had had nothing to do with the selection of the three men for dismissal.
The chairman, the Rev. J. K. Archer, said the selection of the men had been left entirely to the management, which was instructed that the men were to be selected regardless of their attitude to the strike. '
"It rather amuses me to see how the Press gloats over .the word 'loyalist,' as if the men who remained on duty during the strike were loyal and those who went out were disloyal," said Mr. Archer. "To whom were they loyal and to whom were they disloyal? The first business of a working man in time of strike is to his fellow working men."
Mr. Archer added that he was against strikes in general if they could possibly be avoided, but if there had to be a strike he thought it should be a straight-out dispute between the employers and employed. He regarded as a traitor the working man who was not loyal to his fellows in such a time. If all the workers had been loyal to their class in 1932 there would have been neither the strike nor the troubles that had since arisen from it.
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Bibliographic details
Evening Post, Issue 20, 23 July 1935, Page 14
Word Count
311TRAMWAY DISMISSALS Evening Post, Issue 20, 23 July 1935, Page 14
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