A growing campaign to stop outsourcing suggests solidarity isn't dead after all.

Under the surface, something is happening in the trade union movement.

On Tuesday, over a hundred workers working at the University of London – but who are technically employed through facilities management company Cordant Security – went on strike. They chanted, marched and danced outside UoL’s Senate House to demand they are taken back in house.

The largely migrant workforce – including many from Latin America – say they receive worse pensions, holiday pay and sick pay entitlements than their in-house colleagues.

But unlike most migrant workers, they are members of the Independent Workers of Great Britain, a small insurgent union that is starting to organise those previously thought ‘unorganisable’ by many larger unions.

They are being supported not just by students, but by those in workplaces that at first glance seem very different: art-house cinema staff, McDonald’s workers and Uber drivers.

What brings them together is the precarity that often disproportionately hits migrant workers and young people across the gig and service economies.

Yaseen Aslam is a member of the IWGB’s drivers’ branch, who took Uber to court last October over drivers’ employment status – and won.

Around 15 Uber drivers were at the protest to show their support to the outsourced workers. I asked Aslam why they were supporting the action:

““We talk about exploitation in developing countries but it’s here [too]. “This [outsourcing] should be happening. We’ve got the same issues, and we’re still not getting our rights. “There are many ways to fight a campaign – we need to lobby and protest.”

Indeed, on the same day, the union filed a landmark case to extend trade union rights of outsourced workers. If they win, they will be allowed to bargain and negotiate with the de facto employer: in this case the University of London.

Shen Batmaz, who took part in the UK’s first ever McDonald’s strike in September, addressed the crowd:

“We have message: we deserve better. “It’s not just the cleaners here. It’s workers across the country, in every strike that’s going on at the moment. “These workers are coming together to say we want stability in our lives. “Labour are promising that, but we can’t wait for another election.”

Obi, a cinema worker at Hackney Picturehouse, where staff are demanding a real Living Wage and union recognition, also spoke:

“These workers are the front-line of the trade union movement. When the big unions have given up on them, they are expressing their militancy. “And when these workers win this dispute, it means all workers can win. “We are all part of the same fight – the fight against racism, and the fight against exploitation.”

Liz, at UoL worker on strike, told LFF: “We here to stand up for all workers, and we’re going to win.”

It was a common message. All the speakers finished with this line: “Hasta la victoria siempre.” Ever onwards to victory. With this kind of solidarity – something many thought was long gone – they might well be heading that way.

Josiah Mortimer is Editor of Left Foot Forward. Follow him on Twitter

See also: McDonald’s workers are going back on strike – and this time it will spread

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