Labour backbenchers vow Cadbury action
Dec 17 2009 by Jonathan Walker, Birmingham Mail
LABOUR backbenchers have warned the Government they will step up demands for action to prevent a foreign buying axing jobs at Cadbury, if ministers fail to intervene.
Gordon Brown and Business Secretary Peter Mandelson have issued a series of strong warnings to any potential buyer who tries to “asset strip” the Birmingham-based chocolate maker. But they have also insisted there is nothing they can do to prevent a sale.
Jim Cunningham (Coventry South), chair of the West Midlands Parliamentary Labour Party, warned that this was not enough, as he met a delegation from trade union Unite.
He said: “Depending on what the Government does, we will take the campaign forward. Lord Mandelson has met Unite, but we now want to speak to him ourselves. Our response will depend on what he has to say.” A delegation of seven Unite shop stewards representing workers from Cadbury plants in Dublin, Herefordshire and Somerset as well as Birmingham held a meeting with Lord Mandelson in his Whitehall offices yesterday.
As well as presenting Lord Mandelson with a box of Cadbury Fruit and Nut bars, they demanded reforms to takeover regulations making it harder for foreign buyers to acquire British firms.
In a statement released after the meeting, the Department for Business said Lord Mandelson had made it clear he was acutely aware of the strength of feelings generated by the takeover bid. He said Cadbury was a major UK company and it was important that any acquirer of Cadbury respect the company’s heritage and workforce. However, the Business Secretary had stressed that he had no statutory power to intervene in this case.
Unite, which fears British jobs could be axed if Kraft is successful, says that the takeover bid is funded partly by state-owned bank Royal Bank of Scotland.
RBS, which is 84 per cent owned by taxpayers, is one of nine banks lending Kraft up to £5.5 billion in total.
Jenni Formby, Unite’s National Secretary for the Food and Drink Sector, said: “We expect a state-owned bank to be more accountable to taxpayers. It should not be funding a bid that could have a serious impact on jobs in the UK.”