In 1968 a group of some 180 women machinists in the Ford Factory in Dagenham, a London suburb, defied the fiercely male entrenched society at the time and did the unheard of thing by going out on strike and demanding equal pay. Lined up against them were Trade Union Officials that cozied up to Management, Labour Prime Minister Harold Wilson who was not wanting to alienate a big corporate employer, the powerful might of Ford itself, and worse of all, the women’s own husbands who, like most of the town, were also Ford employees. But thanks to an unlikely naïve but passionate heroine forced into the limelight as their shop steward whi even managed to sway the formidable Barbara Castle the UK's first female Employment Minister, they won their case.
'RITA' in her BIBA dress |
R.T.V. I read recently the Brits produce two genres of movies very well viz. Period Pieces and Blue Collar (working-class) Dramas. This one is a superb example of both.
P.S. In 197O the UK went on to introduce the Equal Pay Act and Ford and all the other corporations had to change their working practices. BUT that was then, and this is now. Last month a Republican filibuster in the Senate prevented the success of the Paycheck Families Act which would have strengthen equal pay right, so some things never change.
★★★★★★★★