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Union warns Labour over funding Union warns Labour over funding
(21 minutes later)
The Labour Party's biggest financial backer trade union Unison has said it will no longer give financial support to MPs that do not support its values.The Labour Party's biggest financial backer trade union Unison has said it will no longer give financial support to MPs that do not support its values.
General Secretary Dave Prentis told union members it would not give any more "blank cheques" to the party.General Secretary Dave Prentis told union members it would not give any more "blank cheques" to the party.
He said Labour MPs and candidates at the next election who backed further privatisation of public services would have funding withdrawn.He said Labour MPs and candidates at the next election who backed further privatisation of public services would have funding withdrawn.
He said his union was "tired of feeding the hand that bites it".He said his union was "tired of feeding the hand that bites it".
Gordon Brown earlier tried to rally members of the GMB behind the party, saying the movement Labour had to "work together" to win the next election. Unison represents millions of workers in the NHS and across the public sector.
Union values
Gordon Brown earlier tried to rally members of the GMB behind the party, saying the Labour movement had to "work together" to win the next election.
Mr Prentis' comments represent a real threat to Labour in the run-up to a general election with many of its MPs reliant on union support to support.
Mr Prentis said the results of recent council and European elections showed a "real gap" had opened up between Labour and the working public, who he said were disgusted by the expenses scandal and threats to public sector jobs from government reforms.
Labour MPs who would not "stand up for the union's values" would no longer be bankrolled, he said.
Gordon Brown has tried to make Labour's record on public service investment a key plank of his fight back after his recent leadership troubles.
He told the GMB union that Labour faced an unprecedented fight to protect public services from a Conservative government committed to cutting spending.
However, MPs on the left of the Labour party, led by John McDonnell, have threatened to put forward their own manifestos at the next election if the leadership refuses to adopt its policies.
The Campaign Group of MPs wants union rights increased and an end to privatisation of the public services.
Mr McDonnell said: "I welcome Dave Prentis's speech today at Unison conference. It is an indication of the revulsion within rank-and-file trade unionists at the government policies of privatisation.
"We will be seeking a meeting with Mr Prentis about his support for the 'change campaign' within Labour and how we can mobilise for the policies we all want from a Labour government."
The government's plan to part-privatise Royal Mail, now under serious doubt, is likely to become a litmus test of union support for Mr Brown's leadership.