Labor Movement
US Perspectives 2006 - The Labor Movement
Saturday, 24 June 2006 18:01
The pendulum of the class struggle,
which has been swinging mercilessly against working people for the past
twenty-five years, is starting to swing the other way, with the beginnings
of a fight back by the working class. The period we have entered may
well be far more similar to the turbulent 1930s than the relatively
stable post-war period. It is important to keep this in mind when analyzing
the processes developing within U.S. society. A sharpening of the class
struggle in the United States is on the order of the day, and this will
be increasingly expressed through the trade unions and the Labor Movement
in general.
Over the past year there has
been a changing mood within the Labor Movement. This is a reflection
of the shift to the left taking place internationally, which is itself
the result of the crisis of capitalism and the vicious attacks on working
people around the world. The pace and intensity of events is accelerating
in one country after another. After nearly three decades of a bosses’
offensive against the working class, of betrayals by the trade union
leadership, as well as a general fall in wages and living conditions,
the rank and file of the Labor Movement is showing the first signs of
a serious reawakening. The reaction against decades of class collaboration
and business unionism is steadily gaining momentum.
In the last few months we have
witnessed a number of important struggles and movements of the rank
and file, largely unprecedented in the 25 years since the demoralizing
and crushing defeat of the PATCO strike. Foremost among these have been
the New York transit strike and the rank and file movement issuing out
of the UAW, the Soldiers of Solidarity.
The New York Transit strike was an opening shot in this process. The strike involved 33,000 workers and brought the nation’s largest transit system to a halt (TWU workers move 7 million people around the NY metro area every day). This was the first strike of NY TWU since 1980, when they struck for 11 days. Pay, health, and retirement benefits were the main points of contention. The attacks by the municipal administration of billionaire Mayor Michael Bloomberg against the TWU were meant as a battering ram against the entire labor movement. Declaring it an “illegal” strike, the authorities threatened stiff fines, court actions, and layoffs. They aimed at nothing less than invalidating the unions’ fundamental right to bargain collectively.
In the face of these threats,
the rank and file transit workers refused to be cowed and went on strike
anyway. But despite the solid strike action and a decent measure of
support from the public, the International leadership of the TWU intervened
and put heavy pressure on the local leadership to call off the strike
and return to negotiations with the Metropolitan Transit Authority.
This 11th
hour betrayal by the “leadership”
undermined what could have been an important victory. Nonetheless, the
TWU strike shows the discontent and fighting spirit that is growing
within the rank and file of the labor movement. It also highlights the
bitter character of industrial disputes in the next period, as the bosses
and the state mobilize their entire might to defeat the workers. But
given a far-sighted, incorruptible, and accountable rank and file leadership,
the potential for big victories of the labor movement is in the cards
in the coming period.
In this regard, the Soldiers
of Solidarity (SOS) movement is of particular importance. The SOS offers
a first glimpse of the militant and democratic organizing capacity of
the rank and file, and shows how a real struggle for workers’ rights
can be waged starting at the shop floor. It shows that we don’t have
to wait to be sold-out by our union “leaders”, and points the way
forward to industrial and class-wide unity against the attacks being
suffered by all working people - at home and abroad.
The SOS movement first emerged
as a rank and file mobilization of Delphi workers who oppose the company’s
tactic of using bankruptcy proceedings to invalidate the union’s contract
and pensions. They also oppose the official union leadership’s unfortunate
policy of collaborating with the bosses instead of defending their members’
interests. While the struggle at Delphi against plant closures, layoffs,
and drastic cuts in wages and benefits remains the movement’s main
point of attack, the SOS has made a class-wide appeal that has begun
to get an echo not just in the UAW, but throughout the entire Labor
Movement. This has important implications for the class struggle in
the coming period.
The conservative inertia of
collaboration with the bosses that has been the primary feature of the
trade unions for the past 25 years is starting to come under the pressure
of the rank and file. Put simply, the rank and file is starting to stand
up and say, “No more concessions! Enough is enough!” By basing itself
on the rank and file and demanding militant and democratic action starting
at the point of production, the SOS are an important element in the
reinvigoration of the trade unions from below. The fighting outlook
of the SOS is summed up by Gregg Shotwell, one of their most active
members, as follows: “Workers’ Rights are not defined by Law or
Contract. Workers’ Rights are defined by Struggle. You
will Win what you are willing to Fight for. Nothing more, nothing
less.”
At present, the SOS itself
is a relatively amorphous and loosely-knit body based mostly within
the UAW locals representing Delphi workers. There are also “sister”
movements across the UAW, which although not going by the name Soldiers
of Solidarity, represent the same movement for rank and file democracy
and militancy. SOS supporters have emerged in other unions as well,
and on the basis of events, this growing ferment could spread quickly.
The slogan “Every Worker a Soldier of Solidarity!” has the potential
to unite all honest rank and file militants throughout the labor movement.
All workers should solidarize themselves with Soldiers of Solidarity:
what happens at Delphi will set the tone for the labor movement for
years to come. An injury to one is an injury to all!
For decades, the union bureaucracy
has stifled the internal atmosphere and pursued a policy of business
unionism almost unopposed. The history of the U.S. Labor Movement over
the last half-century has been a sorry litany of incremental concessions
and the erosion of the power of the trade unions. In times of industrial
“peace”, the working class tends to empty out of its mass organizations
and leave the business of defending their interests to the leadership.
During periods like this, a bureaucratic layer forms at the top of the
movement, which has a choking effect on the movement as a whole. This
is exactly what happened within the AFL-CIO during the 1950s, and the
bureaucracy has continued to control and stifle the trade unions to
this day.
This is a result of the policy
of “Labor-Management Partnership”, which extends to the political
arena as well. When faced with increasingly aggressive employers, those
that should be defending our interests and rights against the diametrically
opposed interests of the bosses instead offer “cooperation”. Many
of these people seem to be more interested in keeping their perks and
privileges than in fighting for the working class. If these career bureaucrats
had the interests of the rank and file at heart, the AFL-CIO today would
not be faced with a steep decline and a split.
The recent break up of the
AFL-CIO came as a shock to many trade unionists and activists. Over
one third of the federation’s 13 million members left. The Teamsters
and SEIU alone accounted for more than $20 million of the AFL-CIO’s
estimated $120 million annual budget. First and foremost, the split
is a reflection of the crisis facing the Labor Movement. Since Sweeney’s
election in 1995 the AFL-CIO has presided over a net loss of over 800,000
members. The policies of Sweeney and co. have already led to disaster,
and could eventually lead the AFL-CIO into oblivion. However the solution
cannot come from a permanent and bureaucratic split of the movement.
The working class needs maximum unity to take on the bosses. It
is positive that at the rank and file level, many trade unionists from
the rival federations continue to work together closely.
The split was not the result
of a mass upsurge of working class organization and militancy, nor the
result of a mass rank and file movement towards political class independence
and the formation of a political party by and for working people. On
the contrary, it was chiefly organized by a handful of union careerists
with little or no organization-wide discussion, nor any perspective
of increased democratic participation by the millions of rank and filers
that make up the unions. The new formation offers no new political perspective
and does not reject supporting the Democratic Party.
It is understandable and healthy
that millions of trade union members are frustrated by the long decline
in membership, and want more energy and resources poured into organizing.
But this vital work cannot be entrusted to this or that bureaucratic
clique. We need an honest, democratically-elected and accountable leadership
at the head of the movement that is ready and willing to fight in the
interests of the working class. The militant rank and file of the AFL-CIO
and Change to Win must fight to clean out the self-interested and careerist
mis-leadership currently dominating the movement. This is the
only way forward.
Starting with the Meaney leadership,
the AFL-CIO bureaucracy’s right-wing, which remains its dominant wing,
has maintained close ties to not only both of the bosses’ political
parties but with the highest levels of the Federal government as well,
notably the State Department and the CIA. But now the rank and file
is starting to return to an active role in the affairs of their own
mass organizations. History shows again and again that when the masses
begin to move into action, they turn first towards their traditional
mass organizations: the trade unions and the mass workers’ parties.
In the absence of a mass party
of labor, and despite the severe short-comings of the trade unions at
the present time, many workers are seeking to reclaim them as fighting
organs for defending their rights, wages, and conditions. With the rise
of the SOS, we can see the beginning of this process in the United States.
It is important to stress that while this process is still in its earliest
stages, it can accelerate quickly on the basis of events, and can and
must develop a political expression as well.
Economic struggles are of tremendous
importance, but the struggle must also be taken to the political plane.
So long as the courts and laws are controlled and written by the billionaires,
working people will be unable to fight back effectively. The need
to break with the Democrats and to build a mass party truly by and for
working people has never been greater. This idea is getting an
increasing echo among many working people, who can see that there is
no fundamental difference between the two billionaire’s parties.
While the AFL-CIO leadership loudly criticized NAFTA as an attack against
the workers of North America, they continued to give millions of dollars
and thousands of volunteers to the party responsible for this attack,
the Democrats.
Rising interest in an electoral
outlet for working people can be seen in South Carolina, where the Labor
Party (LP), which seemed doomed to wither on the vine – in part for
lack of participation in the electoral process - is fighting to get
on the ballot, and is receiving support from across the country.
So far, over 10,000 South Carolinians have signed a petition to get
the LP on the ballot with the full support of the state AFL-CIO. This
in a traditionally anti-union state. While it is impossible at this
stage to say what kind of results they will get in SC, or what kind
of effect this will have on national politics, this is an important
indicator of the mood in society. It is a development we must
follow closely and encourage. As the pace of events accelerates and
the trade union leadership is put under the pressure of the rank and
file we can only expect more developments of this sort.
The struggles of Venezuelan
workers offer important lessons for rank and file labor militants in
the U.S. The genesis and formation of the National Union of Workers
(UNT), a democratic and class-based trade union formation, out of the
ashes of the corrupt, bureaucratic, and anti-democratic Confederation
of Venezuelan Workers (CTV) is of particular interest. The movement
of factory occupations and workers’ control also offers important
lessons. Under the slogan of “Factory Closed, Factory Taken” several
important bankrupt firms in Venezuela have been nationalized and turned
over to “cogestion obrera” (workers’ co-management and control).
These nationalizations only took place after long and bitter struggles
and occupations by the workers themselves. Implicit in the SOS call
to “Work to Rule” is the vital question: “who actually runs the
factories?” We should not forget that the sit down strike, a form
of factory occupation, was invented in the United States and by the
autoworkers no less.
Capitalism can no longer play
a progressive role in developing the means of production. Cuts,
layoffs, and closures are the way the capitalists make profits now,
not investment. The bosses’ tactic of using the bankruptcy courts
to throw out union contracts and company pension plans is part of an
all-out effort to smash the power of the unions and drive wages down
to the lowest possible level. The airline and auto industries
in particular have come under this kind of attack, which pits the workers
against not only the boss, but also against the government and their
own trade union leadership.
In the past the capitalists
were able to buy off important layers of workers by giving them bigger
crumbs than the rest of the class. But now, even these formerly
privileged sectors are under attack, and in most cases, the trade union
leadership is nowhere to be seen, as they are guided by the principle
of collaborating with the bosses at the expense of the membership. The
consistent betrayals of the official leadership cannot be considered
as subjective phenomenon, particular to this or that leader or wing
of the movement. The class collaborationism of Sweeney, Hoffa and Stern
are not unique peculiarities or personality traits. Rather, it is as
an objective feature of trade unionism in the epoch of capitalist decay.
Only a conscious and organized
rank and file movement to rid the unions of these mis-leaders can turn
the unions back into fighting organizations that defend the interests
of working people against the bosses. In the final analysis what is
needed in order to reverse the long decline of trade unionism in the
U.S. is for the unions to engage in a real fight for improvements for
the membership, and then actually win this fight.
Developments in the labor movement
over the past year are an indication of what is to come as the class
struggle intensifies in the U.S. The colossal task of fighting
not only the bosses but also the government and the trade union mis-leaders
will require tremendous amounts of energy – revolutionary energy.
The movement against the bosses’ attacks, for the democratization
of the trade unions, for a mass party of labor, will inevitably run
against the limitations of the capitalist system.
Even in the wealthiest country on earth, there is no solution within the bounds of capitalism’s market economy and the nation state. Only an internationalist struggle for socialism can take the American working class, and with it, the whole of humanity, out of this blind alley. In every country on earth, working people must unite against the attacks of our common enemy: the exploiters that live off of our ability to labor. Millions of immigrant workers, many under threat of deportation for standing up for their rights, are showing the way forward.
Coming Soon: The Immigrant Rights Movement






