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Socialist Action / July
1998
Flint UAW Strikers Remember Their History and are
Armed!
By Nat Weinstein
The strike by two United Auto Workers (UAW) locals in
Flint is on its way to shutting down all General Motors (GM)
plants in the US and much of Canada in response to the
company's spending billions of dollars on factories in
developing countries and defaulting on its promise to invest
in aging American factories. Moreover, GM is demanding
further concession from the union, leading to further
massive reductions in jobs.
It's much more than merely another local strike. The
adversaries are headed toward a major test of strength, if
not immediately, then by the time of the expiration of the
union's national contract with GM next year. In such major
conflicts, either workers or their employers will come out
stronger and with a stronger hand in future conflicts
between labor and capital. Even a modest victory by the UAW
over GM will have far-reaching positive consequences for the
working class as a whole, and vice versa.
On June 25th it was reported that the Flint strike had so
far idled 147,900 production workers, including 10,400 in
Mexico, nearly half of GM's North American work force. It
was also reported that GM had toughened its stance by
threatening legal action in the courts in support of the
company's demand that the Flint strike be declared illegal
and brought to a halt. GM also declared that it would
initiate action to block payment by states of unemployment
benefits to laid off workers.
GM further declared its intention to force the union into
arbitration. Arbitration imposed on unions in such
circumstances tend to result in concessions to the employer
they could not otherwise gain. Even if unrealized, GM's
demands are designed to get the government's help in turning
public opinion against the UAW in preparation for an
inevitable showdown.
GM sent these demands to Richard Shoemaker, the UAW
officer in charge of negotiations with the giant auto
corporation and gave the union 48 hours to respond. This
toughened stance by the giant auto corporation is the result
of the pain inflicted by the loss of an estimated $75
million each day the strike lasts. It also serves as
political preparation for the longer-range offensive by
capital against labor, sure to follow this strike.
Whether or not this strike leads to a decisive outcome
one way or the other, the fact that well over 200,000 UAW
members employed by GM are demonstrating enthusiastic
support for the 9,200 auto workers in the two struck Flint
parts plants is of the greatest significance. Also
significant is the uninterrupted horn-honking support to
picket lines by passing motorists.
It reflects their understanding that the steady
disappearance of "good jobs" in the auto industry and
elsewhere, means that many of the sons and daughters of
working people can look forward to a future as minimum-wage
hamburger flippers and other poverty level jobs, or no jobs
at all. (UAW membership, some 1.5 million in the 1970s, has
been shrunk to 800,000 today.) But auto corporations, like
capitalists everywhere, are relentlessly striving for
further reductions in costs; and reducing their payrolls
without a loss in production is capitalism's main means of
cutting costs and raising profit margins.
Worker consciousness reaching higher stage
While there has been mounting awareness of the future in
store for American workers, this is only the second time
since the offensive against living standards was begun in
earnest in 1981, that the disappearance of living-wage jobs,
has become the central strike issue.
A shift in mass worker consciousness began in 1997 with
the strike victory by the Teamsters' Union over the United
Parcel Service (UPS). That victory undercut the myth
disseminated by the capitalist press to the effect that
"trade unions have lost their clout because strikes don't
work anymore"
The message of the victory by 180,000 Teamster pickets
went out to the entire working class. Millions of American
workers could see that strikes can be won when the workers
are mobilized to block any attempt to run scabs through
picket lines.
The Ron Carey-led leadership of that potentially
tide-turning strike victory sent such a message to UPS by
mobilizing mass picket lines around the clock at
parcel-distribution centers across the length and breadth of
the United States and Canada. Thus, UPS bosses knew that
attempts to hire "replacement workers" would and did result
in mass resistance in the one or two places where such an
attempt was made.
No less important, the Teamster leadership in that
confrontation also won the hearts and minds of working class
America by making clear that their struggle was a fight for
"good-paying full-time jobs" that would give all American
working class families a living wage.
That combined message has clearly come through to
striking and idled auto workers. That's the meaning of
pickets telling all who will listen this simple but profound
message: that this strike is not just the UAW's fight but is
the fight of the American workers against the fate slated
for them and for their sons and daughters by corporate
America. (See on the scene report from Flint.)
This is significant for another, related, reason. Up to
now, auto and other industrial workers have been, however
reluctantly, accepting contracts which gave the country's
giant corporate empires the worst kind of concessions
possible. In return for merely maintaining, at best, the
real wages of existing union members and sometimes a few
dollars more for their own retirement, workers were
pressured to approve a very bad trade-off.
Over the years contracts were negotiated which traded
away the jobs of new hires and provided reduced pay scales
for the few still to be hired. Such tentative agreements
submitted for approval by the membership, tended to be
rejected. Union officials, however, have followed a policy
of repeatedly resubmitting such rotten trade-offs until they
wear down the natural resistance of their membership. In
effect, union officials made the decision to give up what
they had no right to give up-the quantity and quality of
jobs, many of which were slated to go to their own members'
children.
Meaning of the government's assault on union
independence
Corporate America and its wholly owned capitalist
government counter-attacked in hopes they could obliterate
the lesson of the Teamsters' tide-turning victory over UPS.
They began by launching a media and legal offensive against
Carey and the Teamsters Union on trumped up charges made in
a kangaroo court. It was at the same time a government-led,
capitalist assault on the right of all unions to
democratically elect leaders of their choice and
democratically determine all aspects of union policy. Most
of all, it was designed to crush a rebirth of a class
struggle movement in the egg.
However the UAW strike against GM is convincing evidence
that the re-vitalization of American labor set off by the
Teamster victory over UPS is alive and well. Moreover,
however this strike ends up, it won't be the end, but only
the beginning of a new rise in class consciousness and a
resurgence of the American working class. Such a fighting
reaction by the working class to the uninterrupted
deterioration of its living standards was and is
irrepressible. The long-delayed fightback has begun!
What makes GM run
But to understand why GM is risking provoking a
generalized upsurge by the American working class, it's
necessary to understand that the developing crisis of global
capitalism is reaching a new stage of ever more intensive
competition. GM is not merely intent on eliminating jobs,
driving down wages and benefits, and intensifying the rate
of exploitation of its workers-it is also struggling for
dominance, and even survival, in the inter-imperialist
commercial war for market-share.
And this struggle for world domination boils down to
which imperialism can lower the costs of labor more than its
competitors. Thus in this global capitalist jungle, red in
tooth and claw, the international working class is first and
foremost among those whose life-blood stains capitalist
teeth and claws in the course of the currently deepening
inter-imperialist conflict.
That's the way it is, and nothing can stop the
intensifying struggle between capitalist and capitalist, and
between the capitalists as a class and the workers as a
class. But the irresistible forces of history are on the
side of the working class. And it's history, not accident,
that helps us understand events. Thus, it's not entirely
accidental that the first union to launch the fightback was
the Teamsters, and the second, the UAW.
Both these unions have a rich history of victorious
struggles. The Teamsters in 1934 in their Minneapolis-wide
strikes and later their eleven-state organizing campaigh
which transformed a moribund craft union of some 80,000 at
the end of 1933 into the powerful industrial union of 1.4
million that it is today. And neither is it accidental that
the current UAW struggle erupted in Flint, the birthplace of
the earth-shaking sitdown strike victory in 1937 that was
decisive in organizing all of GM and the giant auto industry
into the powerful industrial union that it still is today.
This strike against GM and the Teamster victory over UPS
are the first light of a new dawn for long-suffering
American workers. Full support by all labor to the UAW and
its striking members is on the order of the day! Their
victory would go down in history as step toward the ultimate
victory of all workers everywhere!
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