Socialist Action /June 1999

Teamsters Notebook

Can Hoffa Jr. Carry Out His Promises?
"If you don't think I'm going to do a great job, you're crazy."
-Junior Hoffa,
Crain's Detroit Business
By CHARLES WALKER
Labor's Haymarket May Day martyrs were executed over 100 years ago, yet
recently they had good reason to roll over in their graves. For in a bit
of caustic irony, the Teamster bureaucracy chose May 1, 1999, to ceremoniously
anoint James Hoffa Jr. as general president of the International Brotherhood
of Teamsters.
A Hoffa press release trumpeted that "Thousands Cheer Inauguration
of True Reformer." Showing none of the personal modesty of his predecessor,
Ron Carey, the inaugural rite was convened at a Washington, D.C., reflecting
pool, near an intersection temporarily renamed Hoffa Boulevard and Hoffa
Way.
It's one thing to pretend that streets are named after you, but it's
quite another to believe that your name is the key to protecting the interests
of 1.4 million rank-and-file Teamsters. Yet that seems to be Junior Hoffa's
conceit. More than that, he has convinced some rank-and-file Teamsters to
rely on the power of his name rather than the power of their organized strength.
A New York Times reporter recently wrote with a trace of exaggeration
that "many Teamsters who worshiped his father ... look to the son as
the Second Coming and expect him to perform some of the same wonders [as
his father]."
For some Teamsters the memory of the gains of the boom years when Hoffa
Senior was president is still strong, almost mythological. But it must be
acknowledged that all industrial unions won wage and benefit gains during
the 10 years Hoffa headed the union (1957-67). Without taking anything away
from the elder Hoffa, the fact is that during those postwar years it was
damn difficult not to "bring home the bacon."
Junior Hoffa campaigned for five years, telling the Teamster ranks he
had the know-how, acquired at his father's knee, to "restore the power
of the Teamsters union." Still, Hoffa Jr. lost to Carey, who then led
the most inspiring labor battle in many decades when the union successfully
took on United Parcel Service, in a first-ever national strike.
It took the federal government, not the icon-like mystique of Hoffa's
name, to topple Carey and choke off Carey's militant policies.
Anheuser-Busch: Hoffa's first test
Anheuser-Busch, the nation's dominant brewing company, imposed a substandard,
concessionary contract on its 8000-strong Teamster workforce less than a
year after the government removed Carey from the union's rerun election.
On April 20, Hoffa sat down with the latest scion of the Busch dynasty to
run the company, August A. Busch II.
According to the union, Busch "flatly" told Hoffa that "he
was not interested in the union's proposals." Those proposals would
save the jobs of 90 workers in two plants, end subcontracting at 10 other
plants, put in place a negotiated contract, and restore the previous balance
of power between the union and the company.
Failing to overpower Busch with the authority of his name, Hoffa has
embarked on a low-key corporate campaign designed to convince the company's
shareholders to pressure Busch to reverse himself and reach an agreement
with Hoffa.
When that fails, as it must, he will likely escalate the campaign, perhaps
calling for a boycott. But that won't work. The trick is to really hurt
Busch, and that's not easy. It was tried by the Teamsters in the 1970s and
the Teamsters came up short.
Busch has deep pockets, vast political connections, and weak industry
competitors. A successful strike against Busch would not only entail keeping
scabs from operating the plants, but also giving banks and vendors compelling
reasons to pressure Busch to settle. That means a level of class warfare
that the bureaucratic backers of Hoffa showed no appetite for when Carey
headed the union.
There are other pending major disputes that Hoffa won't be able to resolve
by merely leaving his business card on a CEO's desk. In Hoffa's back yard,
there is the four-year-old strike by 1000 Teamsters and members of other
unions at Detroit's two major scab dailies.
Then there are 10,000 Teamster flight attendants who have been working
at Northwest Airlines without a contract for nearly three years.
The UPS-style contract campaign at Northwest is hurt now that "at
least 55 international field representatives and organizers have been fired.
... The fired staffers include organizers of the successful 1997 United
Parcel Service strike, and some who were involved in ongoing contract negotiations
involving Northwest Airlines flight attendants and newspaper workers in
Detroit" (Los Angeles Times).
Pie in the sky for carhaulers
Recently, Chuck Mack, one of Hoffa's vice presidents, told a meeting
of the Industrial Relations Association in San Francisco that he and others
would be providing Hoffa "guidance" because Hoffa lacked experience
as a "union administrator." That lack of experience may have been
on display in April, when Hoffa guaranteed a pie-in-the-sky future for
12,000 carhaulers whose national contract ends May 31.
In a Detroit speech, Hoffa told hundreds of carhaulers from dozens of
local unions that he will win them pension improvements, a stronger grievance
procedure, job safety, job security, and keep the non-union competition
from "eat[ing] our lunch down the road, and organize every segment
of the carhauling industry."
As we go to press, reports indicate that a carhaul strike is looming.
Hoffa told the press, "I have made it very clear to management that
their unacceptable demands to hire part-time workers, to cut pay for new
employees, and to use Mexican trucks would trigger a strike." On May
12, the ranks voted 5705 to 251 to authorize a walkout.
The Teamsters have enough leverage in the carhaul industry to resist
corporate take-aways and make gains over their present contract. But carhaul
Teamsters who take Hoffa's boasting seriously are sure to be disappointed
when he brings back a settlement for ratification.
Five years ago, Carey began organizing Overnite, a major freight firm.
His basic strategy was to build a member-to-member movement to win over
a majority of the key terminals. The Teamsters for a Democratic Union (TDU)
says that the Overnite organizing drive "is in jeopardy."
According to the TDU, Hoffa has "fired almost all the Overnite staff,
including those who were formerly Overnite employees. There may be a new
strategy, where the emphasis is less on organizing and more on negotiating.
... Organizing itself will be largely turned over to the local unions,"
while a five-person committee appointed by Hoffa will handle negotiations.
TDU believes that the Teamsters are still too weak to force the company
into the national contract, and the union need not settle for anything less.
TDU says the union should stick with "the same strategy used effectively
by our union in the 1930s and 1940s to organize freight."
"Where did your dues go?"
Hoffa's inauguration hasn't ended his systematic efforts to blacken Carey's
reputation, and undermine the reform forces. Hoffa's first issue of Teamster
magazine, which is sent to all active members and retirees, is virtually
a campaign broadsheet from the photo portrait of himself on the front cover,
testimonial letters from his supporters in the ranks, a Hoffa interview
(four more photos of himself) and an attack on Carey dressed up as a report
on the union's finances.
The "report" is titled "The $153 Million Question: Where
Did Your Dues Go?" Yet it never mentions the $123 million Carey returned
to the members by way of strike pay.
In fact, Carey could have returned $34 million more, but the old guard
took it out of the strike fund to pay for their extravagances. Several of
the bureaucrats each retired with lump-sum pension pay-outs of over a million
dollars, in addition to multiple monthly lifetime pensions.
Carey correctly believed the members' money should be used for the members
when they needed it, not squirreled away in stocks and investments. But
Hoffa is going back to the days when the union put dues money in investments
that partly paid multiple pensions and benefits to officials.
"The Teamsters' assets," the article states, "should be
invested and protected in a continual effort to build for growth. By squandering
$151 million, the previous administration took advantage of members' dues
and lost out on a significant opportunity to invest and generate additional
income. Our administration wants to regenerate that income and build for
the future of the union."
Perhaps no clearer definition of "Business Unionism" has been
uttered by a high-ranking Teamster bureaucrat since Dave Beck said that
businesses don't allow workers to run the company, so why should rank-and-file
members run the union!
Now that Hoffa controls the main channels of communication with the ranks,
a major campaign by reformers and militants to get the truth out is more
important than ever. A campaign to tell the truth about Carey's ouster,
the government's stealing of the members' right to elect the leaders of
their choice, and what happened to the union's finances can undermine Hoffa's
propaganda advantage.
Such an effort would not be an idle exercise in digging up the past.
For no matter who opposes Hoffa in 2001, Hoffa will campaign against Carey's
policies-as he did in 1988.
Socialist Action /June 1999 |