From The American Left History Blog Archives(2008)
- On American Political Discourse
Markin comment:
In the period 2006-2008 I, in
vain, attempted to put some energy into analyzing the blossoming American
presidential campaign since it was to be, as advertised at least, a watershed
election, for women, blacks, old white anglos, latinos, youth, etc. In the
event I had to abandon the efforts in about May of 2008 when it became obvious,
in my face obvious, that the election would be a watershed only for those who really
believed that it would be a watershed election. The four years of the Obama
presidency, the 2012 American presidential election campaign, and world
politics have only confirmed in my eyes that that abandonment was essentially
the right decision at the right time. In short, let the well- paid bourgeois
commentators go on and on with their twitter. I, we, had (have) better things
to do like fighting against the permanent wars, the permanent war economies,
the struggle for more and better jobs, and for a workers party that fights for
a workers government . More than enough to do, right? Still a look back at some
of the stuff I wrote then does not a bad feel to it. Read on.
************
LABOR DAY SCORECARD -2006
COMMENTARY
TOUGH TIMES FOR THE AMERICAN LABOR MOVEMENT- AND THAT
AINT NO LIE
FORGET DONKEYS, ELEPHANTS AND GREENS- BUILD A WORKERS
PARTY!
This writer started his blog
site in February 2006 (see below for blog site) so this is the first Labor Day
scorecard giving his take on the condition of American labor. And it ain’t
pretty. That says it all. There was little strike action this year. There was
little in the way of unionization to organize labor’s potential strength.
American workers continue to have a real decline in their paychecks. The
difference between survival and not for most working families is the two job
(or more) household. In short, the average family is working more hours to make
ends meet. Real inflation in energy and food costs has put many up against the
wall. Forget the Federal Reserve Bank’s definition of inflation- one fill up at
the pump confounds that noise. One does not have to be a Marxist economist to
know that something is desperately wrong when at the beginning of the 21st
century with all the technological advances and productivity increases of the
past period working people need to work more just to try to stay even. Even the
more far-sighted bourgeois thinkers have trouble with that one. In any case,
here are some comments on the labor year.
The key, although not the
only action necessary, to a turn-around for American labor is the unionization
of Wal-Mart and the South. The necessary class struggle politics that would
make such drives successful would act as a huge impetus for other areas of the
labor movement. This writer further argues that such struggles against such
vicious enemies as Wal-Mart can be the catalyst for the organization of a
workers party. Okay, okay let the writer
dream a little, won’t you? What has happened this year on this issue is that
more organizations have taken up the call for a boycott of Wal-Mart. That is all
to the good and must be supported by militant leftists but it is only a very
small beginning shot in the campaign (See blog, dated June 10, 2006)
The issue of immigration has
surfaced strongly this year. Every militant leftist was supportive of the May
Day actions of the vast immigrant communities to not be pushed around.
Immigration is a labor issue and key to the struggle against the race to the
bottom. While May Day and other events were big moments unless there are links
to the greater labor movement this very promising movement could fizzle. A
central problem is the role of the Democratic Party and the Catholic Church in
the organizing efforts. I will deal with
this question at a latter time but for now know this- these organizations are
an obstruction to real progress on the immigration issue. (See blog, dated May
1, 2006)
By far the most important
labor action of the year was the transport workers strike of Local 100 in New
York City just before Christmas 2005. Although this turned out to be three day
work stoppage that eventually has to rank as a defeat for the labor movement
there are some lessons militant leftists can learn from the experience.
·
It appears that
every time the left, and not only the left, gives up on the possibility of the
international labor movement being capable of coming close to what Marx and
other projected as its historic role in creating a new society something
happens to pull that theory up short. In my generation it was the events which
led to a workers general strike and semi-insurrection in France in 1968. Now is
it the example of the New York transit workers. Although both efforts were
defeated, mainly through the treachery and class collaboration of the trade
union leadership, no one then or now can deny the potential political power of
the working class. We militant leftists are not just blowing smoke when we say
that labor must rule. The key is to channel those possibilities into a struggle
for power for a new, more just society.
·
Although the
transit workers proved to have more than enough militancy to succeed the
leadership, frankly, got scared when the capitalists rulers started to play
rough. The issues in dispute were hardly
radical issues- pensions, wages, working conditions. Actually they represented
a rather defensive effort on the part of the transit workers to stop falling
further behind in the capitalist race to the bottom. This fight nevertheless
could have been won. Perhaps it is because the labor movement has lost
continuity with its historic roots in the huge and successful struggles of the
1930’s. But know this -every serious effort at class struggle by the working
class will be met by the same kind of reaction and worst that was meted out by
the ruling class in New York. Not only do militant leftists have to know this
fact but also that every labor action has to be planned carefully to ensure
victory. In short, that means a new labor leadership based on a program of
struggle is needed. More on this another time. Start reading about the labor
struggles in the 1930’s- in auto, the Teamsters, steel, electrical workers,
etc. Those were the days.
·
The transit
workers strike brought out the underlying class tensions of society. Sure the
yuppies, ruling class, etc. were inconvenienced as were working people,
however, working people in general supported the transit workers’ struggle as
their struggle. Know your enemies- yes. But, also know your friends. As for
enemies note the ugly role played by the International Transit Workers Union
bureaucracy in leaving the New York workers in the lurch. Also note well the
treacherous role of the rest of the New York labor bureaucracy in not calling
out their members to support the strike. That support was the key to success. A
general strike was in the cards there. Needless to say I do not even have to
mention the role of the politicians, both Democratic and Republican, in
outbidding each other in denouncing the strike.
·
The transit
workers as governmental workers prove you can strike against the government.
But you need to defend against the capitalist onslaught by insisting on amnesty
for your membership and for the leadership before going back to work. Also know
this, if you did not already, that the courts, the cops and the politicians are
not your friends. If nothing else the defeat in New York should burn these
lessons in the memories of every serious militant. Next time we can win. Plan
for it.
If one needed one more
example of why the American labor movement is in the condition it is in then an
article this summer by John Sweeney, punitive President of the AFL-CIO, and
therefore one of the titular heads of the organized labor movement brings that
point home in gory detail. The gist of the article is that the governmental
agencies, like the National Labor Relations Board, have over the years (and
here he means in reality the Bush years) bent over backwards to help the
employers in their fight against unionization. Well, John, surprise, surprise.
No militant leftist, no forget that, no militant has believed in the
impartiality of governmental boards, agencies, courts, etc. since about 1936.
Yes, that is right, since Roosevelt. Wake up. Again this brings up the question
of the leadership of the labor movement. And I do not mean to turn it over to
Andy Stein and his Change to Win Coalition.
We may be, as some theorists imagine, a post-industrial society, but the
conditions of labor seem more like the classic age of rapacious capitalist
accumulation of the last century and the early part of this century. We need a labor leadership based on a program
of labor independence and struggle for worker rights- and we need it damn soon.
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