Workers Vanguard No. 1030 |
20 September 2013
|
As 2014 Contract Battle Looms-ILWU Splits from AFL-CIO
On the eve of the recent AFL-CIO convention, the 42,000-member
International Longshore and Warehouse Union (ILWU) split from the federation. In
his August 29 letter of disaffiliation, ILWU International president Robert
McEllrath pointed to increasing attacks on the longshore union by other AFL-CIO
unions, ranging from the filing of unfair labor practice lawsuits to outright
scabbing. These charges are all too true and then some. But the ILWU
leadership’s hands are hardly clean in the sordid game of jurisdictional warfare
that pits union against union in a scramble to defend their turf. McEllrath
complains of the “compromising” policies of the AFL-CIO in “going along to get
along” with the Obama administration. But the ILWU bureaucrats are equally
culpable in subordinating the unions to the political fortunes of the Democratic
Party, even if they have been disappointed with the hoped-for payoff for such
treachery.
Today, the very existence of the ILWU in grain handling in the
Pacific Northwest is on the line. Its members have been locked out for months by
United Grain in Vancouver, Washington, and by Columbia Grain in Portland,
Oregon. Scabs, protected by the latter-day Pinkertons of J.R. Gettier &
Associates, are doing jobs held by the union for decades. Alongside the grain
conglomerates’ drive to break the ILWU stand the shipping company bosses of the
Pacific Maritime Association (PMA), who are preparing for war with the union
when its coastwide contract expires in July 2014.
Splitting from the AFL-CIO in the lead-up to this battle, the ILWU
stands to be further isolated and risks making an even more open enemy of the
AFL-CIO bureaucracy, led by Richard Trumka. It is already reported that the ILWU
will not be granted “solidarity charters,” which were awarded to the affiliates
of the Change to Win coalition when they broke from the AFL-CIO in 2005.
Instead, the ILWU is to be expelled from all regional and city labor councils.
Despite the formation last year of a “Maritime Labor Alliance” composed of the
ILWU, the International Longshoremen’s Association (ILA)—which organizes East
and Gulf Coast ports—and four other unions, the ILWU can hardly bank on
solidarity from the leaders of the ILA. At the AFL-CIO convention, the ILA
announced it would stay in the AFL-CIO. Its president, Harold Daggett, was
rewarded with a seat as a vice president of the federation, even as he gave more
lip service to standing behind the ILWU.
In his letter to the AFL-CIO, McEllrath recounts the ILWU’s “long
and proud history of militant independence,” from its roots in the Industrial
Workers of the World, early pioneers of industrial unionism, to its role in the
formative years of the CIO. But the CIO was born out of the militant class
battles of the 1930s to organize the millions of workers in U.S.
industry who were disdained by the craft-based AFL, which was led by sworn
enemies of socialism and often outright racists. In these battles, workers
mobilized their power as a class to shut down production through mass, militant
picket lines, sit-down strikes and solidarity actions. They didn’t bow before
the capitalist anti-labor laws but fought it out in opposition to the bosses and
their cops, courts and security goons. Against the poisonous racial and ethnic
hatreds so ably wielded by America’s rulers to divide and conquer the workers,
the organizing drives in auto, steel, meatpacking and other industries brought
thousands of black workers into the new industrial unions.
Such is not even the remotest perspective of the pro-capitalist
labor tops today, from the Trumka bureaucracy to the ILWU leadership.
The Fall of the “House of Labor”
At its convention, the AFL-CIO outlined what is described as a
“strategic shift” away from collective workplace organizing. The federation
proposes to replenish its diminishing ranks by allowing workers to join as
individuals through its “Working America” organization. It also
will open its doors to the community-based workers’ centers that have sprung up
around the country. These new members will provide more money and bodies for the
bureaucrats’ “get out the vote” and lobbying efforts. The name of the game has
become building coalitions with student labor activists and other “community”
groups in order to beg the capitalist rulers to throw a few more crumbs labor’s
way.
This scheme is a striking example of what not to do
to build the unions. But it is a natural step for the labor misleaders, who have
long refused to wage the class battles required to organize the mass of
unorganized workers. For years, the AFL-CIO tops have argued that their hands
are tied in waging any such struggle by myriad anti-union agencies and laws,
from the National Labor Relations Board to the Taft-Hartley Act. The truth is
that labor has never won anything of value playing by the bosses’ rules. The
unions themselves were once outlawed as criminal conspiracies.
The attempt to turn the AFL-CIO into a labor-centered version of
MoveOn.org is premised on and can only serve to reinforce the supposed
obsolescence of organizing drives that bring to bear the unique social power of
the working class to withhold its labor and cut off the flow of profits. It also
further undermines any understanding of the workers as a distinct class,
dissolving them into the mass of “the people.” As early American Communist and,
later, Trotskyist leader James P. Cannon observed of a plan by a New York
central labor council to bring various perceived “friends of labor” into its
ranks over 90 years ago:
“Civic bodies, church forums, ‘non-labor organizations’—the
elements who go to make up such groupings are poor props for the unions to seek
to lean upon. They may ‘feel’ for organized labor, but the organized workers
never feel it in the shape of substantial support in their fight....
“The working class has the power not only to defeat the effort to
destroy the unions, but to end the system of exploitation altogether. The
principal thing lacking for the quick development of this power is the mistaken
point of view illustrated by the program of the New York central body.”
— “Who Can Save the Unions?” 7 May 1921, reprinted in James P.
Cannon and the Early Years of American Communism (Prometheus Research
Library, 1992)
Labor: Stop the Backstabbing!
Today, the few private-sector unions left standing are often at
each other’s throats to preserve their jurisdictions. McEllrath cites one of the
more notorious examples, pointing to the strikebreaking role played by the
Operating Engineers union during the ILWU’s 2011-12 fight against an all-out
union-busting offensive by the EGT grain consortium in Longview, Washington.
Trumka stood by these scabs, ordering the Oregon AFL-CIO to rescind a motion
condemning the Operating Engineers. More recently, members of the International
Brotherhood of Electrical Workers (IBEW) have been crossing ILWU picket lines at
United Grain. An ILWU motion condemning this scabbing did not even make it to
the floor for discussion at the July convention of the Washington state
AFL-CIO.
Taking on this backstabbing in his president’s report in the
July/August issue of the ILWU newspaper, the Dispatcher, McEllrath writes
that the “ILWU sees the honoring of picket lines as a fundamental principle that
can’t be compromised.” It is hard to imagine any other top union leader in this
country even recalling this principle, much less being able to choke it out. But
as the great Irish writer and wit Oscar Wilde famously put it: “Hypocrisy is the
homage vice pays to virtue.”
For decades, the ILWU tops have invoked the struggles that forged
the union to convince the ranks that the ILWU remains the last remaining bastion
of labor militancy. The union’s founder, Harry Bridges, is eulogized as the
epitome of fighting unionism. All this is belied, of course, by the actual
history and practice of the ILWU leadership. The last coastwide ILWU strike was
in 1971, more than 40 years ago. That strike was largely forced on Bridges by a
membership seething over the massive loss of jobs under the 1960 Mechanization
and Modernization (M&M) Agreement he negotiated and rammed down their
throats.
Today, the ILWU bureaucracy’s answer to the PMA’s drive to
increasingly mechanize operations on the docks is to claim jurisdiction over
maintenance and other mechanical service jobs, a number of which are currently
done by other unions. In Portland, for example, the ILWU filed a joint lawsuit
with the PMA bosses to claim the equivalent of two jobs servicing refrigerated
containers that have been worked by the IBEW for over 30 years. As a result, the
ILWU has incurred the animosity of the IBEW, a union well versed in the
dog-eat-dog world of jurisdiction.
The ILWU is an increasingly isolated outpost of organized labor at
the ports, surrounded by tens of thousands of unorganized workers, from the port
truckers to workers at intermodal rail facilities and the vast inland warehouse
empires. Little to nothing has been done to organize these workers. In
disaffiliating from the AFL-CIO, McEllrath pointed a finger at the Trumka
bureaucracy’s “immigration reform policies,” in particular its support to a bill
that “favors workers with higher education and profitability to corporations, as
opposed to the undocumented workers such as janitors and farm workers who would
greatly benefit from the protections granted by legalization.”
Many such workers are among the thousands of overwhelmingly
immigrant port truckers. Yet far from championing citizenship rights for these
workers or even a “pathway to citizenship,” the ILWU has, at best, turned a
blind eye to their plight. At worst, as recounted by many of the drivers who
recently walked off the job in protest against the grueling conditions they face
at the Oakland port, they are treated with chauvinist contempt by many ILWU
members. The solidarity of the truckers will be critical in the upcoming ILWU
contract battle with the PMA, as the ILWU leadership no doubt recognizes on some
level. Unlike in 2008, when the Bay Area Local 10 tops told longshoremen that
the truckers’ picket lines were not “bona fide,” this time they called to honor
the pickets, at least at the Stevedoring Services of America terminal.
In his Dispatcher column, McEllrath demands an end to the
“ugliness of racial bigotry.” In particular, he pointed to reports of
longshoremen on the picket lines at grain terminals in the Pacific Northwest
hurling racial epithets at scabs and Gettier security guards. There is no
question that these strikebreakers serve the class enemy. But it has nothing to
do with the color of their skin. They are hirelings of companies that, in the
tried-and-true practice of this country’s capitalist rulers, play the race card
to further their aims. If the ILWU actually used its muscle, mobilizing its
supporters to build picket lines that no scab would dare to cross, it would be
in a position to turn the tables on the bosses. But not only has there been no
such struggle, the ILWU in Portland and elsewhere embraces the regular port
security guards as fellow union members. It is hard to fight an enemy that is
welcomed into your own house!
McEllrath recounts that Bridges “made racial integration and
anti-discrimination a cornerstone” of the union’s organizing strategy. Indeed,
he did in the Bay Area, but in the name of “local autonomy” he left
discrimination mostly unchallenged in the Pacific Northwest as well as at the
San Pedro docks in Los Angeles. Thus, racial fault lines were built into the
union from the beginning. Today, the deadly poison of racism is a threat to the
very existence of the ILWU, with the potential to detonate divisions between the
still overwhelmingly white Pacific Northwest, the largely black membership in
the Bay Area and the majority Latino L.A./Long Beach local.
Racial and ethnic chauvinism has been further fueled by the “loyal
to America” patriotism of the ILWU International leadership. In the aftermath of
the September 11, 2001 attacks, the ILWU bureaucracy lined up behind the “war on
terror” on the docks, pointing a finger at port truckers as a potential
“security threat.” Now the ILWU tops present the fight against the union-busting
grain companies as one in defense of the “American grain industry” against
Japanese and other foreign competitors. To this end, McEllrath & Co. uphold
the concessionary deal they made with the U.S.-based TEMCO grain company, amid
contentious negotiations with the Pacific Northwest Grain Handlers Association,
as supposed evidence of TEMCO’s commitment to the well-being of its workers.
The lie that workers and their exploiters have common interests
disarms labor in the face of the virtually unchallenged offensive by the bosses
and their government to gut the unions in this country. If the unions are not
only to survive but to become actual battalions of working-class struggle, they
must champion the cause of black freedom and full citizenship rights for
immigrants as part of a class-struggle fight to bring the masses of unorganized
workers into the unions. As is particularly demonstrated in longshore, where
work is dependent on world trade, the workers’ fight is international. Labor
must repudiate the red-white-and-blue patriotism of its misleaders, who have
shackled the unions to the interests and profitability of U.S. imperialism. The
kind of leadership that labor needs is one that inscribes on its banners Marx
and Engels’ call in the Communist Manifesto: “The proletarians have
nothing to lose but their chains. They have a world to win. Working men of all
countries unite!”
Build a Class-Struggle Workers Party!
The present crisis is not the first faced by a weakened American
labor movement. Throughout the 1920s, the AFL union leadership did little to
organize the millions of workers who did the backbreaking work in the mills and
on the assembly lines. In the four years after the October 1929 stock market
crash, unemployment skyrocketed to over 12 million, so that virtually any worker
could easily be replaced. The working class was confronted not just by
joblessness but homelessness and starvation. By 1933, AFL membership was less
than half of what it had been in 1920. But the next year, citywide strikes in
Minneapolis, San Francisco and Toledo—led by Trotskyists, the Stalinist
Communist Party (CP) and left-wing socialists respectively—set the stage for an
outpouring of working-class militancy and laid the basis for the formation of
the mass CIO industrial unions.
The gigantic class battles of the 1930s carried the American
trade-union movement to unprecedented heights and advanced class consciousness
in the working class. The most advanced elements were receptive to the idea of
forming a workers party in opposition to the capitalist parties, Democratic as
well as Republican. But the very leaders of the new industrial movement,
including the social democrats and the CP, crippled it through their political
support to Democratic Party president Franklin D. Roosevelt. Harry Bridges was
among this number. During World War II, he imposed a no-strike pledge and other
measures that served to increase the exploitation of ILWU members in order to
advance the war aims of predatory U.S. imperialism.
In 1949-50, eleven unions associated with the CP, including the
ILWU, were expelled from the CIO as part of the Cold War red purges. Driving out
the key leaders and fighters for industrial unionism, the purges consolidated
the labor bureaucracy that has presided over the steady erosion of union power
to the point where today less than 7 percent of manufacturing and other
industrial workers are organized. Aptly described over a century ago by early
American socialist Daniel De Leon as the “labor lieutenants of the capitalist
class,” the union officialdom, then and today, shares the exploiters’ belief in
the inviolability of the profit system. This belief is concretized by their
prostration before, and integration into, the capitalist Democratic Party.
The Obama administration is far from a disinterested observer of
the upcoming contract struggle between the ILWU and the PMA. The union has
enormous social power. With the offshoring of much manufacturing and the
just-in-time delivery system, a strike would quickly paralyze whole sectors of
the U.S. economy. It is precisely because longshoremen have their hands on the
choke points of international commerce that there has been an offensive against
their unions around the world. That Obama will stand with the PMA shipping
bosses is as obvious as the flotilla of armed Coast Guard ships and helicopters
his administration mobilized during the ILWU’s Longview battle to ensure that
the first shipment of scab grain out of the EGT terminal met no interference.
Today, Coast Guard ships again patrol the Columbia River to ensure the passage
of grain worked by scabs in Vancouver and Portland. Meanwhile, with the PMA
aiming to gut medical benefits, Obama’s health care “reform” will further roll
back these hard-won gains by levying taxes on so-called “Cadillac” union health
care programs.
The ILWU is in a tough spot. But there is no immediate hope if the
union continues to surrender its power. Nor does splitting from the AFL-CIO open
the way for the union to struggle. The road forward lies in the fight to forge a
new, class-struggle leadership of the unions that will wage the battles out of
which a revolutionary internationalist workers party can be built. Such a party
will lead the “final conflict” to get rid of a system in which profits are
reaped through the brutal exploitation of labor. When those who labor rule, the
means of production will be taken out of the hands of the rapacious capitalist
owners and made the collective property of society. The tremendous wealth of
this country will then be used to provide for the many as opposed to profiting
the few.
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