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(en) Ireland, Anarchist journal Red and Black Revolution #11 - Focus on precarity - Change To Win (USA)
Date
Sun, 14 Jan 2007 20:04:24 +0200
Last September saw a split in the USA’s Congress of Trade Unions, the
AFL-CIO. The Change to Win Federation held its founding convention in
St. Louis, Missouri, where they set out their plans: cut down on
bureaucracy, devote a lot more resources to organising the unorganised,
and start building industry-wide super-unions. --- The seven founding
unions were the Teamsters (a general union and the USA’s biggest), the
Building Labourers, Service Employees (third biggest in the USA),
UNITE-HERE (clothing and restaurant workers), Farmworkers, Food workers,
and the Carpenters. Together they made up about 35% of the AFL-CIO's
members. --- Literally from day one, we could see this was not going to
be some radical break from the undemocratic practices of the AFL-CIO.
There was no membership vote over affiliation to this new federation,
the handful of people on each union executive took the decision themselves.
So, is this new formation simply an attempt by a few discontented senior
union leaders to increase their power or do they have ideas that merit
serious consideration? Most of their literature has been long on
describing the problems faced by working people, but short on offering
solutions.
Well, there are very real problems in the US trade union movement.
Whether you are a radical or a conservative, you can’t avoid the fact
that the percentage of American workers in a union has dropped to an
all-time low of about 12%. And that’s an open invitation to the bosses
to stick the boot in, an invitation the bosses have been more than happy
to accept.
“We are focusing our resources on organising tens of millions of workers
who are without union representation. We are shifting our resources into
organising”, said Anna Burger, Change to Win Chair. Indeed the
federation has put it like this:
“1. Working people, including current union members, cannot win
consistently without uniting millions more workers in unions.
2. Every worker in America has the right to a union that has the focus,
strategy, and resources to unite workers in that industry and win.”
Among their proposals to achieve these objectives are encouraging unions
to organize on an industry- wide basis, merging smaller unions into a
few large unions, and spending more money on organising as opposed to
electoral politics.
All well and good, but unions have to be seen to do more than merely
hold the line against employer demands for cutbacks. They need to
actually spearhead a fight for higher wages, more job security, better
healthcare, shorter hours and improved pensions. There has to be a sense
that we are going forward, that any sacrifices or risks we are asked to
take will be worth it.
Just as important, even a brief look at labour history suggests that
ideas, politics, and grassroots worker involvement are far more
important than changes in organisational structures in the recipe for
reviving union strength.
There are no shortcuts to rebuilding our movement, and that it will take
far more than a few mergers or spending more on recruitment to produce
the reversal in union fortunes that so many of us desire. After all,
that’s what has been done here by SIPTU and IMPACT, to name but two of
our own big unions which were formed through mergers.
This is not to say that the heads of the new federation are “sell-outs”,
“traitors” or any of the other silly names that sometimes get thrown at
union leaders. By and large they represent the general ideas of the
members who elected them. When most workers see no alternative to the
conservative political parties, let alone to capitalism, we should not
be surprised that our unions are not some sort of revolutionary movement.
What is needed is not “better leaders”. We are not sheep who simply
require a better or more farsighted shepherd. Real change necessitates
the active participation of a lot of people.
All over the world we need to convince our work colleagues and fellow
union members that a militant fight for workers’ interests is a good
thing, that ordinary member involvement and control of our unions is a
good thing, that a fundamental change in the way society is ordered is
possible.
In our unions, whether in the USA or Ireland, experience suggests that
we need a programme that puts far greater weight on political and social
change, rank-and-file education and empowerment, and a commitment to
reinvigorating collective bargaining as well as rebuilding membership.
This was the experience of Connolly and Larkin, of the US Congress of
Industrial Organisations in the 1930s, and of every large-scale union
movement since.
======================================
*This article is from Red and Black Revolution 11
<http://www.wsm.ie/story/1321>,
published October 2006*
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