https://socialistaction.org/2019/10/02/solidarity-with-the-gm-strike/
Solidarity with the GM strike!
/ 16 hours ago
Oct. 2019 UAW (Jim West:Zuma Wire)By JIM FARRELL
At midnight on Sept. 15, the United Autoworkers Union (UAW) contract
with General Motors (GM) expired and almost 50,000 workers downed tools
and walked off the job. During the recession, the UAW and its members
had agreed to deep concessions to keep GM afloat. Now, GM is prospering
and CEO Mary Barra is one of the highest paid executives in the U.S.,
with a total compensation package of almost $22 million annually???281
times the median salary of a GM employee.
Meanwhile, workers are subjected to two-tier wages and threats to their
pensions and health care. The company cut off workers??? health care just
a few days into the strike and only recently reinstated it. One GM
worker in Langhorne, Pa., told Socialist Action, ???How can people live
like this? It???s wrong.???
On Oct. 1, the UAW notified members that the latest offer from GM was
unacceptable. UAW lead negotiator Terry Dittes said, ???This proposal that
the company provided to us on day 15 of the strike did not satisfy your
contract demands or needs. There were many areas that came up short like
health care, wages, temporary employees, skilled trades and job security
to name a few.??? After over two weeks on strike, workers are beginning to
receive $250 in weekly strike pay.
Solidarity is key
The solidarity between established and more recently hired workers
against the two-tier is a sign of a shift in class consciousness. The GM
strike has reportedly caused workers at Ford and Fiat-Chrysler to
advocate for a walkout in solidarity with GM workers. Teamsters,
Steelworkers, Communications Workers, and other unions have demonstrated
solidarity with strikers and shown up at the picket lines. The Teamsters
union announced that its drivers would not deliver cars to GM
dealerships, but nonunion independent truckers and FEDEX drivers have
not honored picket lines.
Eleven GM strikers were arrested on Sept. 18 at the Spring Hill, Tenn.,
plant for blocking a scab truck. GM is also threatening to reopen
assembly plants in Arlington, Texas, and Wentzville, Missouri, with
scabs. There have been several incidents of strikers being hit by scab
vehicles. This writer witnessed a nonunion delivery truck drive through
the line at the GM parts warehouse in Langhorne, Pa.???almost running down
several strikers.
One of the contentious issues in the strike is the hiring of temporary
workers, who, despite being union members, work for half the hourly wage
of permanent workers, and with fewer benefits. There is also no clearly
laid-out path for temps to become permanent employees. The hiring of
temps was one of the concessions given to the three main U.S. automakers
during the Great Recession.
One GM worker, John Ryan Bishop, a UAW member and former temp, told the
Detroit Free Press, ???As a temp you???re doing the same work as the other
people and making half the wages, and you don???t get profit sharing, and
you feel like you contributed just as much to this and you don???t reap
the award?????? Temp workers also don???t qualify for participation in the
401K retirement program.
Speaking at a strike rally in Langhorne, Pa., on Sept. 28, a Local 2177
officer said, ???One thing I want to say is that General Motors totally
miscalculated this strike. They totally did not think that the UAW was
going to come together like they did. ??? All across the country,
including our local union, this strike has brought us all closer together.???
He went on to discuss the issue of temps: ???One of the big issues is the
temporary employees. Some of the employees, temporary employees, are
doing the same exact job as people making the full rate. It???s wrong.
They get no benefits, no bonuses.???
The restructuring of auto
For decades, autoworkers have been under attack by the Detroit-based
???Big Three,??? who blamed foreign competition and lack of worker
productivity for their troubles. The UAW has been a willing accomplice
by supporting labor-management cooperation schemes and workplace
restructuring. Automation, increased use of outsourcing, the increased
number of temps, and downsizing have changed the auto industry.
A 2008 article in Labor Notes pointed out, ?????? the UAW???s deal with the
auto makers was this: do whatever you need to do to boost profits, as
long as you maintain the wages and benefits of (a steadily shrinking
number of) workers at the Big Three. That ???whatever??? included lean
production, outsourcing to nonunion parts plants at home and abroad, the
sale of GM???s and Ford???s parts divisions in 1999 and 2000 (lopping off
52,000 workers) and, today, buyouts. There were 466,000 GM hourly
workers in 1978 and in 2006, 112,000??? (End of the Road: If the Auto
Industry is Dead What does that Mean for Workers? ).
Another factor in the decline of the UAW is the growth of nonunion
plants in the South, as well as the spread of right-to-work laws in the
Midwest. Five states in the Midwest contain the majority of Big Three
operations???Kentucky, Indiana, Michigan, Ohio, and Wisconsin???and since
2011, all but Ohio have become right-to-work states. In 2018, UAW
membership declined by 35,000, but the number of autoworkers in these
states increased by almost 160,000 since 2011.
Distrust of a class-collaborationist union bureaucracy is most certainly
a factor in the failure of organizing drives in the South. Why would you
trust a union that clearly has sold out the interests of members? The
corruption and lack of backbone of the union bureaucrats is one
explanation for the number of UAW members who have quit in right-to-work
states.
A surge in workers??? struggles
The increased combativity among workers is manifested in an uptick in
strike activity and organizing. The teachers??? strikes in various states
caused increased excitement and awareness of unions.
According to the Bureau of Labor Statistics, ???In 2018, there were 20
major work stoppages involving 485,000 workers. ??? The number of major
work stoppages beginning in 2018 was the highest since 2007 (21 major
work stoppages). The number of workers involved was the highest since
1986. ??? Educational services and health care and social assistance
industry groups accounted for over 90 percent??? of idled workers.
In July, nonunion coal miners in Kentucky began a protest against their
former employer, Blackjewel LLC, by blocking a railroad track that
carries coal trains, demanding back pay after being laid off. Blackjewel
had filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy on July 1, leaving 1700 miners and
their families in dire straits. Many of these workers had voted for
Trump because of his promise to revitalize the coal industry. These
workers??? decision to take collective action, and the support given by
the surrounding community and the labor movement, shows the potential
for the mobilization and self-organization of workers. The blockaders
abandoned their protest on Sept. 26, but the coal trains have not moved
pending a court decision.
??Back to the future: The need for a class-struggle fightback
The UAW bureaucracy, wracked by accusations of corruption, has
repeatedly sold out their members and other industry workers in the
past. What is needed is a clear, class-struggle upsurge by rank-and-file
autoworkers.
To achieve their demands, the union must decisively strike to win. The
UAW should take a page from the past history of the union and lead an
all-out strike against the auto bosses. This includes mass blockades and
occupations if necessary. The Blackjewel miners offered an important
lesson by obstructing the railways leading out of the mine. An
increasingly dissatisfied and combative working class would follow the
lead of such militant strike actions.
In recent days, various Democrats running for president have shown up at
picket lines to declare their solidarity, but they are doing very little
to mobilize their voting base to join the lines.
In 2007, Obama said: ???Understand this: If American workers are being
denied their right to organize and collectively bargain, when I???m in the
White House, I???ll put on a comfortable pair of shoes myself. I???ll walk
on that picket line with you, as president of the United States of
America.??? Despite his promises, however, Obama did very little for union
members, and his policies favored the interests of the ruling rich.
During his campaign, Obama promised to fight for the Employee Free
Choice Act (EFCA), which was quickly forgotten.
The Democrats, who like to portray themselves as ???friends of labor???
during election cycles, are, in fact, enforcers for the class enemy on
Wall Street. Militant unions cannot fight for their members alone. The
labor movement???s subordination to the Democrats must end. What is needed
is a combined struggle to build a Labor Party based on fighting unions.
Photo: Jim West / Zuma Wire
???
???
???
???
1
https://calendar.yahoo.com/?view=notepad
Settings
Share this:
???Click to share on Twitter (Opens in new window)
???Click to share on Facebook (Opens in new window)
October 2, 2019 in Labor.
Related posts
Jobs and Health Care Benefits to Be Slashed in the Auto Industry
On the UAW Picket Line in Flint: ???This is a War with General Motors for
Job Security???
UAW to contest election loss at Nissan
Post navigation
??? Sports equity: Women???s soccer and the fight for equal pay
Get Involved!
Donate to help support our work
Get email updates
Join Socialist Action
Newspaper Archives
Newspaper Archives Select Month October 2019?? (2) September 2019 (12)
August 2019?? (14) July 2019?? (10) June 2019?? (14) May 2019 (12) April
2019?? (12) March 2019?? (13) February 2019?? (10) January 2019?? (16)
December 2018?? (12) November 2018?? (15) October 2018 (10) September
2018?? (8) August 2018?? (12) July 2018?? (13) June 2018?? (11) May 2018??
(19) April 2018?? (15) March 2018?? (17) February 2018?? (14) January 2018??
(13) December 2017?? (13) November 2017?? (13) October 2017?? (16)
September 2017?? (15) August 2017?? (16) July 2017?? (17) June 2017?? (16)
May 2017?? (17) April 2017?? (14) March 2017?? (13) February 2017?? (19)
January 2017?? (13) December 2016?? (12) November 2016?? (19) October 2016??
(12) September 2016?? (10) August 2016?? (10) July 2016?? (14) June 2016
(14) May 2016?? (9) April 2016?? (12) March 2016?? (14) February 2016?? (8)
January 2016?? (11) December 2015?? (11) November 2015 (9) October 2015??
(8) September 2015?? (10) August 2015?? (7) July 2015?? (13) June 2015?? (9)
May 2015?? (10) April 2015?? (12) March 2015?? (9) February 2015?? (11)
January 2015?? (10) December 2014 (12) November 2014?? (11) October 2014??
(9) September 2014?? (6) August 2014?? (10) July 2014?? (11) June 2014??
(10) May 2014?? (11) April 2014?? (10) March 2014?? (9) February 2014?? (11)
January 2014 (11) December 2013?? (10) November 2013?? (11) October 2013??
(17) September 2013?? (13) August 2013?? (10) July 2013?? (11) June 2013
(15) May 2013?? (14) April 2013?? (14) March 2013?? (12) February 2013??
(10) January 2013?? (17) December 2012?? (7) November 2012 (8) October
2012?? (19) September 2012?? (2) August 2012?? (27) July 2012?? (18) June
2012?? (3) May 2012?? (19) April 2012?? (14) March 2012?? (17) February
2012?? (19) January 2012?? (17) December 2011 (3) November 2011?? (33)
October 2011?? (14) September 2011?? (13) August 2011?? (34) July 2011??
(24) June 2011?? (19) May 2011?? (19) April 2011?? (15) March 2011?? (15)
February 2011?? (15) January 2011?? (15) December 2010?? (17) November
2010?? (1) October 2010 (6) September 2010?? (3) August 2010?? (8) July
2010?? (7) June 2010 (2) May 2010?? (10) April 2010?? (3) March 2010?? (8)
February 2010 (3) January 2010?? (9) December 2009?? (6) November 2009??
(5) October 2009?? (16) September 2009?? (3) August 2009?? (2) July 2009
(5) June 2009?? (2) May 2009?? (7) April 2009?? (6) March 2009?? (16)
February 2009?? (9) January 2009?? (10) December 2008?? (11) November 2008??
(8) October 2008?? (16) September 2008?? (14) August 2008 (18) July 2008??
(12) June 2008?? (3) May 2008?? (2) April 2008?? (3) March 2008?? (14)
February 2008?? (11) January 2008?? (11) December 2007?? (8) November 2007??
(1) July 2007?? (1) June 2007?? (1) April 2007?? (1) March 2007?? (1)
February 2007?? (3) December 2006?? (11) November 2006?? (11) October 2006??
(13) September 2006?? (15) August 2006?? (11) July 2006?? (18) June 2006??
(7) May 2006?? (14) April 2006?? (6) March 2006?? (14) February 2006?? (5)
January 2006?? (2) December 2005?? (9) November 2005?? (8) October 2005??
(13) September 2005?? (12) August 2005?? (9) July 2005?? (16) June 2005??
(16) May 2005?? (16) April 2005?? (12) March 2005?? (14) February 2005??
(19) January 2005?? (15) December 2004?? (14) November 2002?? (17) October
2002?? (19) September 2002?? (22) August 2002?? (21) July 2002?? (15) May
2002?? (21) April 2002?? (21) February 2002?? (15) January 2002 (15)
December 2001?? (17) October 2001?? (24) September 2001?? (18) July 2001??
(19) June 2001?? (18) October 2000?? (17) September 2000 (21) August 2000??
(19) July 2000?? (16) June 2000?? (26) May 2000 (21) April 2000?? (22)
March 2000?? (28) February 2000?? (18) January 2000?? (20) December 1999??
(20) November 1999?? (26) October 1999 (25) September 1999?? (18) August
1999?? (40) July 1999?? (38) June 1999?? (24) May 1999?? (27) April 1999??
(25) March 1999?? (26) February 1999?? (29) January 1999?? (24) July 1998??
(12)
Search
???View socialistactionusa???s profile on Facebook
???View SocialistActUS???s profile on Twitter
???View SocialistActionCT???s profile on YouTube
Subscribe to Our Newspaper
Upcoming Events
No upcoming events
Category Cloud
Actions & Protest Africa Anti-War Arts & Culture Black Liberation Canada
Caribbean Civil Liberties Connecticut Cuba East Asia Economy Education &
Schools Elections Environment Europe Immigration International Labor
Latin America Marxist Theory & History Middle East Palestine Police &
FBI Prisons South Asia Trump / U.S. Government Uncategorized Vote
Socialist Action Women's Liberation
View Calendar
Blog at WordPress.com.
Follow
--
---
Albert Einstein
???Blind belief in authority is the greatest enemy of truth.???
??? Albert Einstein