The Strike at General Motors
48,000 members of the United Auto Workers of America (UAW), the regime union representing Auto Workers in the United States, went on an unexpected strike at General Motors from the 16th of September to the 25th of October. The strike cost GM more than $2bn, according to Wall Street estimates. It closed 34 GM manufacturing and distribution facilities across the USA. It also disrupted operations in Mexico and Canada.
General Motors, which produces the Chevrolet, Buick, GMC,
and Cadillac brands in North America, is North America’s largest
automaker.
Demands
It’s hard to discuss workers’ demands as there was no plan and no real
membership discussion before the strike vote occurred. The UAW leadership
was seen as using the strike as an attempt to regain legitimacy amongst
workers after a series of scandals. As typical of regime unions, the
scandals continued and the leaderships’ handling of the strike has only
increased anger towards them.
Labor Notes magazine observed: «The strike was declared suddenly, with no guidance from
top bargainers on its goals. When I visited the picket line at
Detroit-Hamtramck Assembly on the first day, workers couldn’t tell me what
they were going out for. But remarkably, a consensus soon emerged. Most workers I
interviewed over eight visits to the line said their top priority was
“make everyone equal” or “hire the temps”».
The above quote shows how workers are open to stuggle when
they feel and see that what is going on is a real strike. So the methods
of struggle are as important as goals. This is the reason why the ICP
always fights to organize real strikes: without notice, with no
estabilished deadline, with picket lines to stop entry and exit of goods
and to wipe away the scabs.
Pay for GM workers is a series of tiers, depending on when
you started. Older workers get paid more for work than more recently hired
workers - this a provision pushed through by the “progressive” Obama
administration in the U.S. Govern-ment’s bailout of GM in 2008. More and
more GM is also using temporary (precarious) workers who have no work
guarentee and no benefits. In the US, the notoriously expensive health
care system is provided, if provided at all, by your employer. By
implimenting tiered work scales and through the use of temporary workers,
the company can lower costs in providing health care, placing workers in
dire straights.
Corruption in the UAW
Just before the GM strike was called a series of
corruption charges were brought by the US Federal Government against
primarily UAW officials but some company executives as well. The charges
dealt with bribes and kickbacks given to UAW officers.
We have to say that in our view is not just the corruption
that make a union a regime one but its principles, its methods of
struggle, its internal life, and its whole history, since founding
forward, across the class struggle. Nevertheless corruption cases like
these are a manifestation of the nature of a union which has gone over to
the side of the bosses for decades.
Counter Groups
There are small pockets of organized internal resistence in the UAW. The current UAW was called a “One Party State” by a militant and former official back in the 1950s. Since that time the union has become the party of the corporations.
Since 1990 there have been some well organized caucuses
within the union fighting for a pro-worker direction.
“New Directions Caucus” especially seemed to have some
movement until its leadership was pulled into the union leadership.
“Soldiers Of Solidarity” was more of a rank and file
insurgency in the first decade of the 2000s.
Today there are no well organized rank and file groups.
The Solidarity Review is a group organized around
publishing articles critical of the present leadership, which is
important, but really has no organization.
“Autoworkers Caravan” is a protest movement more in line with Soldiers of
Solidarity - loose knit and mainly a social networking phenomenon, but
unfortunately not as organized as the Teachers union groups which won so
much.
International Aspects
Canada and Mexico play important parts in Auto
manufacturing in North America. Mexico makes many of the parts to be
assembled in the United States - so the finished product can be marketed
as “American made”. Canadian auto manufacturing is much more integrated
into the much larger American market with many parts and assembly plants
located in the Canadian provience of Ontario - just across the Windsor
River from the center of American production in Detroit, Michigan.
The Canadian Auto Workers and American union were the same
until 1985 when the Canadians split because of American union’s
willingness to sign concessionary contracts, often to the disadvantage of
their Canadian members. The American habit of ignoring their Canadian
fellow workers again popped up when the American’s showed no organized
solidarity with the Candians wildcat strike against the closing of a GM
assembly plant in Oshawa, Ontario which would eliminate 2,500 production
jobs at the plant and 2,500 union workers in auto parts suppliers, etc.
The Canadians repaid the American’s lack of solidarity in kind.
The Maquiladora are special economic zones of Mexico which
provide low cost labor for American industry. In Silao, Guanajuato, Mexico
at least five workers at the GM - Silao plant were fired for trying to aid
the American strikers by advocating a strike in that plant, a slow down
against increased production to substitute for lost American production as
well as advocating workers leaving the corrupt regime union. For more on
the Maquiladoras see “Wildcat Strikes in Mexico” in “The Communist Party”
#12
Class Unionism’s lack of Organization vs the Regime Unions
The contract which came out of the strike negated the strikers’ desires
articulated on the picket lines above. Multiple tiers of pay continue,
temporary work remains temporary rather than permanent, health care costs
and risks are being dumped upon the workers. The contract was accepted by
a 57% to 43% margin. The success was ensured through a number of bribes
such as tying bonuses to yes vote.
The failure of the strike is being widely presented as a case of greed
and betrayal by the company and union officials. This is an important flaw
in analysis.
First of all, capitalist companies are against the workers not because of
the bosses’ greed but because capitalist competiton imposes a need, in
order to survive, to exploit workers. This exploitation will grow more and
more as the global economic crisis advances.
Secondly, it is incorrect to talk about a betrayal by the UAW leaders.
This union and its leaders, like the whole AFL-CIO, have been for decades
openly with the bosses and for class collaborationist unionism. The only
class the UAW leadership could betray is the bourgeoisie - somethning that
they will never do. The attitude of UAW leaders in this strike is just a
confirmation of the regime nature of this union.
But this is just half of the problem. The other is the lack of
organization by workers willing to fight and the militants of class
unionism, inside and outside the UAW.
The strike failed because there was no counter-organization to the bosses
and their union hirelings.
The militants of class unionism have to coordinate themselves to get
recognition from workers in struggle that they are the real alternative
leadership in the struggle and to achieve the possibility of effectevly
jointly organizing an opposition to regime unionism.
This “Coordination” can’t be built on a party basis. It can’t be a united front of parties – of any nature – but a united front of militant workers for class unionism. To keep it’s own nature it has to be open only to workers, employed and unemployed, not to members of other classes or social strata.