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Four unions announce boycott of AFL-CIO convention
By Jerry White
25 July 2005
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On the eve of the AFL-CIO convention, officials from four unions
representing nearly a third of the US labor federations
membership announced they would boycott the organizations
national conference that starts Monday in Chicago. The move appears
to be the first step towards an organizational breakup of the
fifty-year-old labor federation, which has been beset by a bitter
factional struggle within its executive board since last November.
The boycott announcement followed a meeting of the AFL-CIO
Executive Board on Sunday, which failed to resolve differences
between the two factions.
None of the unions that announced the boycottthe Service
Employees International Union, Teamsters, United Food and Commercial
Workers and the textile and hotel workers union UNITE/HEREhas
declared a formal severing of ties with the AFL-CIO.
However, the decision not to attend the constitutional convention,
which includes withholding dues money from the labor federation,
makes a split more probable, several officials told the Associated
Press.
SEIU President Andrew Stern has been threatening to pull his
1.6 million-member union from the labor federation and set up
a new organization if AFL-CIO President John Sweeney is re-elected
at the convention and the Executive Board rejects his demands
for the restructuring of the 60-union organization.
For the vast majority of American workers, whether the AFL-CIO
splits or stays together is of little consequence, particularly
since the proportion of the American workforce that is unionized
has fallen to almost negligible levels. The unionization rate
among private-sector workers dropped to just 7.9 percent in 2004,
the lowest percentage since 1901, and overall union membership
is 12.5 percent, down from 35 percent in 1955, when the AFL and
CIO merged, and 20 percent as late as 1983.
The in-fighting within the top echelons of the AFL-CIO is not
a dispute between leaders of genuine working class organizations.
It is an unprincipled faction fight within a labor bureaucracyan
upper-middle-class stratum whose interests are hostile to the
workers it nominally represents.
In the history of the labor movement there are few precedents
for a split so devoid of any substantial differences. Outside
of a few organizational complaintsmost concerning the dispensation
of dues moneyStern and his cohorts have not elaborated any
serious reasons as to why they might leave the AFL-CIO. Predictably,
this struggle has taken place behind the backs of the 13 million
members of the labor federation, let alone the tens of millions
of workers who stand outside of the unions.
Stern has long been a loyal member of the AFL-CIO bureaucracy,
whose personnel and social physiognomy have been shaped by decades
of betrayals of working class struggles, ferocious anti-communism,
and machinations with the CIA against the international workers
movement.
The SEIU leader was brought into prominence by his mentor,
John Sweeney, the former head of the SEIU. He has no fundamental
differences with the AFL-CIOs policies of labor-management
collaboration, economic nationalism and defense of American capitalism.
He is not an opponent of the war in Iraq. He is not advancing
a platform of more militant struggle, and has not even criticized
the virtual abandonment of the strike weapon by the AFL-CIO leadership.
On the critical question of the disastrous political orientation
of the labor federation, which has doggedly opposed any break
with the American two-party system, Stern has nothing to say.
Instead, he has praised Sweeneys political efforts,
which have turned the AFL-CIO into a virtual adjunct of the Democratic
Party, adding only that the union federation might also support
more labor-friendly Republicans.
One need only consider the union leaders who have joined Sterns
Change to Win coalition to see that any new
labor movement created by these people will be just as hostile
to rank-and-file workers as the AFL-CIO. Included among them is
James P. Hoffa, whose Teamsters union is synonymous with corruption,
gangsterism and the suppression of members rights.
The formation of the CIO
Some officials within Sterns faction have attempted to
compare their actions to the split within the American Federation
of Labor (AFL) in 1935 that led to the formation of the Congress
of Industrial Organizations (CIO). That struggle, however, erupted
over serious questions, and the different factions gave expression
to powerful social forces.
The leaders of the AFL craft unions were opposed to any effort
to organize the millions of unskilled and immigrant workers employed
in mass production industries, such as steel, auto and rubber.
The more farsighted union officials, such as mineworkers
leader John L. Lewis, recognized that the labor movement could
not survive without unionizing the industrial monopolies, like
US Steel, which controlled the coal mines and exercised overwhelming
influence over the economy.
At the same time, Lewis and the other CIO officials were under
the pressure of a militant and insurgent working class, radicalized
by the mass unemployment and pervasive poverty of the Great Depression.
These workers were increasingly coming under the influence of
socialist ideas, and Lewis and his cohorts realized that if the
CIO did not contain this movement, it could take an anti-capitalist
and revolutionary path.
There are definite reasons for the bitter infighting that is
consuming the AFL-CIO bureaucracy today, but they have nothing
to do with what is being said publicly, let alone the genuine
interests of the working class.
For years, the bureaucracy was able to insulate itself from
the impact of the disastrous policies it pursued in response to
the decisive changes in the US and world economy over the last
quarter century. As American industry faced increased international
competition in the 1970s and 1980s, the union bureaucracy functioned
as junior partners with corporate management and did everything
possible to suppress the resistance of US workers to wage-cutting,
corporate downsizing and outsourcing to low-wage countries.
In exchange for its services, the labor bureaucracy gained
access to an array of labor-management programs, slush funds and
real estate ventures that enabled it, combined with increased
dues levies on its remaining membership, to maintain and even
increase its income, despite the continual loss of union members.
The plummeting membership rolls, however, have finally caught
up with the labor bureaucracy. As its overall income declines,
the union bureaucracy enters into ever more bitter turf wars,
with unions engaging in raiding drives against one another to
secure new members and new sources of dues income.
Meanwhile, corporate and political circles no longer see the
AFL-CIO as a social or political force capable of mobilizing a
significant section of the working class. It increasingly occupies
the role of bit player in the internal struggles of the American
ruling elite.
It is noteworthy that Sterns first salvo against Sweeney
followed Democrat John Kerrys failed bid to win the 2004
presidential election. While making clear that he had no differences
with the pro-war and pro-business policies espoused by Kerry and
the Democratspolicies that alienated millions of working
class voters and facilitated Bushs reelectionStern
argued that the AFL-CIO had to overcome its membership problem
in order to more successfully campaign for the Democrats.
The declining influence of the AFL-CIO has encouraged growing
sections of big business and the Republican Party to circumvent
the unions altogether. In the recent period alone, the federal
bankruptcy courts have granted United Airlines the right to stop
paying into the union pension fund, Republican governors have
unilaterally abrogated public employee contracts, and the Bush
administration has moved towards establishing a pay-for-performance
system for all federal employees, along the lines of the Department
of Homeland Security.
Stern made clear the centrality of jurisdictional disputes
between various unions in the current conflict at the top of the
AFL-CIO bureaucracy. In a recent interview with the Nation
magazine, he bitterly complained that the Steelworkers union was
infringing on the SEIUs turf by organizing commercial building
and healthcare workers.
Stern told the Nation he had offered the United Steelworkers
union the option of organizing security guards at industrial facilities
if they agreed to lay off security guards in commercial buildings.
The Steelworkers officials, however, saw that as an attempt to
distract them from organizing healthcare workers, Stern complained.
The fight within the labor bureaucracy has generated little
interest except among ex-radicals and liberals such as those who
publish the Nation, Democratic Party officials who
are concerned that a split in the AFL-CIO could disrupt their
flow of money from the labor bureaucracy, and media commentators
who worry that a split could weaken a long-standing and reliable
prop of American capitalism and its two-party system.
Among union members, the rift has been hardly noticed. The
comments of one worker, cited by the Detroit News, sum
up the general contempt in which the AFL-CIO bureaucracy is held.
Noting that few of his fellow workers were following news of the
possible breakup, Skip Hanline, a member of the United Auto Workers
union at Delphis steering assembly plant in Athens, Alabama,
said he had seen a drastic shift in the unions over the last 20
years. Union leaders, he said, had more in common with company
executives than with assembly line workers.
The unions have become more capitalistic in nature,
Hanline said, Theyre more corporate in the way the
run things.
The fracturing of the AFL-CIO underscores the fact that at
a resurgence of the working class movement will not emerge through
this bureaucratized apparatus, or any of its factions, but through
the creation of new forms of organizationabove all, a political
party of the working class that consciously strives for the unity
of workers internationally and the reorganization of economic
life based on socialist principles of genuine democracy and equality.
See Also:
The split in the AFL-CIO
[12 July 2005]
Crisis of labor bureaucracy
dominates US union summit
[31 March 2005]
Divisions among union officials
over reform of AFL-CIO
[14 February 2005]
Marxism and the
Trade Unions
Globalization
and the International Working Class
A Marxist Assessment
Part Four
Part Five
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