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Opel strike ends in Poland as GM cuts more jobs in Belgium
By Marianne Arens
11 June 2007
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At the end of May, General Motors Europe (GME) revealed that
it will cut significantly more jobs at its Opel factory in Antwerp,
Belgium than previously announced, with 1,900 jobs to go this
year alone. In addition, 400 temporary positions will not be extended
when their contracts expire in July. Half of the present 4,500-strong
workforce face the axe.
When the job cuts were originally announced at the end of April,
workers went on strike and occupied the factory for two weeks.
The cuts were part of GMs plan to end production of the
Opel Astra in Antwerp in 2010. The current production of 225,000
vehicles per year is to be reduced to 120,000, concentrating on
a Chevrolet and a small off-road model. As a result, one shift
is to be eliminated.
General Motors, still the worlds biggest carmaker, has
15 production and assembly lines in nine European countries, employing
around 60,000 workers. In April the president of GM Europe, Carl-Peter
Forster, announced that the Astra would no longer be manufactured
in Antwerp. Instead, it would be produced in Bochum, Germany;
Gliwice, Poland; Ellesmere, England; and in Trollhätten,
Sweden.
The decision was part of a large restructuring of GMs
worldwide operations, which seeks to attack the wages and working
conditions of the workforce in order to increase the return on
investment for GM shareholders. As with other auto manufacturers,
GM is intent on increasing productivity in its factories and to
shift part of its production to cheap labour countries in Eastern
Europe.
In the past months, GMs restructuring has already resulted
in more than 30,000 jobs being lost in both its own plants and
at its suppliers. In the last six years in Europe, 20,000 jobs
have been cut. The latest cost-cutting programme seeks to save
the company 450 million euros in personnel costs. From 2010, each
vehicle is to be produced in just 15 hours instead of the current
24 hours.
Cost-cutting programme of the European Employee
Forum
The management at GM is working closely with its co-managers
in the headquarters of the trade unions and works councils. To
this end, the unions founded the so-called European Employee Forum
(EEF). It is headed by Klaus Franz, who is the chairman of the
works council at the Opel factory in Rüsselsheim, Germany.
Franz is not only a functionary in the IG Metall German engineering
workers union and chairman of the joint Opel works councilhe
is also a member of the supervisory board of GM subsidiary Adam
Opel AG.
Franz and the European Employee Forum are working on their
own cost-cutting proposals for GM. The EEF stated in a press release
its intention to close the estimated financial hole of 290
million euros in order to improve the competitiveness of the factories.
Further reductions in structural costs will also be investigated
when GM management provides us with the necessary consolidated
data.
In addition, the EEF has taken on the responsibility, together
with the local works councils, of isolating any attempt by workers
to fight against GMs restructuring and to limit resistance
to hollow protests, with the aim of putting an end to them as
quickly as possible. This was exactly what happened three years
ago when workers occupied the plant at Bochum for one week; last
year when the factory in Azambuja, Portugal was closed; and finally
one month ago with the end of the occupation in Antwerp.
One of the most despicable aspects of the politics of the works
councils and IG Metall union is that they aim to play workers
in the different Opel factories within Germany against each other,
and indeed workers in Germany against those in other countries.
When GM Europe announced plans to develop and build a successor
to the current Astra model, it also stated that only the most
productive plants would receive the contracts to build it. The
most unprofitable plant would be closed. The chairman of the Bochum
works council, Rainer Einenkel, replied to this attempt at extortion
by GM at a mass meeting of workers in Essen on 28 January, 2005:
Those that have the best chance of receiving the orders
at the end of the decade to build the new model will be those
that possess the best cost structures.
As a consequence, Einenkel together with the works councils
at other German factories sought precisely to improve these cost
structures, while at the same time insuring that job losses
would be accompanied by appropriate measures. Before
workers in Bochum struck in October 2004, the workforce numbered
nearly 10,000. Today, only 4,900 remain. The latest cost cuts
will mean another 1,700 losing their jobs. If one includes the
planned outsourcing measures, only 2,200 workers are to remain
in Bochum.
The works councils seeks to justify these constant concessions
to management with the tenuous argument of having secured
and guaranteed the production location. This is a
fraud. One can already see how this never-ending attack on workers
will end. A confrontation between Rainer Einenkel and Klaus Franz
has developed as a result of the continually sharper competition
between the European plants.
In an exchange of letters between the two union bureaucrats
last November, each accused the other of having signed plant-specific
contracts, undertaken secret projects, and to have lied and defrauded.
Klaus Franz first accused Rainer Einenkel, chairman of the Bochum
works council, of claiming during a committee meeting of the EEF
that he saw special advantages for Bochum in GMs Pact
for the Future. Einenkel reacted immediately, sending a
vitriolic reply to both Franz and IG Metall Chairman Jürgen
Peters, in which he accused Franz of participating in a secret
project for the last several weeks to see whether the Astra
could also be produced in the Rüsselsheim factory.
It was only reluctantlyfor fear of losing control over
auto workers and with one eye on the occupation at the time of
the VW factory in Brusselsthat the two declared a temporary
truce. Franz sent another letter to Einenkel on November 26, complaining
about the form, method and way in which you are handling
this complex situation for IG Metall.
There are parallels between the current dealings of the Opel
works councils with GM Europe and that of the unions during the
VW dispute. At the end of 2006, Volkswagen workers occupied the
factory in Brussels for seven weeks in order to prevent production
of the Golf being withdrawn, half of the jobs being cut, and the
factory being earmarked for imminent closure.
The VW workers were systematically isolated and abandoned by
the European VW works councils and its chairman, Bernd Osterloh,
who is also chairman of the Wolfsburg works council in Germany.
In the end, production of the Golf was halted in Brussels and
shifted to the Wolfsburg and Mosel plants, because the Wolfsburg
works council had previously agreed to an extension of the working
week (from 28.8 to 33 hours) with no increase in wages, as well
as other concessions.
It is clear that Einenkel and Franz ended their dispute last
November in such a way as to ensure that the Opel factory in Antwerp
would be gradually wound down. GM estimates that the restructured
Antwerp facility will produce 120,000 vehicles per year at most,
compared to 224,000 manufactured in 2006.
Opel in Bochum had prepared itself for the November strike.
According to a member of the Bochum works council, Jürgen
Schwartz, engine bonnets, doors and other pressed components that
were produced in Antwerp were stockpiled in Bochum from January
2006 in order to safeguard against a possible strike in Antwerp.
This would allow the strike to be run into the ground while at
the same time ensuring that production at their factory
would not be endangered.
Workers struggle in Gliwice
The role of the workers councils as specialists of suppressing
struggles of workers was also demonstrated recently in Poland
On May31the same day that the massive job cuts at Antwerp
were announcedKlaus Franz travelled to Gliwice to end a
strike there at the Opel factory. Significantly, he said he went
there not as a representative of the workforce, but as a mediator.
The conflict at Gliwice had been brewing since February, when
Polish trade union representatives from Solidarnosc (Solidarity)
presented management with a list of 21 demands to improve wages
and working conditions in order to improve morale at the plant.
Gliwice has the lowest costs of all the European plants. It
was opened in 1998, costing 500 million euros and employing 2,800
workers, and profited from numerous concessions made to it by
the city administration. For the first 10 years, Opel does not
have to pay any tax whatsoever, and in the subsequent 10 years
will only pay half the regular rate.
The working class in this former mining and steel region, which
experienced an unparalleled social decline after the collapse
of the old Stalinist regime, greeted the new Opel factory with
the hope that things would finally now improve. The were, however,
disappointed. The investment hardly brought any benefits to the
people. In spite of a full order book, wages for workers were
frozen at 700 euros (2,700 zloty) per month, while working conditions
became increasingly harsh. Younger and more independent workers
emigrated to try their luck in Western Europe.
A report on the GM workers blog quoted the following description
of the Solidarity representative Miroslaw Rzezniczek from Gliwice:
Two workers have initiated court proceedings against workplace
harassment. One of them could not physically stand it any longer
and picked up another job, albeit worse paying, but calmer work.
Many experienced workers who helped establish the factory are
even leaving. The remaining workers hold them much more dear to
their hearts than they do management. Its only management
that are being paid according to European levels. The report
also notes that temporary workers at Opel employed via the Adecco
agency have to work even when they are ill and have a fever.
The demands of Solidarity have centred around its call for
a 500 zloty (130 euro) monthly wage increase, for which workers
have struck several times, most recently on May 29. Eighty-five
percent of the workforce participated in the strike, which lasted
from 1 p.m. to 3 p.m., taking in an hour from both the morning
and afternoon shifts. Klaus Franz came to Poland to participate
in negotiations to end the strike. On May 31, workers were given
a one-off payment of 2,500 zloty (625 euro). This was celebrated
on the web site of the European Employee Forum as a great
success, even though wages were kept at their existing low
level.
In addition, Franz has formed a negotiation committee
for workplace conflicts, which is to work closely with the
EEF in order to bring conflicts under control at an early stage.
Growing resistance among workers
The strikes at Gliwice and Antwerp, as well as those by Ford
suppliers SLM and Lear in Belgium, VW in Brussels and at Skoda
last April in the Czech Republic cities of Mlada Boleslav and
Kwasiny, signal a growing resistance of European auto workers
against attacks by management against wages and working conditions.
On May 3, thousands of GM workers across Europe came out to
protest in a day of action in Antwerp (Belgium); Bochum, Rüsselsheim,
Eisenach, Kaiserslautern, Dudenhofen (Germany); Vienna (Austria);
Ellesmere Port and Luton (Great Britain); Göteborg, Södertälje
and Trollhättan (Sweden); Strasburg (France); Saragossa (Spain);
Togliatti (Russia); and Szentgotthardt (Hungary). In Szentgotthardt
the protest was apparently the largest since the restoration of
capitalism.
The global integration of the auto industry not only makes
an international strategy of workers to defend jobs and conditions
a burning necessity, it simultaneously raises the possibility
of this in the minds of workers. However, this strategy requires
a conscious break with the nationalist perspective of the trade
unions. Workers must build new, independent organisations that
are democratically structured and are bound to defend the interests
of workers.
See Also:
Belgium Volkswagen workers resume
strike
[29 January 2007]
Volkswagen workers in Belgium
end their strike and occupation
[18 January 2007]
To Volkswagen workers in Brussels:
Vote against the sell-out organised by the unions and works councils!
[6 January 2007]
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