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CAW officials grandstand after GM plant closure announcement
By Carl Bronski
7 June 2008
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Canadian Auto Workers (CAW) President Buzz Hargrove emerged
from a meeting with General Motors executives in Detroit Friday
morning to announce that the company has refused to reverse its
decision to close the giant Oshawa, Ontario, truck plant as part
of a restructuring plan of its North American operations. That
plan also earmarks for closure two truck and sport utility assembly
facilities in the US and one in Mexico. Hargrove and CAW Local
222 President Chris Buckley had travelled to GMs world headquarters
to protest the announced shutdown of GMs truck assembly
operations in Oshawa.
The closure, slated for mid-2009, will result in the loss of
2,600 autoworkers jobs in Oshawa. It will also affect hundreds
of jobs at GMs engine plant in St. Catharines, Ontario,
where 60 percent of the engines produced are used in the Chevy
Silverado and GMC Sierra models built in Oshawa. It is further
expected that the truck plant shutdown will force the layoff of
hundreds of workers at the Lear Corporation seat-making factory
in nearby Ajax, Ontario, and at parts makers Automodular and Martinrea
International.
Standing in front of the cameras like a jilted lover, Hargrove
seemed incredulous that GM CEO Richard Wagoner and his team of
executive vice-presidents could be so intransigent. Only the previous
evening, Hargrove had stated, Ive dealt with them
for many, many years. I just find it impossible to think that
they would look me in the eye and say, Yes, we agree but
no, were not going to [reverse the decision].
Asked by reporters what the union would do now, Hargrove was
at pains to preclude any mention of industrial action, stating
instead that the CAWs options include going to the Canadian
Labor Board or seeking arbitration. As a long-time labor bureaucrat,
Hargrove well knows that such appeals have absolutely no chance
of keeping the Oshawa facility open.
The announcement made by Wagoner last Tuesday scheduled the
four GM factories in the US, Canada, and Mexico for closure by
2010, eliminating more than 8,000 jobs. The explosion in gasoline
prices, now topping US$4 a gallon in the US and C$1.30 per litre
in Canada, has hit GM particularly hard. The company has long
been dependent on highly profitable pick-up trucks and SUVs, which
are among the least fuel-efficient vehicles.
With year-to-year truck sales plunging by 37 percent last month,
GM is sharply reducing output of these vehicles, preparing the
sale of its Hummer brand, and ramping up production of smaller
cars at plants in Ohio and Michigan where GM has received tax
abatements and massive concessions from United Auto Workers (UAW)
union locals. Production of a yet-unnamed hybrid truck model,
previously promised for the Oshawa facility, will be shifted to
plants in Mexico and the US.
The action is the latest move in the downsizing of the former
automaking icon, which has cut its hourly Oshawa workforce by
4,000 since 2002 and jobs in the US by 53,000or more than
halfover the last four years alone.
On Tuesday, CAW President Buzz Hargrove feigned shock and outrage
over the closing of the Oshawa plant, which occurred only weeks
after his union pushed through a concessions contract that supposedly
promised continued production at the Oshawa plant through the
life of the new three-year agreement, while accepting the permanent
shutdown of GMs Windsor Transmission plant at a cost of
1,400 jobs.
Hargrove claimed the Oshawa closure is a violation of the newly
signed contract, but he did not threaten to call a strike. Instead,
he launched into a Canadian nationalist tirade, saying, This
is an American company, controlled by Americans, and they are
making decisions in tough times to protect American jobs,
ignoring the thousands of US workers who are being thrown onto
the street. He also denounced Mexican workers because GM had decided
to build hybrid pickups there instead of in Canada.
This nationalist campaign, which serves to pit worker against
worker in a fratricidal struggle to determine who can offer the
auto bosses the most competitive labor costs, was
stepped up Wednesday when CAW Local 222 union officials organized
a blockade of GMs Oshawa headquarters. Waving
Canadian flags and sporting maple leaf-adorned Made in Canada
Matters T-shirts, hundreds of GM workers and supporters
prevented management personnel from driving into the parking lot.
Although employees were allowed to proceed on foot, GM executives
nonetheless decided to activate their work-at-home contingency
plans for their white-collar staff.
Local president Chris Buckley was quick to reassure management
that the CAW officialdom had no intention of interrupting production
at either the truck plant or the adjacent car-assembly facility.
I am encouraging my members to remain on their jobs. I want
my members to continue to build the best trucks and cars in the
industry, said Buckley. Clearly signaling his intentions
to the companythat is, to provide a harmless avenue to blow
off the steam building among autoworkersBuckley continued,
The membership is looking for the union to take some action.
Thats clearly what weve done.
Buckley went on to provide the appropriate loophole for both
the company and the union leadership in ultimately standing down
the blockade. Were going to stay here, he declared,
until General Motors reverses that decision or at the very
least, until somebody in General Motors Corporation tries to justify
to us why they have violated our brand new collective agreement.
Workers interviewed at the blockade Friday morning held out little
hope that the stunt would bear any fruit.
For his own part, GM spokesman Stew Low shrugged off the blockade,
acknowledging the companys tacit solidarity with the union
bureaucracy. Said Low, There is a protest going on at our
headquarters building and thats, frankly, understandable
because this is a very tough thing for employees to go through
and for the union to go through and us as well. GM has the highest
regard for the CAW and will continue to work through this issue
with them. Durham Regional Police also saw nothing untoward
in the CAWs stunt. Theyre allowed to picket,
Sgt. Paul McCurbin told the Canadian Press.We dont
have a problem with that.
Hargrove, Buckley, Oshawa plant chairman Keith Osborne and
the rest of the CAW leadership are adamantly opposed to strike
action against GM or any other measure that would hurt the companys
balance sheet. This is because they uphold the capitalist profit
system, support the automaker in its struggle for market share
and profits with rival car companies, and, in so far as they seek
to prevent job losses, aim to do so by convincing GM management
and stockholders that the CAW can guarantee them labor peace and
the optimum returns.
However, the CAW leadership fears that without some modicum
of grandstanding, it may lose control of angry rank and file.
Only last month, the CAW bureaucracy rammed through a series of
massive concessions contracts at Ford, Chrysler and GM that were
reluctantly accepted by the membership but not before significant
resistance was mounted, particularly at the Ford Oakville plant,
which voted down the deal.
In exchange for hundreds of millions of dollars in union give-backs,
the GM contract, claimed Hargrove at the time, provided guarantees
that truck production would continue in Oshawa for the life of
the agreement. Furthermore, some 900 second-shift truck plant
workers who had been slated to lose their jobs in the near future
would be bridged by a reduced-hours agreement until
a new hybrid truck model was introduced.
Nonetheless, the language of the deal provided GM with an out
should there be a change in market demand for the Silverado and
Sierra models. Moreover, GM claims some of the product commitment
provisions in the new contract do not take effect until September.
Hargrove, clearly hoisted by his own petard, had overridden the
unions established bargaining procedures and opened up the
contracts with the Big Three automakers five months in advance
of the contract expiry dates, claiming historic concessions and
certainty for the corporate bosses were the best way
to preserve jobs.
Also exposed in the GM closure announcement has been the CAWs
close ally, the Ontario Liberal government of Premier Dalton McGuinty.
In 2005, McGuinty, with Hargroves assistance, engineered
a huge infusion of government monies to GMs Project Beacon.
The undertaking provided C$175 million to the corporation to develop
its Oshawa operations and another C$60 million to fund GMs
research and development projects at Ontario universities. Some
of the provisions of the deal were kept secret from both the public
and members of the Ontario legislature.
Sandra Pupatello, Minister of Economic Development, seemed
initially unaware of a provision that required GM to guarantee
maintaining an average hourly workforce of at least 16,000 autoworkers
over the ensuing 10 years. GM had gone under the 16,000-job threshold
even before this weeks announcement. Pupatello was also
unclear on the terms of the 50-year interest-free loan structure
under which the cash had been divvied out. It now appears that
GM will be required to refund a small portion of the monies that
it had earlier received.
In another move, Conservative Federal Finance Minister Jim
Flaherty hinted that the government would make funds available
to General Motors that would make its car assembly operation in
Oshawa more profitable. Not content with allying with the Liberals,
Hargrove sought and obtained a meeting with Conservative Prime
Minister Stephen Harper earlier this year in which he implored
him to assist the Detroit-based Big Three against their Asian
rivals though tariffs, tax concessions and outright grants.
By splitting auto workers into rival national organizations,
the creation of the CAW in 1985 served to strengthen the right-wing
leadership of the UAW and facilitated the auto companies
efforts not only to play one jurisdiction off against another
in seeking tax dollars, but much more importantly, to whipsaw
jobs and contracts back and forth across national borders. Only
a strategy that rejects the capitalist profit imperative and seeks
to unite workers internationally around an independent socialist
program can combat the massive offensive that is being launched
against autoworkers in North America and around the globe.
See Also:
The political lessons of the
American Axle strike
[31 May 2008]
Canada: CAW tries to stampede
GM and Chrysler workers into making huge concessions
[16 May 2008]
In midst of early contract
talks
GM Canada announces closure of last Windsor plant
[14 May 2008]
Unprecedented opposition to
CAWs concession-filled deal with Ford Canada
[10 May 2008]
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