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Canada: GM seeks discussions with CAW to end Oshawa blockade
By Carl Bronski
11 June 2008
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As outrage continues to build amongst auto workers and the
people of Oshawa, Ontario, over General Motors recent announcement
of the impending closure of the giant Oshawa truck plant, the
leadership of the Canadian Auto Workers (CAW) union is working
with the company to dissipate workers anger.
Last week, CAW president Buzz Hargrove, Local 222 president
Chris Buckley, and Oshawa Plant chairman Keith Osborne were caught
off guard by GMs announcement that 2,600 auto workers would
lose their jobs in the second half of 2009 when the company ceases
all truck production at the Oshawa complex.
Just two weeks earlier, the CAW officialdom had rammed through
a new three-year contract that offered up massive concessions
and accepted the imminent closure of GMs Windsor Transmission
plant in exchange for supposed job guarantees at other GM facilitiesguarantees
that Hargrove said would keep trucks rolling off the line in Oshawa
through 2011 and beyond. But GM, citing the freshly-minted contracts
language, argued that market conditions had changed, thereby voiding
future product commitments.
Hargrove, who had claimed that he had saved thousands of jobs
by surrendering unprecedented concessions, was exposed as the
purveyor of little more than bureaucratic snake oil. He has been
reduced to claiming that the Oshawa truck plant closure is a violation
of the contract, with GM countering that the new agreement doesnt
take force until mid-September and, in any event, allows GM complete
freedom to slash jobs should market conditions deteriorate.
In an effort to shore up its rapidly evaporating credibility
amongst the rank and file, the CAW leadership mounted a so-called
blockade of GMs national headquarters, also
located in Oshawa, beginning last Wednesday. The office-building
blockade has been a rather tame affair. The union is not preventing
white-collar personnel from walking into the building. On Monday,
local president Buckley announced that he made GM an offer
to allow their payroll personnel in and anyone else they deemed
essential to run their Canadian operations.
For its part, GM has made it known from Day One that it has
instructed its white collar staff to activate, wherever possible,
its backup and work-at-home contingencies, whilst the company
and the union work to resolve the situation. Even when GM began
to prepare the groundwork for a court injunction against the protest
on Monday, a company spokesman offered to seek a collaborative
approach with the union to bring the action to a close.
With many workers still skeptical about the efficacy of the
blockade, Buckley organized a three hour go-slow car
convoy around the truck and car complex on Saturday that, according
to plant chairman Keith Osborne, slowed production for about 45
minutes by delaying supply deliveries.
Hargrove, Buckley, and the company are clearly working together
to ensure that the situation does not get out of hand. The bureaucracy
well knows there have been rank-and-file discussions of a wildcat
strike, as does GM. On Tuesday, at the CAWs Collective Bargaining
and Political Action Convention in Toronto, delegates, speaking
from the floor, warned of the anger amongst rank-and-file workers
and politely asked the leadership to at least consider a one-day
strike. From the podium, a stoic Hargrove declined comment.
Local president Chris Buckley has been quick to reassure management
that the CAW officialdom has 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,
he said at the beginning of the dispute. I want my members
to continue to build the best trucks and cars in the industry.
Clearly signaling his intentions to the companythat is,
to provide a harmless avenue to blow off the steam building among
auto workersBuckley continued, The membership is looking
for the union to take some action. Thats clearly what weve
done.
On Monday, Hargrove stated that he was not surprised that the
auto maker was moving toward an injunction and tipped his hat
to their patience: Its quite interesting that they
recognized that the anger and frustration was pretty high and
they better let it set for a few days before they applied [for
an injunction]. Im glad they let it set for a few days.
Ever cognisant of its primary role as guardian of company productivity
targets and hence corporate profits, the CAW bureaucracys
fight back has been one part bluster, one part publicity
stunt and two parts virulent anti-American and anti-Mexican chauvinism.
From the outset, Hargrove has been at pains to assure GM and
its investors on Wall Street and Bay Street that whatever stunts
the union may have to pull to quell the anger of the rank and
file, a strike against GMs flagrant and cynical manoeuvre
to close the truck plant is not in the cards. Whats
the best approach? asked Hargrove. Is it through the
grievance procedure? Expedited arbitration, which we have done
under our contract? Is it the Ontario Labour Relations Board,
or is it the courts? Well decide which place we can be most
effective and get a decision the quickest before this thing starts
to wind down.
Of course, Hargrove, as a veteran labour bureaucrat, knows
full well that there is absolutely no possibility that such appeals
will result in a reprieve for the truck plant. And just to ensure
his compliancy, GM has yet to announce the anticipated additional
product for the car plant that sits next to the soon-to-be-closed
truck facility.
Hargrove set the tone for his damage control operation from
the beginning of the dispute, launching 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 has decided to build hybrid pick-ups there,
instead of in Canada. Never mentioned once is the fact that two
of the four truck and sport utility plants being closed by GM
are in the United States and one is in Mexico. CAW officials have
derisively referred to the Mexican facility slated for closure
as a small, shed operation.
The CAWs fightback campaign gives pride of
place to claims that the Oshawa facility is one of the companys
most profitable, that is to say it aimed at convincing GM that
cutting US and Mexican jobs, in preference to Canadian ones, would
be better for its shareholders.
Ken Lewenza, Local 444 president at Chryslers Windsor
operation, and touted as a possible heir apparent to Hargrove,
magnanimously strode to the microphone Tuesday at the Bargaining
Convention and offered all delegates a Made in Canada Matters
T-shirt worn by the members of the local bureaucracy at the blockade.
The offer came on the heels of an emergency resolution proposed
by Hargrove and passed by the delegates that called on the federal
government to require auto makers to produce in Canada a total
amount of cars and light trucks equivalent to the number of vehicles
that they sell in Canada. A second resolution called on municipal
councils to adopt a Buy Canadian policy in matters
of government procurement.
Given the right-wing nationalist perspective that has animated
the CAWs blockade, it is not surprising that both federal
Liberal leader Stephane Dion and Jack Layton, leader of the social-democratic
New Democratic Party, have visited it to show support.
Hargrove stumped for the re-election of a Liberal minority
government in the 2006 federal election, making campaign appearances
with the then Liberal prime minister, Paul Martin, and Liberal
MP Belinda Stronach, the daughter of Frank Stronach, the principal
shareholder of auto parts giant Magna International.
See Also:
CAW officials grandstand after GM plant
closure announcement
[7 June 2008]
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]
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