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Quebec nurses' strike at a turning point
By Jacques Richard
8 July 1999
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Now in its third week, the strike by the 45,000 members of
the Quebec Nurses Federation (QFN) is at a turning point.
The nurses have shown great determination in fighting for decent
working conditions and quality health care. They have not hesitated
to defy anti-strike laws, and since, last Saturday, to disobey
a draconian back-to-work law passed by the Parti Québécois
majority in the Quebec legislature. Nurses have just voted by
a margin of 93 percent to continue the strike.
A groundswell of popular support for the nurses has shaken
the pro-indépendentiste PQ government, and forced it to
apply only very cautiously the hard line advocated by Quebec Premier
Lucien Bouchard. The strike has popular legitimacy despite the
stipulations of the law, the denunciations of the capitalist media,
and the hardships caused to patients and their families, because
it is broadly recognized that the nurses have borne much of the
brunt of a decade of savage cuts to health care and that in fighting
for increased staffing and better working conditions the nurses
are fighting for all working people.
Canada's health care system has been bled white by budget cuts
by all governments, beginning with the federal Liberal government,
which cut the annual transfers it makes to the provinces to finance
social spending by $6 billion. The PQ government tried to camouflage
its cuts behind a reorganization of health care aimed at promoting
walk-in clinics and homecare, the so-called virage ambulatoire.
But the results have been similar to those in other provinceshospitals
closed (nine in the Montreal area alone), thousands of jobs cut,
overcrowded hospital emergency rooms, and months-long waiting
lists for all but emergency treatment.
Despite overwhelming popular support and the manifest isolation
and weakness of the Bouchard government, the nurses' struggle
will be lost unless it transcends the narrow framework of a trade
union contract struggle and becomes the spearhead for a mass political
mobilization of working people aimed at bringing about a radical
reorganization of economic life, so social policy can be based
on human need, rather than subordinated to the exigencies of big
business.
Although the leadership of the QFN has been forced to distance
itself from the PQ, a longstanding political ally, it is adamantly
opposed to such a struggle. Rather than fighting to make the nurses'
strike a catalyst of a social movement, it has sought to use the
popular support for the nurses to plead for the government to
treat the nurses as a special case. Even in the most
narrow and immediate sense such a strategy cannot serve the interests
of the nurses. How can nurses' working conditions be separated
from those of the orderlies, medical technicians and other workers
with whom they work? How can public health care be defended without
mounting a political challenge to the big business agenda of budget-cutting,
privatization, and tax cuts?
The more powerful the strike has grown, the more anxious the
QFN leadership has become to find a mechanism whereby it can be
terminated. Nurses face the danger of a similar betrayal as that
carried out against striking Ontario teachers in November 1997.
In that struggle, the Ontario Teachers' Federation (OTF) called
off the strike by 126,000 teachers just at the point when popular
opposition to Tory Premier Mike Harris had exposed the isolation
and weakness of his right-wing government. The courts, fearing
that an injunction ordering an end to the strike could further
incite opposition and destabilize the entire national political
situation, relied on the OTF bureaucracy to strangle the movement
and impose massive rollbacks on the teachers.
While publicly the PQ government is adamant that there will
be no negotiations until the nurses obey the law and return to
work, behind the scenes the government and union are discussing
a plan whereby an arbitrator or mediator will be named to consider
the nurses' grievances.
In Saskatchewan, where nurses struck for ten days last April
in defiance of a strikebreaking law, such a formula was used to
coral the nurses back to work. Ultimately, the Saskatchewan Union
of Nurses agreed to a new contract falling far short of the nurses'
demands and the Association of Health Organizations has sought
a $1 million fine against the nurses for illegally striking.
Thus far the Bouchard government has flatly rejected arbitration,
affirming that it is unthinkable
to name someone to decide such a thing as the Quebec budget."
But the PQ would likely be willing to give the nurses a modest
increase above the five percent over three years it has offered
them, were it not for the fear that this would encourage a wave
of militancy among Quebec's other 300,000 public sector workers,
who are also currently in contract negotiations. The QFN leaders'
claim that the nurses are a special case is aimed
at addressing the government's fears and raises the prospect that
the nurses will in future be used to enforce the government's
wage limits against their colleagues. But the government, having
for months resisted the QFN leaders call for a special deal,
faces the thorny problem of how to make such a settlement without
being seen to reward militancy and defiance of the province's
battery of antiunion laws.
In tabling the law against the nurses' strike, Bouchard declared,
"In the wake of this illegal strike, all kinds of groups
have announced votes on illegal strikes. This disorder is very
contagious. Very contagious are these illegal strikes."
For Bouchardand in this he is rightthe pivotal
issue is not the tens of millions more the government might have
to spend so the QFN leaders can claim victory, but
the danger that the nurses' strike will trigger a larger social
movement challenging, at least implicitly, the very essence of
the PQ government's and the entire bourgeoisie's policy: the dramatic
downsizing of the public sector and public services, so as to
increase corporate competitiveness and transfer wealth
from working people to the capitalists and managerial and professional
elite.
The government's cautious response to the strike reveals how
acutely aware it is of the growing unpopularity of its social
agenda. The PQ has not imposed the harshest provision of the existing
antiunion legislation (Bill 160)the stripping of a year's
seniority for each day of illegal strike. And last week's back-to-work
(Bill 72) did not increase the penalties for rank-and file nurses,
although it did dramatically increase those against the nurses'
local union representatives.
The government's strength lies in the political domination
of the strike by a union bureaucracy committed to the existing
social and political order (the QFN leadership, like the rest
of the Quebec trade union leadership supported the government's
drive to eliminate the provincial deficit by the year 2000) and
the lack, as of yet, of an alternative perspective among nurses
and working people.
The support for the nurses from the population remains passive.
The nurses themselves have not sought to mobilize this support
beyond asking motorists passing their picket lines to honk their
horns. Nor have they appealed to Quebec hospital workers, let
alone other Quebec public sector workers or health care workers
elsewhere in Canada, to join them in job action in defence of
public health care and public services.
If the nurses strike has underscored the potential for a working
class counter-offensive, it has no less strikingly demonstrated
the urgency of a struggle to arm the working class with a socialist
perspective so that this potential can be realized. The challenge
facing nurses and all workers is to confront the great taboo questions
of contemporary political life: In a society that is ever-more
productive, why are public services shriveling? Why are poverty
and social inequality growing by leaps and bounds in the midst
of a technological revolution?
See Also:
Quebec nurses enter fourth
day of general strike
[30 June 1999]
Saskatchewan: nurses union
offers to end outlawed strike
[17 April 1999]
Canada: Saskatchewan nurses
defy back-to-work legislation
[10 April 1999]
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