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WSWS : Workers
Struggles : North
America : Auto
workers
UAW officials take an auto worker for a ride
Comment by Jerry White
4 February 2000
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Anyone who has seen American gangster movies knows what it
means when a mafia enforcer takes his victim for a ride. If the
unhappy individual is lucky enough to survive, he gets an unforgettable
message: do what you are told ... or else.
Last March officials from the United Auto Workers (UAW) in
Dearborn, Michigan took an auto worker for just such a ride. Their
victim was Brian Papke, a survivor of last February's explosion
at the Ford Rouge power plant. Their aim was to get Papke to stop
speaking out about hazards at the facility that led to death of
six of his co-workers.
Papke, a 45-year-old instrument repairman, barely escaped injury
in the blast. He made a courageous attempt to save one worker,
who later succumbed to his injuries.
Papke was certain the explosion was not a mere accident.
He decided to make public what he knew about unsafe conditions
in the facility, and in the days following the blast he spoke
with newspaper and television reporters. He frequently spoke about
these issues with other workers, as well as safety experts and
legal advisers on an Internet discussion group, making it clear
he believed Ford had put its profits before workers' safety.
Unknown to Papke, his comments were being monitored. Throughout
this period Ford was attempting to conceal prior safety problems
in the plant, and the UAW was warning workers not to talk about
plant conditions. Publicly, high-ranking Ford and UAW officials
were defending the company's safety record and denying that the
explosion had anything to do with years of downsizing and cost-cutting.
Papke and others who spoke out were a thorn in their sides.
According to a February 1 article in the Detroit Free Press,
one day last March a union representative approached Papke in
a Ford Rouge cafeteria and said simply, Let's go for a ride.
Because he was on involuntary layoff after the blast and awaiting
reassignment to another Ford facility, Papke assumed this was
about a new job, and followed the union official to his car. He
had no idea where they were going until the official pulled up
to the office of a psychiatrist on Michigan Avenue. Although he
did not know the doctor, the psychiatrist had apparently been
fully briefed about Papke.
He told me I was obsessed with the power plant, that
I needed to stop talking to people about it, Papke said.
They told me to stop writing those letters on the Internet.
He also told Papke that he needed to go on medication and take
a medical leave. I almost went for it, Papke said,
but he resisted.
Later he told other workers about the incident. They
thought it was screwy. Usually, the company tries to get you off
medical leave, not on it, Papke said. He concluded,
With me being an insider and knowing the building and stuff,
they didn't want me going public with my knowledge.
What is the proper description of such actions by UAW officials?
At the least, they border on criminal activity. Union officials
conspired with Ford management to intimidate and silence a worker,
and if that did not work, to use the services of an unscrupulous
doctor to drug him with medication.
In the history of the labor movement such gangsterism has played
a prominent and lamentable role. In the 1930s these methods were
used by the auto bosses against the courageous workers who fought
to organize the UAW at Ford, General Motors and other corporations.
The auto magnates employed spies and thugs to terrorize and silence
union supporters. This was particularly true of Henry Ford, the
Nazi supporter, who employed a private army of 8,000 goonsthe
so-called Ford Servicemen, led by Harry Bennett, well known for
his connections to the Detroit mafia.
To fight for the UAW meant taking your life into your own hands.
UAW supporters were forced to carry out underground work to avoid
detection and retribution. So tight was Ford's anti-union hold
on the city of Dearborn that when Walter Reuther and other UAW
organizers came to the Rouge plant to pass out union leaflets
in full view of news cameras, Bennett's thugs beat them up in
the so-called Battle of the Overpass of 1937.
In many ways the tragedy of the American labor movement is
summed up in the fact that today the organizations which previous
generations of workers struggled and sacrificed to build have
taken on the functions of the company goons and gangsters against
whom the UAW pioneers fought sixty years ago. Ford workers who
speak out against the conditions on the shop floor are subjected
to threats and intimidation, not from Ford's servicemen, but from
the UAW.
How has this happened? The bureaucratized, pro-company outfits
that presently constitute the organized labor movement
in America are the product of a protracted process of degeneration.
A key juncture in that decline was the anti-communist purges carried
out by the Reuther brothers and others in the 1940s and 1950s.
By the 1980s the unions had openly embraced corporatism. Today
they function as little more than an extension of corporate management.
The basic political physiognomy of the UAW remains the same
today as it was during the Cold War, above all its fear of socialism
and hatred of its Marxist opponents. One aspect of the Brian Papke
episode underscores this fact. Papke was told by UAW officials
to stop sending letters to the socialist web site.
It is clear that the UAW's retaliation was in direct response
to their suspicion that Papke was sending letters to the World
Socialist Web Site. On March 11, the WSWS posted several
letters from BP, a correspondent who identified himself
as a Ford power plant employee. These letters provided
details of Ford's negligence towards safety and charged that the
company's greed killed six of my co-workers. Within
days of the appearance of these letters Papke was taken for a
ride.
The UAW was complicit in imposing unsafe conditions at the
Ford Rouge power plant and ignoring the warnings of workers of
an impending disaster. To protect Ford from criminal charges and
liability, and cover up their own corrupt relations with management,
the UAW officials sought to silence their own members, by whatever
means necessary.
The fact that the union bureaucracy has contempt for the democratic
rights of its members is not a revelation. But one additional
point should be made. For years, the UAW and AFL-CIO bureaucracy
used anti-communism and red-baiting as weapons in their struggle
against the influence of socialists and class conscious workers
in the trade unions. But the methods they use against their members
echo those employed by Stalin's heirs in the former Soviet Union,
who often sent opponents to asylums for psychiatric treatment
and drugging.
The affinity of methods is no mere coincidence. From a sociological
standpoint, the UAW officialdom and the old Stalinist apparatchiks
represent similar phenomenapetty-bourgeois layers of a parasitical
type, whose privileges and social status depend on their oppression
and betrayal of the working class.
See Also:
The unions:
What one worker's case reveals
[21 October 1996]
Dissident
miners attacked at United Mine Workers rally
[9 April 1998]
Bus drivers campaign
for "Union members' bill of rights" in Washington state
The political issues in the fight for workers' democracy
[10 July 1999]
One year since Dearborn, Michigan
explosion
New revelations expose company-union complicity in fatal blast
at US Ford plant
"They decided to put profits over safety"
[4 February 2000]
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