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Hypocrisy and nervousness dominate Australian union congress
By Peter Stavropoulos
18 July 2000
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Congress 2000 convened by the Australian Council of Trade Unions
at the end of last month was marked by a glaring gulf between
rhetoric and reality.
Conscious of the deep alienation of many workers from the unions,
the ACTU's newly installed leadershippresident Sharan Burrow
and secretary Greg Combetattempted to bolster its credibility
with a feigned concern for the deepening divide between rich and
poor. Even the venuethe industrial city of Wollongongwas
part of the performance. For the first time in its 73-year history,
the union body held its triennial Congress outside a state capital,
to give its members the impression that the trade unions were
returning to their roots.
But as soon as one entered the Wollongong Entertainment Centre,
the cosy relationship between the trade union bureaucracy and
big business was immediately apparent. The foyer contained professional
booths representing over 20 organisations that had sponsored the
event and were eager to court union officials with their glossy
brochures and giveaways. Nearly half were superannuation funds.
Others included Fuji-Xerox, Ansett Airlines and property developer,
Multiplex.
Moreover, one of the guest speakers was former Reserve Bank
Governor, Bernie Fraser, who promoted the launching of a new bank,
Member's Equity. The banks, building societies and superannuation
funds are vying to gain access to the $438 billion of workers'
money tied up in superannuation, an amount expected to reach $1.3
trillion in the next 15 years.
The Australian Financial Review claimed the Congress
unveiled a radical policy shift and that the ACTU
was moving sharply to the left. Nothing could be further
from the truth. But what the Congress did reveal is a growing
nervousness within the union leaderships about their declining
membership.
The figures presented to the Congress revealed that unionised
workers now make up only 27 percent of the workforce, down from
42 percent in 1989. Since the last congress in 1997 the decline
has accelerated. Last year alone, the unions lost some 150,000
members.
In her opening speech Burrow told the Congress: Australia
is a deeply divided rich-get-richer nation, in which both winners
and losers of almost two decades of economic and social upheaval
are baffled and angry at the destruction of the fair-go-society.
She cited statistics on health, aged-care, education, childcare,
housing and transport to paint a picture of social devastation
and then blamed the widening social gulf on the Howard government
and the individualism of the 80s. But she did not
address the obvious question: what role did the ACTU play in all
of this?
Under the various prices and income accords established between
the ACTU, big business and Labor from 1983 until 1996, the unions
isolated and betrayed struggle after struggle, creating the conditions
for the cutting of real wages, the elimination of hundreds of
thousands of jobs and the dismantling of working conditions. Through
the accords, they facilitated the greatest re-distribution of
wealth away from workers to the rich in history. In 1987, the
ACTU adopted a program, labeled Australia Reconstructed,
that openly committed the unions to ensuring the profitability
and global competitiveness of Australian companies.
For all the talk of a new approach, Burrow defended the accords.
Despite a decade of growth, working families are struggling.
Unions played a significant role in ensuring that growth. Despite
the contention it created in our constituency, the restraint during
the accord years enabled Australia's economic restructuring.
But the accords created mass disaffection and anger in the
working class. As a direct result, the Labor government was defeated
by a landslide in the 1996 elections. Prior to the poll, ACTU
secretary Bill Kelty blustered about a war against
the Liberals over their proposed new industrial laws. But it wasn't
long before the unions wound down their rhetoric and accommodated
themselves to the new government.
Inside the Congress, the new ACTU leaders tried to re-assure
the 700-odd assembled delegates that the decline in membership
was entirely due to the emergence of the new economy.
Service and IT industries had replaced the old economy
of manufacturingthe traditional base of union support. This
new workforce, they argued, was highly casualised and concentrated
in industries without a history of union coverage.
The fact that the ACTU actively participated in this casualisation
process by signing enterprise agreements based on a company's
fluctuating production needs was not mentioned. Indeed, unions
have themselves become employers by establishing their own body-hire
companies that contract out their members as casual labour, competing
for contracts by offering employers the most favourable terms.
Some 27 percent of the workforce is now casual.
Despite its declining membership, the ACTU now controls more
finances than ever before. It has become increasingly dependent
on corporate support and the control of workers' superannuation
funds for its revenue, with many union executives serving as directors
on superannuation fund boards. Under the accords, the ACTU insisted
that workers forgo wage rises in favour of employer contributions
to superannuation funds that are increasingly being used to replace
state-funded retirement pensions.
The growing significance of this financial base of support
was emphasised by American union leader, Richard Trumka, who delivered
the keynote address to Congress 2000. Secretary-treasurer of the
American Federation of Labor-Congress of Industrial Organisations
(AFL-CIO), Trumka told delegates: The power of worker capital
is starting to influence the global economy and corporate decision-making.
He cited figures showing that union pension funds in the US now
total a massive $US11 trillion. Control of these funds, Trumka
said, could be used to influence international trade agreements.
He omitted any reference to the disintegration of the unions
over which he presides and the terrible impact of the AFL-CIO's
policies on the American working class. Barely 15 percent of US
workers are now unionised, down from 35 percent after World War
II. American workers work, on average, 350 more hours per year
than their counterparts in Europe, and 70 more than those in Japan.
The hourly wages for male workers are nearly 2 percent lower than
they were 10 years ago. Moreover, the gap between rich and poor
has widened steadily, with the wealthiest 1 percent taking home
as much income as the poorest 100 million, and the bottom 80 percent
earning a smaller share of total US income than they did in 1977.
Infighting
Despite the carefully stage-managed character of the Congress,
several bitter disputes erupted. On the second day, Labor Party
leader Kim Beazley told the assembled union leaders that his party
would not abandon its free trade stance in favour
of greater tariff protection. Australian Manufacturing Workers
Union (AMWU) national secretary Doug Cameron criticised Beazley's
position and moved a fair trade resolution that called
for social tariffs to exclude cheap labour imports.
Cameron's intervention was directed, on the one hand, to union
members angered by the destruction of 300,000 manufacturing jobs
since the economy was deregulated, and, on the other hand, to
the less competitive national-based industries demanding protection
against global players.
NSW Labor Council secretary Michael Costa clashed with Cameron,
accusing him of populist posturing whilst defending
the ACTU's continued commitment to the transnational corporations.
A compromise was eventually struck, with the ACTU agreeing to
keep the issue of social tariffs under review. The
entire argument centred on differences of a purely tactical character,
namely, with which section of employers the ACTU should align
itself.
The dispute that aroused the greatest passion, however, was
over union demarcation and members. In the final hours of the
Congress, Combet, the newly-elected secretary, remarked: We
have got to stop knocking off each other's members. We do not
want to see a bidding war and agreements struck with employers
that undermine wages. This was a reference to the fact that
some unions have already signed low-wage deals with employers
in order to secure union coverage.
An Australian Workers Union (AWU) official responded by launching
a tirade against union cannibalism, probably one of the
most important topics this Congress should be addressing.
He admitted that the AWU had spent millions in recent years on
court cases over demarcation disputes and was even considering
putting a motion to expel from the ACTU any union poaching
another's members.
The target of his attack, officials of the Construction Forestry
Mining Employees Union, responded with vitriolic denunciations
of the AWU, backed by catcalling from the floor. The entire spectacle
brought to the surface the real state of affairs within Australia's
peak union council.
The Australian Financial Review commented Congress
marked a sea-change in style for the ACTU after the departure
of Kelty who was close to key business leaders and identified
strongly with the Hawke-Keating Labor administration.
While desperate efforts are being made to modify its style,
i.e. to project a more radical profile in order to arrest the
collapse of its membership, Congress 2000 revealed the ACTU's
ever-deepening ties to big business, its increasing reliance upon
the corporate sector and its growing internal decay.
See Also:
After 16 years
in the service of big business
Australian trade union leader resigns
[28 September 1999]
Marxism and the
Trade Unions
[A lecture by David North, 10 January 1998]
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