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Corporate war at home continues
Bush moves to block strike by United Airlines mechanics
By Jerry White
22 November 2001
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The White House announced Tuesday that President Bush would
block a strike by 15,000 mechanics at United Airlines set to begin
next month. Bushs spokesman, Ari Fleischer, said the president
was prepared to do whatever it takes to prevent a
walkout.
The White House announcement followed the decision by the International
Association of Machinists (IAM) to reject binding arbitration
and announce plans to strike the nations number one air
carrier, following 23 months of stalled negotiations for a new
labor contract. IAM officials charged the company with failing
to bargain in good faith in order to block wage and benefit improvements.
Union officials said mechanics would strike if a deal was not
reached before the expiration of a 30-day cooling-off period
required by federal law. The mechanics will have a legal right
to strike in late December, during the height of the holiday traveling
season. Under terms of the Railway Labor Act, however, Bush can
outlaw strike action by declaring an emergency and appointing
a three-member emergency board to make recommendations for a settlement.
If an impasse still exists after 60 days, Congress will have the
legal authority to pass legislation imposing a contract.
United executives immediately hailed the presidents announcement,
which clearly weakens the position of the workers and undercuts
their leverage in negotiating a decent contract. Corporate spokesman
Andy Plews said, We welcome the presidents commitment
to protect the traveling public. Yesterday, we took the step of
reassuring our customers that they should book with confidence,
because we dont expect that this situation will lead to
any disruption of our schedule.
The presidents action comes on the heels of a temporary
restraining order issued last week by a federal judge in Illinois
instructing United mechanics to stop what airline officials claimed
was an illegal job action that caused large numbers of maintenance-related
flight cancellations. The court action was widely seen as a threat
to levy massive fines against the union and individual mechanics,
similar to the $45.5 million a Dallas judge ordered a pilots
union to pay American Airlines for an alleged sick-out by its
members in 1999.
This is the third time this year Bush has intervened or threatened
to intervene on behalf of the airlines to block strikes by workers,
including Northwest mechanics, Delta pilots and American flight
attendants. In March after stopping a strike by Northwest mechanics
Bush declared, I intend to take the necessary steps to prevent
airline strikes from happening this year.
In the context of recent developments, Bushs intervention
raises even more ominous threats to workers rights. Given
the sweeping legal changes under the governments new anti-terrorism
lawmost of which are not known to the publicand the
battery of executive orders imposed by the president in recent
days, it is legitimate to ask whether the mechanics might be charged
with terrorist crimes if they defied the presidents
order. Several civil liberties advocates have pointed out that
the new laws definition of terrorisman attempt
to intimidate or coerce a civilian population or change
the policy of the government by intimidation or coercionis
so broad, it could include labor strikes or other forms of working
class struggle.
Bushs pre-emptive strike-breaking takes place as the
airlines are conducting a systematic attack on the jobs, living
standards and working conditions of tens of thousands of airline
workers. After reaping massive profits during the 1990sdue
in no small part to concessions accepted by the airline unions
at the beginning of the decadethe industry was hit hard
by the economic downturn in the US over the last year.
Even before September 11, Wall Street analysts were complaining
of costly labor contracts and demanding that the airlines cut
costs. The airlines then seized on the events of September 11
to implement downsizing and cost-cutting plans prepared well in
advance and demand a multi-billion-dollar bailout at taxpayer
expense. United eliminated the jobs of 20,000 pilots, flight attendants,
mechanics and ground crew workers as part of the nearly 150,000
airline workers laid off throughout the industry.
The Bush administrations $5 billion federal bailout for
the industrywhich included $802 million for United alonedid
nothing for the tens of thousands of airline workers losing their
jobs. Laid off workers who were anticipating at least a temporary
extension of unemployment payments or health care benefits did
not receive a penny.
The bailout did not touch the multi-million-dollar compensation
packages and golden parachutes enjoyed by the airline
executives. While a typical laid off United flight attendant received
about $220 a week in jobless benefits, Uniteds CEO Jim Goodwinwhose
base salary was nearly $1 millionleft the company in October
with three years of health care benefits, a company car, a country
club membership and a severance package of more than $3.2 million.
In the face of Bushs latest attack on the right to strike,
the leadership of the AFL-CIO union federation has remained silent.
This is not surprising, given the AFL-CIOs long record of
betraying the workers interests in favor of establishing
closer relations with corporate America, and its consistent support
for American imperialisms military actions overseas.
The efforts of the union bureaucracy to accommodate itself
to the demands of big business and collaborate with management
are epitomized by the situation at United, a so-called employee-owned
company, where officials from the machinists and pilots
unions sit on the company board of directors.
In the immediate aftermath of September 11, AFL-CIO President
John Sweeney signaled his willingness to collaborate with big
business and the Bush administration even further, declaring,
The attack on America will only... inspire both business
and labor to work together to overcome many of the issues that
have divided us.
See Also:
US bails out airlines, ignores
plight of workers
[26 September 2001]
How the US airlines got their
$15 billion bailout
[18 October 2001]
No truce in the corporate
war at home
US air industry launches massive attack on jobs
[20 September 2001]
Bush blocks strike by Northwest
Airlines mechanics
[12 March 2001]
Bush anti-terror
law mandates sweeping attacks on democratic rights
[31 October 2001]
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