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Bush slashes federal workers pay raise
By Kate Randall
5 December 2002
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With its November 29 executive action slashing pay raises for
1.8 million federal workers, the Bush administration has once
again revealed itself to be the political representative of the
most rapacious sections of the American corporate and financial
elite.
A 1990 law requires across-the-board raises of 3.1 percent
for civil service employees as well as a locality pay
adjustment to compensate for the disparity between federal workers
pay and that of workers in the private sector. A clause in the
law allows the president to declare a national emergency
in order to withhold the full amount.
While both the House of Representatives and the Senate had
proposed a 4.1 percent hike, approximately the same amount the
military is to receive, Bush rejected the principal of civilian-military
parity, limiting the raise for civilian workers to the 3.1 percent
minimum. At the same time he barred any locality pay
raise.
Workers in more than 30 metropolitan areas will be affected
by the locality pay freeze, including New York, Boston, San Francisco,
Dallas, Houston, Cincinnati, Orlando, Kansas City and Washington
DCcities where the cost of living is particularly high and
the disparity between civilian and federal workers pay is
greatest. By the White Houses own estimates, the overall
pay gap between private and government workers nationwide is about
18.6 percent.
Bushs invocation of a national emergency
to slash the federal workers pay raise was a fraud. He announced
his decision without any serious explanation of how cutting workers
pay would aid the war on terrorism. The timing of
the announcementin an email to reporters late Friday on
the Thanksgiving holiday weekend, when it was likely to receive
minimal press coverageunderscored the contempt for the working
class that pervades this extreme right-wing government.
Bush faced little resistance. His cut in the federal pay raise
evoked barely a whimper of protest from the Democratic Party and
the unions representing federal workers.
Bush claimed the pay increases would threaten our efforts
against terrorism or force deep cuts in discretionary spending
or federal employment to stay within budget. But the same
rationale was not applied when it came to rewarding his political
cronies. In a decision announced just this week, but implemented
earlier this year, Bush restored cash bonuses for several thousand
of his political appointees, a practice begun under the first
Bush administration and barred under Clinton. These awards can
total $25,000 or higher for senior political appointees, on top
of salaries of $115,000 to $140,000 a year.
The cutback in the raise for federal workers is the latest
in a series of government measures targeting the working class.
On October 8 Bush invoked the anti-union Taft-Hartley law against
West Coast longshoremen, imposing a cooling-off period
and banning any type of work action against the shipping companies.
The law establishing the Department of Homeland Security, drawn
up by the administration and passed last month with the support
of a majority of Democratic lawmakers, will strip 170,000 federal
workers of civil service protection and collective bargaining
rights. The government will have the unrestricted power to hire,
fire and transfer workers in the new department.
In another recent move with devastating implications for federal
workers, Bush announced an initiative allowing private companies
to compete with federal agencies presently employing nearly half
of all federal employees.
Last month the Bush administration refused to broker a compromise
between the House and Senate to extend unemployment payments for
nearly 1 million jobless workers who will run out of benefits
by the end of the year.
Finally, the White House announced this week that it will repeal
a Clinton-era rule that allows states to use unemployment insurance
money to help families whose wage-earners take time off to care
for a newborn or newly adopted child, a move that could adversely
affect as many as 1.9 million working women.
These anti-working class actions take place under conditions
of rising unemployment, with massive job cuts announced almost
on a daily basis, and growing signs of social distress among broad
sections of population. They are an essential component of the
general attack on democratic rights carried out by the Bush administration
in the wake of September 11, including the secret detention of
alleged terror suspects, the indefinite jailing, without trial,
of individuals as enemy combatants, and mass arrests
of Arab and Muslim immigrants.
The latest attack on federal employees demonstrates that the
essential target in Bushs war on terrorism is
the working class. The extreme-right forces represented by the
Bush administration aim to strip working peoplecitizens
and non-citizens alikeof their basic democratic rights and
all means of resisting the attacks of the corporate elite.
By contrast, when it comes to big business and the rich, the
Bush administration is a source of almost limitless largess. Only
a few days before the attack on federal workers pay Bush
signed into a law a terrorism insurance measure that
amounts to a huge windfall for the insurance and construction
industries. The law guarantees up to $100 billion in federal funds
for the insurance industry in the event of a terrorist attack.
The Homeland Security Act was similarly tailored to corporate
interests, with provisions shielding drug companies and arms makers
from liability suits.
See Also:
US intelligence appeals court
sanctions increased domestic spying
[22 November 2002]
Bush Homeland Security bill
nears passage by US Congress
Police-state measure threatens democratic rights
[18 November 2002]
Bushs double standard:
protecting corporations, victimizing workers
[18 November 2002]
Bush invokes anti-union Taft-Hartley
law against West Coast longshoremen
[10 October 2002]
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