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WSWS : News
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America
Big business presses for Bush to intervene against California
dockworkers
By Andrea Cappannari
4 October 2002
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Hundreds of container ships are jamming the waters of ports
on the West Coast of the United States as the lockout of longshoremen
by the Pacific Maritime Association (PMA) continues into its sixth
day. According to some estimates, the shutdown of the docks is
costing the US economy as much as $1 billion a day.
The effect of the lockout is widespread. In Fremont, California,
a plant run jointly by Toyota and GM has already closed due to
a lack of auto parts needed to keep the assembly lines going.
Grape growers on the Pacific seaboard of the US are reporting
a massive glut in their warehouses, with fruit unable to reach
the Asian markets. Meanwhile, retailers across the country are
warning that unless the shipping containers stranded at the ports
get moving soon, they will not be prepared for the Christmas shopping
season that begins in November. The effect could be to lose the
boost in sales they desperately need to lift sagging profit margins.
A group calling itself the West Coast Waterfront Coalition,
representing retailers like Wal-Mart and Target as well as manufacturing
companies like Toyota and Panasonic, wrote a letter to Bush demanding
immediate action. Organizations representing trucking companies
and agribusiness have issued similar appeals to the White House
for federal union-busting.
With thousands of tons of consumer merchandise, produce, manufacturing
parts and other cargo unable to reach their destinations, it is
clear that the PMA and the Bush administration are willing to
pay a very high price in order to break the resistance of the
longshoremen to attacks on their jobs and working conditions.
Negotiations between the shipping companies and the International
Longshore and Warehouse Union (ILWU), which have been ongoing
since July when the previous contract expired, reached an impasse
last week over how new technology will be instituted in the ports.
While the ILWU leadership has said that it is willing to accept
the loss of 1,000 longshore jobs in the process of bringing the
West Coast facilities up to modern standards of computerization,
the PMA is insistent on even further work-rule concessions. Also
at stake in the contract talks are health benefits and pension
funds.
The PMA lockout of 10,500 workers began on the morning of Friday,
September 27 and was lifted two days later, only to be re-imposed
later that evening. The shipping companies said they closed down
the ports in response to an ILWU-organized slowdown on the docks.
The ILWU bureaucracy insists that it issued no orders for a slowdown,
although it has instructed its members to strictly abide by all
health and safety regulations.
Tensions between the union and management increased on Tuesday
of this week when representatives for the PMA came into a mediation
session flanked by armed security guards. In response, union officials
walked out.
This provocative action was in keeping with the hostile environment
that has surrounded the talks since August, when Washington publicly
threw its weight behind the PMA, threatening to bring in the National
Guard in the event that the union called a strike.
The PMA claimed that it brought along armed guards due to death
threats against its chief negotiator, James Miniace. Union leaders,
however, said the action recalled the techniques of violence and
intimidation used against the longshoremen during their attempts
to unionize in the 1930s.
This shows how they approach negotiations, hiding behind
the government and armed thugs, said ILWU President James
Spinosa. PMAs lockout is holding a gun to the head
of the American economy, and now they move to aim real guns at
us.
Having walked out of the negotiations on Tuesday, the ILWU
has since reentered talks with the PMA under the oversight of
a federal mediator, Peter J. Hurtgen. The ILWU accepted Hurtgen
as a go-between in the contract dispute, despite the fact that
he formerly worked for Morgan, Lewis & Bockius, the law firm
that represents the PMA.
From the beginning of the PMAs decision to lock the longshoremen
out of work, the union has maintained that it is ready and eager
to return to the bargaining table. On September 30, Spinosa stated,
The ILWU continues to put forward the best effort and is
willing to meet, as we have been meeting, even though we find
ourselves in an undesirable position, we will continue to make
every effort to get ourselves a contract in this set of bargaining.
The union is also making every effort to affirm its patriotic
loyalty, instructing its membership to continue loading all ships
carrying military equipment and materiel, regardless of the lockout.
On Thursday of this week, the ILWUs web site proudly announced
that after three days of efforts, the ILWU and Maersk [the
owner of a military cargo vessel] were able to convince the PMA
to allow longshore workers to get the ship on the way.
Despite the trade union bureaucracys attempt to ensure
that the PMAs actions have no impact on Washingtons
war efforts, it is widely anticipated that if the labor dispute
drags on, the White House will declare a national emergency and
invoke the Taft-Hartley Act. This would impose an 80-day cooling-off
period on the two parties and force the longshoremen back to work
in the interim.
Senator Dianne Feinstein, a Democrat from California, has already
called on the federal government to intervene in this manner.
With our nation in the economic doldrums and at the brink
of war, we cannot afford to have this dispute cause further damage
to our economy, said Feinstein.
The ILWU has refused to comment on the senators position,
which is particularly awkward for them given that the union leadership
has continually told its membership that the Democrats would defend
them in Washington against the Bush administrations threats
to intercede.
For their part, the AFL-CIO has remained relatively quiet about
the shipping companies actions. On September 30, AFL-CIO
President John Sweeney issued a tepid statement condemning the
PMA for the lockout and insisting that these (longshoremen)
are ready and willing to work. The trade union bureaucracy
has done nothing to mobilize workers in related industries in
defense of the ILWU membership. Similarly, the UAW, whose own
workers have been laid off on the West Coast because of the lockouts
blocking the shipment of auto parts, has said nothing about the
PMAs actions.
See Also:
US shippers lock out dockworkers
on West Coast
[30 September 2002]
US dock talks reach agreement
on health care benefits
[10 September 2002]
US dockworkers rally in Los
Angeles
[5 September 2002]
Bush threatens to use troops
against West Coast dockworkers
[30 August 2002]
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