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New strategy needed to fight attack on New Yorkers jobs
and services
By the Editorial Board
29 April 2003
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The following statement is available in as a PDF
leaflet and is being distributed by supporters of the World
Socialist Web Site and the Socialist Equality Party to an April
29 demonstration called by New York City unions against sweeping
cuts in jobs and services in the new budget proposed by Mayor
Michael Bloomberg.
Faced with the threatened layoff of up to 15,000 municipal
workers and the slashing of already diminished public services,
working people in New York City confront the need for a new political
strategy to defend jobs and social conditions.
New York has already lost over 176,000 jobs in the past two
years. Those now slated to be laid off under Mayor Michael Bloombergs
budget, for the most part low-income workers, will be condemned
to the unemployment lines and welfare.
Proposed budget reductions will slash funds for everything
from education, to basic health care, aid to senior citizens,
foster-care programs and shelters for the homeless. As many as
40 of the citys 200 firehouses could be closed, placing
the lives of both city residents and firefighters in danger.
The city layoffs and budget cuts will come on top of a series
of sweeping attacks by the Republican state administration of
Governor George Pataki, which is projecting its own deficit of
more than $11.5 billion. The Metropolitan Transportation Authority
has already imposed a 33 percent rise in public transit fares
that goes into effect May 1. Cuts in education will sharply increase
tuition at city and state colleges, and a threatened cut of $1.4
billion in health care funding could spell closure for hospitals
and clinics.
These measures will only exacerbate the staggering levels of
social inequality that already exist in New York City. The city
with the greatest concentration of multimillionaires and billionaires
in the world has a rising homeless population that is approaching
40,000, most of them women and children. Many of the homeless
are working at jobs pegged to a minimum wage of $5.15 an hour.
More than 1.6 million of the citys residents20.2
percent of the populationare living below the absurdly low
official poverty line of $17,500 for a family of four, while another
13 percent are subsisting just above it.
The gap between wealth and poverty in New York can be summed
up in one simple fact: the citys $3.8 billion budget deficitto
be covered through mass layoffs and untold suffering for millionsis
$700 million less than the combined corporate and real estate
holdings of just one man, the citys billionaire Republican
mayor, Michael Bloomberg.
The deficit and the impending cutbacks are routinely blamed
on the financial downturn that has struck the city because of
its dependence on the financial markets and the impact of the
September 11, 2001 terrorist attack that toppled the World Trade
Center.
In reality, the deficit is largely the product of the huge
tax breaks awarded to the corporations and New Yorks financial
elite, particularly during the period of the speculative bubble
on Wall Street in the 1990s. While cutting welfare and other social
services, Bloombergs predecessor, Mayor Rudolph Giuliani,
enacted 23 separate tax cuts during his eight years in office.
Combined with cuts carried out at the state level, the result
was an annual reduction in city revenues of $3.6 billion, almost
exactly the size of the current deficit.
Both Bloomberg and Pataki have rejected raising taxes on the
wealthy or the finance houses and corporations that are based
in New York. The mayor has instead imposed a property tax that
falls largely on middle-income homeowners, and proposed a commuter
tax for workers who travel from surrounding suburbs to jobs in
the city.
The citys business taxes have not been adjusted for inflation
since 1966 and account for just 12 percent of total revenues.
Average working families, meanwhile, pay personal income tax at
nearly twice the rate charged to the corporations. In 1979 the
city abolished its stock transfer tax, which brought in $258 million
that year, bowing to blackmail from Wall Street. The stock exchanges
threatened to leave the city unless they got their way.
Various liberal think tanks have produced reports showing that
merely closing corporate loopholes and eliminating tax exemptions
doled out over the past two decades would easily produce revenue
far in excess of the current deficits. But Pataki has dismissed
any such suggestions with demagogic denunciations of job-killing
taxes. Bloomberg has warned that any attempt at forcing
the wealthy to pay their share would only lead to their exodus
from the city.
Both Bloomberg and Pataki are committed to the social policy
that predominates nationwide and in both political partiesthe
redistribution of wealth from the working population to the financial
elite.
Once again, the banks and big business are demanding that the
city balance its budget on the backs of the working class and
the citys most impoverished layers. They want blood in the
form of layoffs and reduced services, and Bloomberg aims to oblige.
He has rejected the unions offers of limited concessions
and loans from their pension funds, and is calling for what amounts
to a radical downsizing of public services and the municipal workforce.
The Bloomberg proposal has been referred to in several newspaper
accounts as a shock-and-awe budget. The reference
to the assault on Iraq is more appropriate than those who use
it as a journalistic catch phrase imagine. The Bush administrations
policy of plundering an entire country goes hand-in-hand with
the plundering of the jobs and living standards of working people
in New York City and throughout the country. These are two sides
of the same policy, which is designed to benefit a thin layer
of multimillionaires and billionaires whose wealth is bound up
with parasitism, corruption and criminality.
Just as Bushs ostensible political opponents in the Democratic
Party and the trade union bureaucracy failed to oppose the illegal
war on Iraq, so too are they prostrate before the impending social
onslaught in New York City. Both of New Yorks US senatorsDemocrats
Charles Schumer and Hillary Clintonvoted last October to
give Bush an open-ended authorization to attack Iraq, while every
one of the statewide Democratic elected officials supported the
aggression.
New York Citys unions have not led a single serious struggle
in more than a quarter of a century. Their protracted degeneration
reached a decisive turning point when the city teetered on the
edge of bankruptcy in 1975. Then, the union bureaucracy, led by
Victor Gotbaum, Barry Feinstein and Albert Shanker, accepted mass
layoffs and the slashing of essential services to bail out the
city and its creditors.
They joined with the politicians and the bankers in helping
to set up the Emergency Financial Control Board and the Municipal
Assistance Corporation. These agencies remain in operation to
this day, imposing a fiscal straight jacket on the city to assure
uninterrupted interest payments to the banks and bondholders.
During the 1990s, the trade union bureaucracy collaborated
intimately with the right-wing Giuliani administration, forcing
through concessions contracts that imposed two-year wage freezes
on city workers, even as the citys wealthy were enjoying
their biggest windfall in history as a result of the soaring stock
market.
The corruption and get-rich-quick mentality on Wall Street
found its direct reflection within the privileged strata that
make up the union bureaucracy. Within the union council representing
the largest share of the municipal workforce, the 125,000-member
District Council 37, it emerged that top leaders had stuffed ballot
boxes to get wage-cutting contracts passed, while stealing from
their members union dues. More than 20 of these bureaucrats
were convicted on charges of embezzlement, kickbacks and ballot-rigging,
while the leaders of the councils two largest locals are
presently sitting in jail for stealing more than $1 million each.
DC 37s current president, Lillian Roberts, was brought
in a year ago to provide the scandal-plagued union with a clean
image. But, with an annual salary of a quarter of a million dollars10
times the average take-home pay of those she claims to representRoberts
is part of the financial elite whose interests Bloombergs
and Patakis policies are designed to defend. She is part
of a social layer that is paid handsomely for the job of sitting
on top of the working class and suppressing any movement toward
independent struggle.
Now Roberts herself has been caught in a conflict-of-interests
scandal, charged with having personally steered DC 37s lucrative
legal contract to a law firm in which her nephew is a partner,
and then lying about the way this no-bid deal was engineered.
The rapid reemergence of corruption at the top of DC 37 is
the clearest indication that these official union structures are
rotting on their feet.
The unions lie when they claim that the Democrats can be pressured
into opposing the destruction of jobs and social conditions at
home or the eruption of militarism and war abroad. Such claims
are aimed at preventing the emergence of any independent struggle
by the working class.
At the same time, the unions long-standing practice of
accepting cuts as a means of saving jobs and their
habitual claim that concessions are only a temporary reaction
to current economic conditions have led workers into
a blind alley. The result has been to completely subordinate the
interests of their members, and of the vast majority of the citys
population, to the profit demands of Wall Street.
Defeating the attacks on jobs and social services will require
the building of new organizations of industrial and political
struggle that are free of the grip of the corrupt and bureaucratized
union apparatus, along their partners in the Democratic and Republican
parties.
The most pressing need is the building of an independent political
party, based on the working class and fighting to defend the social
interests of the vast majority of the population against the profit
interests of the banks, corporations and the financial elite.
Only such a party, armed with a socialist program, can begin to
tackle the present crisis by placing the immense financial resources
that have been monopolized at the top of the social pyramid under
the democratic control of the broad masses of working people,
and redirecting them so as to provide secure and good-paying jobs,
quality health care, housing and education for all.
The Socialist Equality Party (SEP) and the World Socialist
Web Site (WSWS) fight for the building of such a party to
unite all sections of working people, students, immigrant workers
and the poor. We urge all New York City workers to read the WSWS
and carefully consider the policies of the SEP. Help expand the
readership of the WSWS by downloading and distributing its articles
and statements. Contact the WSWS Editorial Board, submit your
own articles, and make the decision to join and help build the
SEP as the new, independent party of the working class.
See Also:
New York City mayor presents doomsday
budget
[19 April 2003]
New York City schools to ax 3,200 jobs
[12 April 2003]
New York City mayor announces 3,400 layoffs
Six firehouses, two companies to be closed
[9 April 2003]
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