|
WSWS : News
& Analysis : Europe
: Ireland
Northern Ireland: Unions derail opposition to Bombardier job
cuts
By Steve James
11 December 2003
Use
this version to print
| Send this
link by email | Email the
author
A weeklong strike by workers at Bombardiers Belfast aerospace
plant, part of a months-long dispute, has been derailed by the
combined efforts of the trade union bureaucracy and the Northern
Ireland Labour Relations Agency (LRA).
The strike, at the citys historic Shorts plant, involved
4,000 of the 5,800 workforce and was called over ongoing efforts
by the company to cut its Belfast-based workforce and introduce
new shift patterns. In the end, despite workers efforts,
the redundancies have merely been delayed for some weeks and the
new shift will be discussed as part of the next round of pay negotiations
with the main trade unions at the plantAmicus, the General
Municipal and Boilermakers Union (GMB) and the Transport and General
Workers Union (TGWU).
The origins of the dispute lie in the depressed state of the
world aircraft industry in the aftermath of September 11, 2001.
Canadian-based Bombardier, which makes medium-sized jets for the
regional and business aircraft markets, has made the Belfast plant
central to its aircraft production because of the low pay and
high skill levels of the workforce. In 2002, under the impact
of falling sales and aggressive competition from the Brazilian
company Embraer, Bombardier set out to defend its profit margins
by cutting its global workforce of 38,000 by 3,800. In March 2003,
the company announced 3,000 more cuts. The job losses had impact
across the company, including locations in Kansas, Arizona, Germany
and Britain. Two hundred and forty jobs were also lost in Belfast.
Shortly after, 60 percent of the Belfast workers rejected a
four-year pay deal that had been initially accepted by union officials,
which included a one-year pay freeze. At the time, union officials
denounced the workforce as voting for their P45s [a tax
form issued to unemployed workers]. Seeking to intimidate
workers, the company immediately announced plans for 1,000 more
redundancies, while local unionist politicians, including Jim
Rodgers, a former Belfast mayor, called for a new vote, insisting
that the workers have no bargaining powers, its a
take it or leave it option.
The workforce nevertheless rejected new talks aimed at finding
a way to impose the pay freeze.
Over the summer, top union officials from Amicus, the GMB,
and the TGWU were called in to calm an increasingly tense situation
at the plant. Peter Williamson of Amicus told the BBC, It
has certainly never been my experience as a trade union official
to witness the resentment and the anger that is current in this
workforce at this stage.
Local unionist politician David Ervine, leader of the Protestant
paramilitary-linked Progressive Unionist Party, also warned of
tensions at the plant.
Talks between Bombardier and the unions broke down, and the
unions were eventually forced to hold a ballot on industrial action
in which workers voted by a large majority to strike. In mid-October,
with a strike imminent, the unions agreed to call off any action
for six weeks if the company agreed to further talks as well as
a suspension of redundancies and shift changes during this period.
The six-week breather, put forward by the LRA, meant that any
strike would occur after the elections to the Northern Ireland
Assembly held on November 26. Bombardiers Shorts plant is
by far the largest manufacturing employer in Northern Ireland,
and a bitter strike at Shorts would have forced unwelcome questions
about the fate of the working class onto the political agenda.
For pro-British unionist politicians, Shorts has historically
been one of the plants at which privileges offered to Protestants
have been used to tie workers politically to the Ulster bourgeoisie.
The local member of the Northern Ireland Assembly is Peter Robinson,
deputy leader of Ian Paisleys far-right Democratic Unionist
Party. Unionism rests on the claim that the interests of Protestant
workers in Northern Ireland can be defended through an alliance
with British capital.
The breakup and decay of this relationship is embodied in the
fate of Shorts. Once a leading, even pioneering company, Shorts
was taken over in 1989 by Bombardier and is now an integral part
of the companys global operation. Rather than being offered
privileged and secure jobs at the expense of neighbouring Catholics,
Shorts workers of all religious persuasions are now forced into
global competition with other sections of the Bombardier workforce,
in Germany, Sweden, the US and the UK.
Simultaneous with the threat to workers in Belfast, 2,000 jobs
at the companys rail division in Derby, UK, are threatened,
while 170 jobs have already been lost in Wakefield, Doncaster,
Ilford and Plymouth.
The companys Hennigdorf plant in Germany recently laid
off 440 workers, while its Halle plant was threatened with closure.
For their part, the republican politicians argue that workers
should support the end of British rule and subordinate their interests
to an Irish capitalist class that has in the last two decades
raked in immense profits based on cheap labour and access to European
markets. In the recent elections, Sinn Fein and the Social Democratic
and Labour Party campaigned on pro-business agendas that advanced
Northern Ireland as an investment platform with links to the southern
republic.
But talks planned for early November broke down, and workers
refused to operate a new computerised time management system.
The works canteen was occupied on November 20 by 2,000 workers
who had been sent home by the company. By November 24, 4,000 Amicus
and TGWU members were on strike, although officially the strike
was not supposed to start until November 26election day.
Picket lines were set up on November 27, and a rally was held
at Transport House in Belfast. Speaking to the BBC, Eugene McGlone
of the TGWU complained that the companys tactic of docking
two weeks wages from all the strikers, before it was clear
how long the dispute would last, had made the unions job
of resolving the dispute in an amicable way more difficult.
Within a few days, shop stewards at the plant voted to accept
a proposal put together by the company, the LRA and senior union
bureaucrats that postponed any new redundancies until the end
of March, while new shift and working practices will be discussed
as part of pay negotiations. This ensures that the union officials
will play the central role in imposing Bombardiers demands
on the Belfast workforce. Davy Thompson of the TGWU stated, We
are more than happy as a union with the settlement, while
Alex McRitchie of Shorts management stated, Everyone has
agreed that the future wage contract is central to the future
competitiveness of our operation here in Belfast.
No less than the unionist or nationalist politicians, the trade
union bureaucracy insists that workers must subordinate their
interests to one or other section of capitalists. Under the impact
of the very same global economic pressures that have transformed
Shorts into a branch of a Canadian transnational, the trade union
bureaucracy has evolved into an arm of corporate management whose
function is to police the exploitation of the working class while
pitting workers in one branch of Bombardier against another.
Shorts workers cannot defend their interests through alliance
with any section of capital, whether British, Irish or Canadian.
Unity must be built amongst working people of all and no religion
in Northern and Southern Ireland, Britain, and internationally;
and it must be based on a perspective that seeks to mobilise the
working class as an independent political force. This demands
the construction of a new socialist party in Ireland.
See Also:
Northern Ireland elections: Democratic
Unionist Party and Sinn Fein gain support
[3 December 2003]
Hundreds of jobs cut in Belfast
[16 June 2003]
Top of page
The WSWS invites your comments.
Copyright 1998-2008
World Socialist Web Site
All rights reserved |