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WSWS : News
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SEP candidate John Christopher Burton speaks with picketing
supermarket workers in Los Angeles
By Jack Heinz
23 October 2003
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Supermarket workers in the second week of a strike/lockout
warmly greeted Socialist Equality Party gubernatorial candidate
John Christopher Burton when Burton visited picket lines in the
Los Angeles area on Tuesday. Burton, a civil rights lawyer in
Pasadena, ran as a replacement candidate in the October 7 recall
election to provide a socialist alternative to the Democrats and
Republicans.

Workers at Vons and Pavillions supermarkets in southern California
walked off their jobs on October 11 in opposition to the owners
demands for sweeping concessions in a new contract. Two other
major chains, Ralphs and Albertsons, immediately locked out their
employees. Some 70,000 workers, members of the United Food and
Commercial Workers Union (UFCW), are either on strike or locked
out in the region.
At a Ralphs store located in the Los Angeles suburb of
La Canada more than a dozen locked out workers stood in temperatures
exceeding 100 degrees to picket the nearly empty parking lot in
front of the store entrance. Inside, strikebreakers hired at hourly
rates exceeding those of UFCW workers with decades of seniority
stood next to empty cashier lines during what would normally be
the late afternoon rush.
Each of the pickets took a copy
of the statement issued by Burton declaring his solidarity with
both the supermarket workers and striking Los Angeles transit
workers [See John Christopher
Burton, socialist candidate in California recall election, declares
solidarity with supermarket and transit strikers] along
with the statement of the Socialist Equality Party on the California
recall election.
Many workers told Burton they hardly ever saw their union officials
at the picket line and expressed concern that the union had not
proposed a strategy for winning the dispute. Burton urged the
pickets to form their own committees and reach out to workers
in other areas of industry and commerce for support. He explained
that although their struggle might seem isolated, it was part
of a broader attack on health coverage for the working class.
All the pickets expressed their agreement.
Burton explained that the workers contract struggle was
in essence a political struggle, and that big business was intent
on driving down the standard of living for workers in California
and throughout the country. He stressed the importance of mobilizing
the working class independently of the two big business parties,
both of which refuse to take any action against the unionbusting
tactics of the grocery chains.
Burton pointed out that the UCFW leadership had taken no measures
to unite their job action with the thousands of striking transit
workers represented by the Amalgamated Transit Union. They
fear the independent mobilization of the workers because it threatens
their alliance with the Democratic Party, he said. Several
of the pickets told Burton that they were sorry they did not vote
for him in the recent recall election, and said that they would
check out the World Socialist Web Site.
Many of the workers were incensed over comments from local
right-wing talk show hosts, particularly John and Ken
from KFI 640 and Larry Elder and Al Rantel from KABC 790. Doreen
Bennett, a cashier with 29 years experience, told Burton, I
dont appreciate people saying that I dont have a real
job. I have a daughter in college and a son who is 32. I raised
them by working full time at this market. Now they want to make
us pay half of our health expenses. I cant imagine if this
had occurred ten or fifteen years ago what I would have done to
make the home and car payments due every month.
Bennett explained how the lockout began at her store, which
belongs to Kroger Company. Workers were told to go home
at 9:00 p.m. one night. The next shift showed up in the morning,
all dressed and ready to work, and was sent home. She expressed
concern because there are no talks scheduled with the holiday
season only weeks away. She suggested that other workers
should join their fight. Teachers, firefighters, everyone
who understands what happens when we go weeks without a paycheck
should support our struggle.
Mark Meshkat told Burton that he
has worked for Ralphs as a cashier for 19 years, yet the
company wont make him full-time because it wants the flexibility
to cut his hours below 40 a week. Meshkat said that the main issue
in dispute was health care coverage.
90 billion dollars is going to Iraq, he said, but
they cannot spend the money on health care here. Food, shelter,
education and health carethese should be basic human rights
that the government insures for all people. If everybody had those,
maybe we would have a better society.
Meshkat praised the many customers who have stopped by the
picket lines to show their support. One dropped off a professionally
prepared poster showing the millions of dollars Krogers
top management are sucking out of the company in annual salary
and stock options.
Jennifer Gates, a checker who moonlights as an accomplished
jazz vocalist at local venues, provided the WSWS with a copy of
the grocery companies latest Offer of Settlement.
She denounced the provision allowing the companies to open non-union
stores wherever their market share is less than 25 percent, along
with a proposed two-tier wage structure and cuts in benefits.
See Also:
Unions isolate California supermarket
strikers
[20 October 2003]
John Christopher Burton, socialist candidate
in California recall election, declares solidarity with supermarket
and transit strikers
[17 October 2003]
California supermarket chains mount strikebreaking
drive against grocery workers
[13 October 2003]
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