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Quebec unions shelve plans for one-day strike
By Guy Charron
11 August 2004
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Quebecs principal labor federations have shelved plans
for a general strikea one-day province-wide
walkoutagainst the provincial Liberal government of Jean
Charest, despite massive rank-and-file support for such action.
Predictably, the leaders of the Quebec Federation of Labor
(QFL), the Confederation of National Trade Unions (CNTU) and the
CSQ (Centrale des syndicats du Québec) are blaming each
other for the scuttling of the mass protest. The CNTU said it
would have to rethink everything (toute revoir)
after the leadership of the QFL, the provinces largest union
federation, made clear it has no intention of acting on the strike
threat. The QFL, for its part, criticized the CNTU and CSQ for
explicitly ruling out a strike of more than 24 hours.
In reality, the union bureaucracy is united in seeking to suppress
the mass working-class opposition to the Liberals, by diverting
it into impotent protests and politically subordinating it to
the big business Parti Québécois (PQ). While
the union officialdom touts the indépendantiste PQ
as a progressive party, when it held office between
1994 and 2003, the PQ instituted massive social spending cuts
and slashed corporate taxes, thereby paving the way for the Liberals
current drive to re-engineer the state through privatization,
deregulation and tax cuts skewed to benefit the well-to-do.
Like the Charest Liberal government, the union bureaucracy
was rattled by the largely spontaneous wave of mass strikes and
demonstrations that swept Quebec last December in response to
a battery of socially regressive Liberal bills. Among other things,
these bills gave employers a green light to contract out work,
stripped thousands of workers of the right to unionize, and increased
charges for daycare and other public services. Fearing the protest
movement was escaping their control, the union leaders seized
on the threat of a general strike in the New Year as a political
lifeline. They could posture as leading the struggle against the
Liberals, while, relying on the holiday season and the passage
of the Liberal legislation to dampen the militancy of the rank-and-file.
From the outset, the QFL, CNTU and CSQ leaders made clear that
what they envisaged by a general strike was a protest writ-large,
not a political challenge to the Liberal government. Not only
did they make the focus of their attack on Charest his repudiation
of the Quebec model of government-business-union collaboration,
but they repeatedly made explicit that the union protests were
in no way meant to call into question the Liberals right
to rule. Typical was QFL President Henri Massés February
2004 statement that he wasnt calling for the defeat
of the government. It is there for four years. It is doing its
job. If it adopts damaging policies, we will always criticize
it.
The maneuvers of the union leadership notwithstanding, the
general strike call did evoke a powerful response among workers.
All the unions recorded massive strike votes. Even the corporate
media was forced to concede that there was widespread popular
support for the opposition movement and not only among trade unionists.
Such is the popular opposition to the Liberals, QFL President
Massé has voiced his exasperation at how difficult it is
to calm his members. When we speak of some correct government
measures, said Massé, people are still outraged
and dont want to listen.
In trying to justify the shelving of the strike threat, the
union leaders have claimed that the Liberals have been forced
to moderate their policies. Said QFL Secretary-General René
Roy, They [the Liberals] are more ready to discuss than
before. Theyre taking more time and it is in this direction
that we want the government to go.
It is indisputable that the Charest government was shaken by
the groundswell of opposition to its right-wing program. But the
Liberals have repeatedly said that they intend to press forward
with the key elements of their agenda: the privatization of much
of the provincial public sector, including parts of the health
system; dramatic tax cuts for business and the better off; and
a major reduction in state expenditures.
Within days of the unions shelving their plans for a one-day
general strike, the Quebec government tabled its wage offer for
the almost half-million hospital workers, teachers, civil servants
and other public sector workers whose contracts expired in the
summer of 2003. The government is proposing an unprecedented six-year
contract, with a wage freeze for the first two years and a total
average wage increase of just 12.6 percent (including any and
all adjustments for gender wage-equity)
While this offer was universally condemned by the union leadership,
the various rivals unions and union federations are all determined
to separate the public sector workers struggle over their
terms of employment from the struggle to defend public and social
services.
The unions suppression of militant protests and industrial
action goes hand in hand with their efforts to tie the working
class to the big business PQ. During the just-completed federal
election, the unions went all out to muster support for the PQs
sister party in the federal parliament, the Bloc Québécois.
And a series of high level union bureaucrats, recently founded
a new group within the PQSyndicalistes et progressistes
pour un Québec libre (Unionists and progressives for
an independent Quebec)with the purpose of refurbishing its
tattered left credentials.
See Also:
Canadian Elections:
The Bloc Québécois a political instrument of the
québécois elite
[25 June 2004]
Quebec government tries to
remake its image for the better to pursue class war assault
[14 April 2004]
Quebec: Mounting
opposition to the Liberals class war agenda
[16 December 2003]
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