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A warning to California grocery workers: Trumka, AFL-CIO preparing
final act in betrayal
By Andrea Peters and Rafael Azul
31 January 2004
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The AFL-CIOs intervention into the strike by grocery
workers in southern California should be understood as a sign
that the leadership of the United Food and Commercial Workers
(UFCW) is preparing its final act in the betrayal of the three-and-half-month-old
struggle by employees at four major supermarket chains to defend
their wages and health benefits.
The UFCW is hailing AFL-CIO Secretary-Treasurer Richard Trumkas
involvement as the initiation of a renewed effort to beat back
the demands of the grocery stores. In fact, the opposite is true.
The maneuvers that have been devised under Trumkapray-ins
outside the house of one of the supermarket executives, demonstrations
at stock-holders meetings, and demands that pension funds not
buy the supermarkets stocksamount to little more than
stunts that have nothing in common with a serious effort to shut
down the supermarkets. These pathetic gestures are intended to
divert workers attention from the underhanded role that
the union bureaucracy has played in the strike thus far and to
prepare the rank and file for a settlement on managements
terms.
The Socialist Equality Party issues this warning to the 70,000
striking and locked-out grocery workers: time is running short
to avert a devastating defeat. Workers must organize a struggle
against the strategy and tactics of the UFCW and AFL-CIO bureaucrats
and mobilize the rank and file to take control of the strike.
This includes the creation of a negotiating team elected directly
by the workers, an end to all closed-door negotiations with the
supermarkets, the initiation of an immediate campaign to stop
strikebreaking, the institution of mass picketing, and the issuing
of calls for sympathy strikes from workers in other sections of
industry. Such a fight can only succeed on the basis of a completely
new political strategyone that defends the working class
as a whole from the onslaught against their living standards by
both the Democratic and Republican parties.
Since the outset of the strike against Vons, Pavillions, Ralphs,
and Albertsons supermarkets, the UFCW leadership has undermined
the struggle of the grocery workers.
* The union has done nothing throughout the course of the strike
to stop the supermarkets strikebreaking through the use
of scab labor at the stores and distribution centers.
* On October 31, the UFCW pulled down the pickets at Ralphs,
maintaining that this would put increased pressure on the other
chains to settle. This claim was made despite the fact that all
four of the grocery chains are sharing profits over the course
of the strike. The removal of the pickets at Ralphs only served
to weaken the workers struggle. Furthermore, it came under
conditions in which there was widespread public support for the
strike, with little traffic in the stores.
* After weeks in which it refused to organize pickets at the
supermarket distribution centers, the UFCW instituted lines at
the warehouses only to pull them down three week later.
* At the end of last year, the health benefits of the membership
were allowed to expire without the union undertaking any measures
to prevent the loss of coverage.
* In January, strike benefits for picketers were cut between
$100 and $150 a week, reducing strike pay by 50 percent or more
at six out of the seven southern California locals.
* For the last three and a half months, the workers have been
kept completely in the dark about the course and progress of negotiations
with the grocery chains.
* In December, the union made a concessionary offer that would
have saved the grocery chains just under $400 million over the
course of the contract.
The AFL-CIOs intervention in the strike, in the form
of Trumkas arrival, is the logical culmination of these
tactics. He has a long history of betraying workers struggles.
In the 1980s and the first half of the 1990s, as head of the United
Mine Workers of America (UMWA), he implemented a corporatist policy
of labor-management relations that, in the name of improving productivity
and reducing labor costs, led to the widespread destructions of
jobs and the operation of non-union mines. Among the concessions
granted by Trumka was the weakening of the principle of the 8-hour
day. Under his stewardship, UMWA membership declined from 120,000
to 30,000 active members in the span of 13 years, transforming
what had once been one of the most militant and powerful unions
in the United States into a hollow shell of its former self.
Most recently, in California in December 2002, Trumka played
the central role in selling out the locked-out longshore workers
represented by the International Longshore and Warehouse Union
(ILWU). The contract hammered out under his supervision resulted
in the elimination of hundreds of jobs through technological changes,
while preserving a position for the union bureaucracy in the implementation
of all future technologies at the docks.
If the UFCW feels free to parade Trumka before the rank and
file as a militant figure, it is because workers are not familiar
with the recent history of labor struggles and have not yet assimilated
the lessons of more than two decades of betrayals and defeats
presided over by labor leaders such as Trumka. At the same time,
Trumkas intervention in the grocery strike is an expression
of the UFCW leaderships arrogance and contempt for the rank
and file.
The tactics chosen by the UFCW throughout the course of the
strike are not the result of either a lack of resolve on the part
of the membership or the absence of support among wide layers
of working and middle class people in southern California. As
is evidenced by the continued willingness of the general public
to observe the picket lines at Vons, Pavillions, and Albertsons,
the efforts by the UFCW workers to prevent the supermarkets from
gutting their health care benefits and instituting a massive reduction
in wages resonates widely with the economic pressures faced by
millions of people.
With the states economy continuing to flounder and the
most right-wing administrations in US and California history holding
office in both Washington and Sacramento, the hostility of masses
of ordinary Californians to the ceaseless drive for profits by
big business has only been exacerbated by the mounting impact
of widespread budget cuts in social programs at the state and
federal levels. An alternative strategy to that taken by the UFCWone
based on calls for mass picketing, solidarity strike actions,
and a political demand for the creation of high-quality fully-government
funded health care for allcould have garnered mass support.
However, the UFCW leadership chose not to undertake such a
strategy because it is fundamentally concerned with protecting
its own narrows interests. With leading representatives of southern
California locals pulling in well over $200,000 a year in salaries
and expense accountsRichard Icaza of Los Angeles local 770
drew in approximately $275,000 of compensation in 2003the
union bureaucracy has nothing in common with the average worker
whose salary ranges between $12 and $14 an hour. In so far as
their own salaries, perks, and privileges depend upon protecting
the profitability of the grocery chains from outside competitors,
the union leadership works to suppress the industrial strength
of the workers and subordinate the working class to the Democratic
Party.
Undoubtedly, the competitive pressure felt by the grocery chains
from superstores such as Wal-Mart which operate
globally and pay poverty wages, provide little or no health insurance,
demand longer hours, and offer no significant retirement benefitsis
quite intense. What this competition and the effort of Alberstons,
Vons, Pavillions, and Ralphs to impose similar conditions on their
own workers demonstrate is that the most elementary interests
and needs of workers have come into an ever more open and irreconcilable
conflict with the profit drives of big business. While in earlier
periods the working class was able to negotiate certain concessions
through national trade union struggles that targeted corporations
bound by the limits of their own countrys borders, in todays
global economy it is impossible to defend the interests of the
workers with such a strategy.
Only on the basis of a strategy that rejects the dictates of
private property and the demands of corporations for profitability
can the needs of the working class be met. However, such an orientation
demands not just an economic but a political struggleone
rooted in a complete break with the Democratic Party and the launching
of a fight to build a mass independent political party of the
working class committed to socialist principles. The trade union
leadership however, is completely hostile to this. It can therefore
only play a treacherous role in the struggles of the workers that
it purportedly represents, betraying strikes and adamantly supporting
the policies of the Democratic Party.
The struggle of the grocery workers in southern California
can only be won on the basis of a break with the strategies, tactics,
and policies of the trade union bureaucracy. This includes the
creation of new organs of industrial action directly and democratically
controlled by the rank and file itself, the return of the picket
lines to Ralphs, the setting up of pickets at all distribution
centers, warehouses, and other facilities used by the supermarkets,
the holding of mass demonstrations, and the implementation of
sympathy strikes by union and non-union workers in other sections
of industry. Above all however, workers must end their subordination
to the Democratic Party and build a new independent party of the
working class that fights for socialist principles.
See Also:
Union moves to strangle grocery workers
struggle in Southern California
[8 January 2004]
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