|
WSWS : News
& Analysis : North
America : Canada
British Columbia: Rank-and-file outrage at betrayal of hospital
workers struggle
By Keith Jones
12 May 2004
Use
this version to print
| Send this
link by email | Email the
author
The British Columbia Federation of Labour (BCFL) and the Hospital
Employees Union (HEU) are facing a torrent of rank-and-file criticism
for their short-circuiting of a strike by more than forty thousand
hospital workers that threatened to become the spearhead of a
working class challenge to the right-wing provincial Liberal government
of Gordon Campbell.
The hospital workers defiance of the Liberals strikebreaking
legislation, Bill 37, galvanized workers across the province,
prompting wildcat strikes by both public sector and forestry industry
workers. Fearing they were losing control of the rank and file,
the Canadian Union of Public Employees (CUPE), followed shortly
thereafter by the Canadian Auto Workers, BC Teachers Federation
and other unions, called a province-wide day of protest
for Monday, May 3.
Meanwhile, behind the scenes, the union officialdom and their
allies in the New Democratic Party were pleading with the Liberals
to make some minor adjustments to Bill 37, so they could more
readily justify their capitulation. Our first goal,
declared BCFL spokesperson Jessie Uppal, is to get a deal.
Late on the evening of May 2, BCFL and HEU leaders announced
they had reached an agreement with the Liberal governmentan
agreement that enshrines a 15 percent pay cut and massive job
losses. They then immediately ordered the tens of thousands of
workers poised to join the hospital workers on the streets in
the coming hours to stand down.
Nonetheless, thousands of workers did stay off the job for
part or all of the following day, many quite consciously as an
act of defiance directed at the union leadership as much as at
the Liberal government. Union officials found themselves confronted,
and sometimes literally encircled, by members angered by the onerous
terms imposed on the hospital workers, but also by the sabotage
of the broader struggle against the hated Liberal regimes. Among
the sites picketed was the suburban Vancouver headquarters of
the HEU.
To try to pacify their members, CUPE, the national union with
which the HEU is affiliated, hosted a discussion forum on the
settlement on its website. In posting after posting, workers denounced
the agreement as a betrayal and a sellout.
Some called for the resignation of HEU negotiator Chris Allutt
and other union officials. Typical was the following comment:
Im disappointed that the general day of protest never
happened. All this grand talk fizzled out to squeaming and bowing
to the government.
The union leaders have justified their betrayal by claiming
that the agreement they negotiated with the Campbell Liberal government
limits the damage. They point to the fact that unlike
Bill 37 the May 2 accord places a limit of 600 full-time hospital
positions that can be contracted out over the next two years.
This is truly a case of bolting the barn door after the horse
has bolted. Since the Liberals reopened the hospital workers
contract in January 2002 so as to gut prohibitions on the contracting
out of work, almost ten thousand HEU members have lost their jobs
or received notice of their impending layoff. The agreement endorsed
by the BCFL and HEU leaders stipulates that the cap
on contracting out doesnt apply either to those who have
already had their jobs contracted-out or to the more than 2,500
workers who received layoff notices since negotiations began earlier
this year.
The union leaders are also trumpeting the fact that the Liberals
have agreed not to make the 15 percent wage cut retroactive to
April 1under the agreement negotiated by the BCFL and HEU
leaders it took effect May 3; the governments concession
of an additional $25 million for severance pay, which is equal
to a few thousand dollars per job eliminated; and the governments
promise to forgo any penalties against the unions and individual
workers for having defied Bill 37s stipulation that they
immediately terminate the strike.
The events in BC have once again demonstrated that the union
officialdom and the social-democratic politicians of the New Democratic
Party fear far more the mobilization of the working class than
they do the gutting of health care, other basic public services
and the most elementary trade union rights.
Since coming to power in the spring of 2001, the Liberals have
slashed funding for public and social services, cut welfare benefits,
passed a battery of antiunion laws, and hiked user fees and sales
taxes, while rewarding the rich and big business with massive
income tax cuts.
This class war agenda has provoked heated and increasingly
widespread opposition. Sections of the middle class who, in anger
at the previous NDP governments provision of both deteriorating
public services and increased levels of taxation, had bought into
to the Liberals tax-cutting agenda, are now questioning
the Liberals privatization and deregulation program. Even
the notoriously right-wing National Post had to concede
that there was mass public support for the hospital workersno
matter that they were defying the law and that the
strike, despite their best efforts, was causing hardship to patients
and their families. Public sentiment, wrote Post
columnist Brian Hutchinson, rested with the hospital
workers.
For the union and NDP leadership it was precisely the potential
that the hospital workers struggle might go beyond the bounds
of a trade union collective-bargaining dispute and become the
spearhead of a mass working class political struggle that made
it so urgent that it be suppressed. With wildcat walkouts erupting
across the provinces and teachers and others suggesting they might
stay out longer than the prescribed 24 hours the union leaders
feared they would find it difficult to restrict job action in
support of the hospital workers to just May 3. Even greater was
their fear of the political implications of the hospital workers
continued defiance of Bill 37, the courts and the government.
Objectively, the hospital workers struggle to defend their
jobs and working conditions and oppose the dismantling of Medicare
was a challenge to the continued existence of the Campbell government.
Provincial NDP leader Carole James spoke for the entire labor
bureaucracy when she responded to the passage of Bill 37 by denouncing
the Campbell Liberals for scaring aware investors. The government,
she said, had brought BC to the brink of a crisis that threatens
to further erode investor confidence in British Columbia and destabilize
the BC economy.
Time and again over the past quarter century, the unions and
NDP have served to contain and smother militant working class
struggles. Last weeks events are a virtual replay of the
unions role in the 1997 Ontario teachers and 1999
Quebec nurses strikes.
The anger among workers in BC toward the union leadership is
palpable. But it must be reinforced with an alternative political
strategythe independent political mobilization of the working
class, through the building of a new party based on a socialist
and internationalist program.
In opposition to the principle of market domination put forward
by the ruling class in its constant efforts to extract an ever
larger share of societys wealth, workers must oppose a progressive
alternativea society of a higher type, where the immense
resources made available by modern technology will be put to the
service of all, by bringing the banks, utilities and large resource
and manufacturing companies under public and democratic control.
See Also:
British Columbia: State assault on hospital
workers provokes mass walkouts
[3 May 2004]
Canada: State assault on public
sector workers: Strikes illegalized, wages and jobs slashed
[30 April 2004]
British Columbia:
Unions suppress ferry and forest strikes
[18 December 2003]
British Columbia government
pressing forward with class war agenda
[19 March 2002]
The betrayal
of the Ontario teachers strike:
The lessons for all workers
[17 November 1997]
Top of page
The WSWS invites your comments.
Copyright 1998-2008
World Socialist Web Site
All rights reserved |