|
WSWS : News
& Analysis : Europe
: Germany
Germany: union, works committee stifle Opel strike in Bochum
By Andreas Kunstmann
25 October 2004
Use
this version to print
| Send this
link by email | Email the
author
For six days, workers at General Motors Opel plant in
Bochum, Germany, withstood a concerted campaign by political leaders,
the media and their own unions and struck in protest against planned
mass redundancies. Finally, on October 20, they gave way and decided
to return to work. Of 6,400 votes cast by the Bochum workers,
4,600 were in favour of a return to work and 1,700 were for continuing
the work action.
The decision to return to work was made at a mass meeting of
the workforce organised by the engineering union IG Metall and
union officials from the joint union-management works committee
at the Opel plant. The undemocratic methods and bureaucratic tricks
employed at the meeting by union and works committee officials
were even more flagrant than the treacherous tactics they had
adopted previously to strangle the strike.
The strike began as an initiative of rank-and-file workers
and was carried out against the wishes of their union, IG Metall.
Nevertheless, none of the 8,000 workers at the plant were allowed
to address the meeting. Nor was any discussion allowed of the
issues at stake.
The only people allowed to speak were three high-ranking functionaries:
the chairman of the factory works committee, Dietmar Hahn; his
deputy, Rainer Einenkel; and a long-time official for Bochum IG
Metall, Ludger Hinse. All three called for an immediate end to
the strike and a return to work. At the same time, they said they
would take into account their responsibility to the
workers. The only issue, they insisted, was whether or not to
resume working. No other issues were up for discussion.
The podium was guarded by factory security personnel, to protect
the three bureaucrats and enforce their ban on any serious discussion
by preventing workers from reaching the microphone. The union
officials remarks lasted barely 20 minutes. The following
two hours were consumed by the vote and an announcement of the
result.
For days, the workers had been pressured by national and local
government figures, Social Democratic Party (SPD) leaders, the
IG Metall and their own works committee, who claimed in chorus
that the strike was endangering talks between the union and General
Motors. As they entered the mass meeting last Wednesday, the workers
were presented with a printed ballot sheet that contained the
following loaded question: Should the works committee continue
talks with the company executive and work be resumed?
Supporters of the strike were thus cast by the works committee
as opponents of any talksprecisely the line taken by management
against the strikers. At a press conference following the meeting,
works committee Chairman Hahn was obliged to say it was the union,
not management, that formulated the ballot question.
In the face of the concerted campaign against the strike, a
large proportion of those attending the meeting anticipated a
likely end to the walkout. Most workers were clear that a continuation
of the strike would mean a confrontation not only with the employers,
but also with the union. But the proceedings at the meeting exceeded
their worst expectations.
Uli Schreyer has been a member of the shop stewards committee
since 1987. He has worked in the factory since 1983, and currently
works in the assembly plant on the night shift. He expressed his
anger over the actions of IG Metall and the works committee.
I have never before experienced such a meeting,
he said. Not only were we required to show our factory passes
as we went inside, our faces were compared with the photos on
the passes, and our pockets were searched. On entry, every colleague
was presented with a ballot form. This was all sold as broad democracy.
But then, the only people allowed to speak were the works committee
chairman, his deputy, and the full-time IG Metall official from
Bochum.
When workers sought to speak, the democracy came to an
end. Factory security guards ringed the podium and prevented workers
from getting to the microphone. Normally, microphones are positioned
on the floor at such meetings, so that workers can participate
in the discussion. This time, however, the only microphones were
on the platform.
None of the factory workers was able to speak, although
we were told the day before that there would be a broad discussion
at the meeting. The meeting hall is designed for such a discussion.
What, then, was the purpose of the meeting? I could have
just handed in my ballot paper. Only opponents of the strike were
allowed to speakthe works committee and the union.
The offer they presented is not really an offer. They
told us we have to be more competitive. How this was to be done
they did not say, and were not prepared to discuss. General Motors
was more open in making its demands.
From the start, the unions and the works committee sought
to strangle the strike action, and enormous pressure was applied
to its spokesmen.
Asked about the mood at the meeting, Schreyer said: There
were various reactions. When colleagues saw the wording of the
ballot paper, they were terribly disappointed. One just sat there
and wept. There was considerable tension amongst the work force,
the feeling that we have to do everything ourselves. We receive
support from the population at large, which has donated food.
But the unions and works committee are working against us.
The threats of redundancy are bound up with the governments
Hartz IV measures and the situation at Karstadt, Siemens and DaimlerChrysler.
Nevertheless, irrespective of how todays decision turns
out, the workforce emerges as a winner. We gave them what for,
and we can resume our action at any time. The union no longer
takes into account what is happening in the workforce.
He continued: There is a split between the union and
the works committee on the one side and the workers on the other.
The gulf exists objectively and has only deepened as a result
of their behaviour. High-ranking union functionaries, for example,
have given interviews to the media in front of the factory, but
neglected to speak to workers at the gate or inside the factory.
And IG Metall could have supported the action, but didnteither
with money or food.
Andreas Felder, 45, is also a member of the shop stewards committee.
In 2002, he stood as a candidate in elections for the works committee,
representing an opposition group in the plant called Opposition
Without Boundaries. He demanded the resignation of the works
committee:
The works committee chairman and the works committee
executive formulated the ballot paper. We, the workforce, are
disappointed over this. What took place was illegitimate.
A no under these conditions would mean that
the work force was not prepared to sanction any talks. We have
said very clearly that we are ready to take part in negotiations,
and only sought to decide whether we should restart work or continue
our information meeting [the term used by the striking workers
to ward off legal reprisals]. Some colleagues were only clear
about the content of what was being asked after the meeting was
over. A works committee chairman who carries out something this
undemocratic must resign.
See Also:
The political issues facing Opel workers:
Statement of the WSWS Editorial Board
[22 October 2004]
GM workers hold European-wide day of
action against job cuts
[22 October 2004]
Top of page
The WSWS invites your comments.
Copyright 1998-2008
World Socialist Web Site
All rights reserved |