|
WSWS : News
& Analysis : North
America
The sudden end of the New York transit strike: A preliminary
assessment
By the World Socialist Web Site Editorial Board
23 December 2005
Use
this version to print
| Send this
link by email | Email
the author
This article is available as a PDF
leaflet to download and distribute
The sudden end of the three-day strike that shut down New York
Citys mass transit system has underscored both the enormous
class tensions building up in America, the heart of world capitalism,
and the deep-going crisis of leadership and perspective in the
working class.
There is no point in denying the fact that the New York City
transit workers have suffered a significant setback. Despite the
immense impact of the strike on the citys economy, which
was growing by the hour, the workers have been sent back to work
by the Toussaint leadership of Transport Workers Union Local 100
without having realized any of their objectives. The fines imposed
under the Taylor Law have not been rescinded.
Local 100, which represents the citys 34,000 bus and
subway workers, ordered its members to take down their picket
lines at bus depots and rail yards throughout New York and immediately
return to work after an agreement to resume negotiations with
the Metropolitan Transportation Authority (MTA) was reached through
state mediation.
The workers are going back without a contract, with no resolution
of the central issue that provoked the strikemanagements
demand to attack pension rights of new employeesand no amnesty
for strikers, who still face punishing fines for joining the walkout.
In short, nothing has been resolved.
The news that the agreement had been brokered came at 11 a.m.
as a New York State Supreme Court judge convened proceedings in
a Brooklyn courtroom to rule on the jailing of union officials
and the imposition of massive fines against individual strikers.
These fines were to begin at $25,000 on the first day, doubling
for each day the walkout continued. These astronomical sums were
requested by the city as a means of breaking the transit workers,
forcing them to lose their homes and driving them into poverty.
State Supreme Court Justice Theodore Jones adjourned the case
until January 20, declaring that he did not want the legal proceedings
to interfere with negotiations.
Republican Governor George Pataki called a press conference
to announce that penalties imposed under the states anti-labor
Taylor Law, which makes public employee strikes illegal, would
be enforced. The law calls for every striker to be docked two
days pay for every day on strike.
There is a lesson to be learned from this, said
Pataki, No one is above the law. You break the law and the
consequences are real. They cannot be waived.
Patakis posturing as tough on labor is part of his bid
for the Republican presidential nomination in 2008, a political
factor that served to exacerbate the friction that produced the
strike.
The two leading Republican candidates seeking to succeed him
as New York governor both issued statements saying that they would
have fired the strikers and replaced them with scab labor. They
denounced the Democratic front-runner, Elliot Spitzer, the states
attorney general, for failing to make a similar demand.
Spitzers spokesman responded to these attacks by pointing
out that the attorney general had obtained some of the strongest
measures ever imposed and we continue to seek additional penalties.
Our actions speak for themselves. These penalties included
a $1 million-a-day fine imposed against TWU Local 100.
There is every indication that the MTA, backed by the governor,
the mayor and powerful sections of New York Citys financial
and corporate elite, deliberately provoked the strike with the
aim of breaking the union and forcing through pension concessions
which would then be used to roll back pension benefits more broadly
in both the public and private sectors. The result was a shutdown
that crippled much of the citys economy and, according to
Mayor Michael Bloombergs own estimates, will cost over $1
billion.
The strike itself was a manifestation of the deep-seated anger
and militancy that has been building up among the citys
transit workers, who conducted their first strike in a quarter
of a century. This anger, in turn, expresses broad sentiments
in the working class as a whole in a city that boasts one of the
worlds greatest concentrations of billionaires and multi-millionaires,
together with masses of underpaid workers, many of them immigrants
drawn from every corner of the globe.
Like all major struggles, the transit strike served to clarify
existing social relations. A billionaire mayor, who bought his
election at over $100 a vote, publicly denounced the workers as
greedy and thugs. The mass media chimed
in, vilifying the strikers and demanding the jailing of their
leaders.
On the very day the media frenzy reached its peak, the Wall
Street Journal published an article revealing that many of
the millionaire CEOs based in New York City are not even paying
taxes, as their companies pick up the tab. As a prominent financial
adviser told the Journal, the practice is aimed at removing
taxes from the inevitable life experiences, leaving only death
for those at the top of the social ladder.
Notwithstanding their militancy, the transit workers were left
isolated. This was not due to lack of popular support. Several
polls have already shown that a significant majority of the population
blamed the MTA for provoking the walkout and sympathized with
the transit workers, despite the vicious media campaign against
them. Rather, the workers were isolated by the venality of the
trade union bureaucracy, both in the TWUwhose international
president branded the strike illegal and unsanctioned and called
upon workers to scaband the whole of the so-called labor
movement in New York City and nationally.
No attempt was made by the official labor leadership in New
York City to mobilize the working class as a whole in support
of the transit workers or to counter the grotesque lies of the
media. Not a single leaflet was issued or demonstration organized
by the other unions in defense of the strike, much less solidarity
strike action to counter the savage state attacks. For its part,
the national AFL-CIO maintained a stony silence. Like the ruling
elite itself, the privileged labor bureaucrats reacted to the
strike with fear and loathing.
The Local 100 leadership, headed by its president, Roger Toussaint,
had no alternative perspective. It conducted the strike as a pure-and-simple
trade union struggle under conditions in which the transit workers
were confronting the full power of the state mobilized through
the Taylor Law and the courts, which stood squarely behind the
MTA and the citys ruling elite. For all its militant rhetoric,
the Toussaint leadership appeared entirely unprepared for the
ferocity of the Bloomberg administrations response to the
strike.
It is likely that Toussaint had hoped certain sections of the
Democratic Party apparatus in both the city and state would provide
some degree of political cover for TWU Local 100. When this failed
to materialize, Toussaint began looking for a way out of the confrontation.
Whatever his intentions, Toussaints dependence upon the
Democratic Party was a fatal political flaw for which the striking
transit workers have paid a heavy price. The so-called friends
of labor that the local had cultivated over the past period
did nothing whatsoever to defend the workers. New Yorks
Senator Hillary Clinton declared herself neutral,
while reaffirming her support for the Taylor Law. Fernando Ferrer,
whom Local 100 backed for mayor last month, was nowhere to be
seen.
Finally, the local leadership lacked an alternative social-economic
perspective that could rally broad sections of the working class
in New York in support of the transit workers. The fight against
the Bloomberg administration was, in essence, a fight against
capitalism. The economic logic of the existing economic system
underlay Bloombergs demand, backed by Wall Street, that
transit workers adapt themselves to a new world in
which workers pensions and health benefits are slashed for
the sake of private wealth and corporate profit.
This struggle has immense lessons for the entire working class.
First, it has debunked all of the conceptions promoted by the
media that the working class has ceased to exist, or that it does
not want to fight. The transit walkout demonstrated the immense
social weight of the working class and its great combativity.
Secondly, it has exposed the existing trade unions as hopelessly
inadequate as instruments of social struggle. To the extent that
these organizations are not actively engaged in the suppression
of the working classas in the case of the TWU international
and the AFL-CIO as a wholetheir lack of an alternative political,
social and economic perspective and program leaves them defenseless
against the attacks of the state. Dominated by a politically reactionary
bureaucracy allied with the Democratic Party, they are inevitably
transformed into means of imposing the demands of the ruling elite
on the working class.
The strike of transit workers has demonstrated the urgent necessity
for the development of a new socialist movement capable of uniting
the working class on the basis of an uncompromising anti-capitalist
political program. This is the movement that the Socialist Equality
Party and the World Socialist Web Site are fighting to
build.
It is impossible to conduct any serious struggle today without
advancing a program for the transformation of society by placing
the interests of working people, the vast majority of the population,
above the drive for profit by the corporations and the financial
oligarchy. This means the reorganization of economic life
along socialist lines.
It is vital that the lessons of the confrontation in New York
be drawn, not only by transit workers, but by every section of
the working class. It is by no means the end of such struggles,
but only the opening shot of what will be an increasingly broad
and powerful movement of the American working class coming into
confrontation with the capitalist system.
See Also:
Behind the media onslaught on the transit
workers
[23 December 2005]
New York transit strikers confront escalating
attacks
[22 December 2005]
The New York transit strike: A new stage
in the class struggle
[21 December 2005]
Top of page
The WSWS invites your comments.
Copyright 1998-2008
World Socialist Web Site
All rights reserved |