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Quebec public sector workers launch rotating strikes
By Richard Dufour
17 November 2005
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The Common Fronta coalition of unions representing hospital
workers, public school board employees, CEGEP (junior college)
personnel, and other provincial public sector workers affiliated
with the Confederation National Trade Unions (CNTU) and the Quebec
Federation of Labour (FTQ)has launched a series of one-day
regional walkouts.
The first took place Thursday, November 10, in eastern Quebec.
Today tens of thousands of CNTU and QFL members in the Montreal
region will walk off the job.
The CNTU and QFL leaderships have sanctioned this limited job
action after months of foot-dragging. Their aim is not to prepare
for a confrontation with the provincial Liberal governmenta
right-wing regime that has intensified the drive of the previous
Parti Quebecois (PQ) to scale back public and social services
and that routinely baits the unions. Rather, the Common Front
leaders are seeking to relieve the pressure for action from rank-and-file
members who have been without a contract since July 2003 and are
angered by the governments demands for significant rollbacks
in their wages and working conditions.
The union leaderships overriding concern is to contain
this groundswell of anger within the straitjacket of collective
bargaining and prevent it from turning into a working-class political
challenge to the provincial Liberal government of Jean Charest.
Since 1982-1983, when the union-supported PQ government of
Rene Levesque reopened the contracts of all government employees
by decree to impose wage cuts and change work rules, contract
negotiations in Quebecs public sector have become a thoroughly
ritualized affair. A privileged labor bureaucracy, which defends
the profit system and functions as a key pillar of support for
the big business, pro-Quebec independence PQ, makes some noise
about resisting the governments concessionary demands, sanctions
the occasional limited protest action, and after a long-drawn-out
bargaining process that serves only to demoralize the rank-and-file
submits to a government-dictated contract.
And if the union leaders prove unable to contain rank-and-file
opposition, as was the case with the 1999 nurses strike,
the government resorts to a battery of strike-breaking laws, passed
by PQ and Liberal governments alike, which union officials then
invoke to justify their own cowardice and prostration before the
government.
The same scenario is being played out this year, differing
perhaps only in the union bureaucracys shamelessness in
abandoning the interests of the rank-and-file and the intensity
of their pleas to the government not to make their job harder
by being too brazen in its drive to contract out public-sector
jobs, privatize public services, lower wages, and reduce corporate
taxes in order to boost profits.
Union negotiators have already conceded a key government demand
by accepting that the new contracts will be for the unprecedented
length of five and a half years. The CNTU-QFL Common Front, which
represents a majority of the provinces nearly half-million
public sector workers, have also scaled back their wage demands
from a 12.5 percent increase over three years to 13.5 percent
over five and a half years, not counting a long-promised adjustment
in pay scales to reflect gender equity.
The government, meanwhile, has not budged on its initial offer
of a combined 12.6 percent increase over six years including the
wage-equity settlement. This would amount to a significant cut
in real wages, since Quebecs annual inflation rate is over
3 percent.
Government negotiators are also seeking separate deals on working
conditions with smaller unions in a clear bid to divide public-sector
workers so as to undermine provisions governing job security and
work rules.
An agreement is reportedly in the making with the nurses
union, FIIQ, and another has been signed with the civil service
union, the Syndicat de la function publique du Quebec (SFPQ).
While details are sketchy, the SFPQ leadership is known to have
abandoned its demand for increased restrictions on contracting
out and has reportedly agreed instead to a system of union-management
committees in which the union will be able to make the case that
its members can provide an operation the government wants to contract
out more cheaply. In other words, the government will be able
to use private-sector competition to press for increased worker
output. SFPQ President Michel Sawyer has hailed this process in
which the union apparatus will take on the function of a labor
contractor, declaring that in the vast majority of cases,
contracting out costs the government more than when the work is
done by its own employees.
The governments hard-line stand is not a sign of strength.
Opinion polls show that only a quarter of the population support
the Charest government. At the same time, there is increasing
dissatisfaction within ruling class circles over the governments
failure to press forward with tax cuts for business and the well-to-do,
consumer electricity rate increases, the ending of a freeze on
university tuitions and other socially regressive measure. Last
month, former PQ Premier Lucien Bouchard and several other prominent
public figures in Quebec, both indépendantistes
and federalists, joined forces to decry the popular resistance
to such changes and the strength of anti-big-business sentiment.
But the Charest government is counting on the union bureaucracy
to ensure (to use a phrase much used by the union officialdom
in Quebec) social peace, just as it did in December
2003, when mass protests and strikes erupted against a series
of regressive Liberal bills. Under conditions in which they themselves
were warning that the protests were escaping their control, the
union leaders made noises about organizing a one-day general strike
some time in the future, used the impending holidays to shut the
protests down, then moved to further tighten their ties to the
PQ, through the creation of a new left faction within
the PQ, the Syndicalistes et progressistes pour un Quebec libre.
Similarly, last spring, when a weeks-long university and college
(CEGEP) strike threatened to become a catalyst for wide protests,
the unions worked with the government to shut it down.
It is precisely because they are conscious of the weakness
and unpopularity of the Charest government that the union bureaucracy
is so intent on avoiding any serious worker mobilization, for
fear it could spur a wider social movement.
A previously scheduled one-day strike last September was cancelled
at the last minute by the Common Front under the pretext that
there were signs of goodwill coming from the government
side.
Perhaps the most open admission of the labor bureaucracys
impotence came from CNTU President Claudette Carbonneau. The government
seems to favor confrontation over a negotiated settlement,
Carbonneau lamented in her opening address to a gathering of the
unions leading body last month. The QFL-CNTU Common
Front, on the other hand, leaves ample room for negotiations.
She then warned that legal pressure tactics would
get harsher if the government continues to refuse
to negotiate. It is in this spirit that we are seeking four-day
rotating strike mandates to be used in mid-November if negotiations
remain bogged down.
To the all-out assault on social programs, wages and working
conditions being spearheaded by the Charest government at the
behest of big business, the CNTU president can oppose nothing
more than pleas that the government become more reasonable and
use, rather than bypass, the union bureaucracys services
in imposing a concession-laden contract on public-sector workers.
A program to answer the assault on public and
social services
What is at stake is not merely the working conditions of public
sector workers, but the continued existence of universal social
programs such as public health care. The Charest government, following
in the footsteps of the previous Parti Quebecois government, has
been promoting the increased use of private clinics for diagnostic
tests and the privatization of so-called peripheral hospital services
such as food, cleaning and maintenance.
This agenda of turning health care into a profit-making operation
has been given legal sanction and a tremendous boost by last Junes
Supreme Court of Canada ruling that the Quebec governments
prohibition on private health care insurance, given the long waiting
lists in the public system for basic health services, constitutes
a violation of basic human rights under Quebecs Charter
of Rights and must be overturned by June 2006.
Government officials have since served notice that they agree
with the Courts ruling and will in the coming months establish
the legislative framework for full-blown private health care in
the province, which will have far-reaching consequences for Canada
as a whole.
After decades of governments at all levels starving public
health care of needed financial resources, the resulting deterioration
in the form of long waits for essential medical procedures is
being used to justify opening the system up to private interests
that will offer the latest technology and the best-trained personnel
to those having the money to pay while the rest of the population
will have to content themselves with a crumbling public system.
In her address, Carbonneau washed her hands of this vital issue,
saying, The right to life has been endangered by our governments.
It is up to them to react to guarantee this right under the Canadian
and Quebec Charter of Rights. Her only advice was that the
Quebec government should demand from Ottawa the money that
is due to Quebec for health care, as if the mere transfer
of control over the health care budget from one level of government
to another would change anything under conditions when both are
committed to the same agenda of tax and social spending cuts that
has paved the way for privatization.
In a clear demonstration of the union bureaucracys political
subordination of the working class to the PQ, the other party
of Quebecs ruling elite, Carbonneau went on to say that
it is high time for the Parti Quebecois MPs to remember
that they are the official opposition. Not once, it should
be noted, did Carbonneau even mention the courageous strike carried
out last month by British Colombia teachers in defiance of back-to-work
legislation introduced by the provincial Liberal government, a
government like Charests that is spearheading the drive
to cut taxes and privatize public services.
Appealing to the PQ while ignoring a significant struggle by
public-sector workers in English Canada are the two sides of the
union bureaucracys nationalist orientation and decades-long
attempt to divide workers in Quebec from their class brothers
and sisters in the rest of North America and tie them instead
to a section of the Quebec ruling class.
A counter-offensive by Quebecs public-sector workers
for the defense of working conditions, quality public education,
and an expanded public health care system that does not fall prey
to the profit motive is only possible to the extent that workers
break free of the bureaucratic apparatus that is paralyzing their
struggles. They must build alternative fighting organizations
ready to make a bold appeal to other sections of working people
in Quebec, Canada, and internationally.
This is not simply a matter of an organizational break. The
labor bureaucracys treacherous policies are rooted in their
defense of the existing profit system. A revival of the best traditions
of working class solidarity and militancy requires as a critical
component a revival of its socialist traditions, the conscious
struggle to rebuild society on higher foundations based on social
need rather than individual profit. The central issue facing Quebecs
public-sector workers and working people as a whole is the building
of their own independent political party, dedicated to the struggle
for a workers government and social equality.
See Also:
Canada: union bureaucrats sponsor candidate
for Parti Quebecois leadership
[15 November 2005]
Canada: ex-indépendantiste
premier calls for intensified assault on working class
[28 October 2005]
Tensions rising between Quebec
government and public sector workers
[1 October 2005]
Canadas Supreme Court
sanctions drive to dismantle public health care
[11 June 2005]
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