|
WSWS : News
& Analysis : North
America : Canada
BC teachers strike shakes Campbell Liberal government
By Keith Jones
13 October 2005
Use
this version to print
| Send this
link by email | Email
the author
Forty-two thousand British Columbia elementary and secondary
school teachers are continuing to mount a province-wide strike
in defiance of antiunion laws, a provincial labour relations board
cease-and-desist order, and a BC Supreme Court contempt-of-court
ruling.
Justice Nancy Brown is slated to rule this morning on what
penalties will be imposed on the BC Teachers Federation,
its officers and possibly individual teachers for their failure
to abide by her order for an immediate end to the strike. The
BC Public School Employers Association, which functions as a tool
of the right-wing provincial Liberal government, is urging the
judge to impose massive finesfines greater than the C$150,000
a day penalty levied on the Hospital Employees Union in 2004 when
its members struck in defiance of a contempt of court ruling.
BCs public school teachers walked out last Friday, just
hours after the Liberal government of Gordon Campbell rammed through
a bill that freezes teachers salaries for two years and
re-imposes the increases in class sizes and teachers workloads
that the government dictated in 2002.
To the consternation of the government, big business, and the
corporate-controlled media, their attempts to blackguard the teachers
for holding 600,000 children hostage, schooling them
in law-breaking and promoting anarchy have failed
to impress the public. Indeed, the media has been forced to admit
that there is strong popular support for the teachers, despite
the inconvenience the strike is causing for many working parents.
Not only do many recognize that the teachers are fighting to defend
quality public education, against a government that has slashed
school budgets and forced more students on teachers while rewarding
big business and the well-to-do with tax cuts. There are many
workers who perceive the teachers strike as the potential
catalyst for a broader movement that will challenge the entire
agenda of the hated Campbell regime.
First elected in 2001, the Campbell Liberals have modeled themselves
on the former Ontario Tory government of Mike Harris. The Campbell
government has slashed public and social services, promoted contracting-out
and privatization, victimized welfare recipients, gutted environmental
and labour standards (including protections for young workers),
passed a battery of anti-union laws, and through tax cuts further
redistributed wealth to the benefit of the privileged.
Thousands of teachers and their supporters joined some 16 often
boisterous rallies in support of the teachers Tuesday evening.
At the 4,000-strong Vancouver rally, speeches by top union official
were repeatedly interrupted by audience chants of general
strike.
While the likes of BC Government and Service Employees Union
President George Heyman and Canadian Union of Public Employees
BC President Barry ONeill pledged their full support for
the teachersjust as they did for the ferry workers and hospital
workers whose strikes they cruelly betrayed in 2003 and 2004the
only speaker to acknowledge the chants was BC Federation of Labour
(BCFL) President Gordon Sinclair. We hear you, said
Sinclair. Then in his very next breath, the BCFL president revealed
his dread of such action, saying he hoped it wouldnt come
to that.
The previous day, an emergency meeting of the BCFL leadership
had issued a plea to Campbell for negotiationsno matter
that the government clearly provoked a confrontation with the
teachers with the aim of escalating its class war assault on public
and social services and workers rights. We met with
the government last week and tried to find a solution, said
Sinclair at the BCFL meetings conclusion. I remain
hopeful that the government recognizes negotiation is the only
way to end this dispute.
The BCFL executives call was echoed by the leader of
the BC New Democratic Party (NDP), Carole James. In a press release
Tuesday, the social-democratic politician called on Campbell to
provide leadership. What is needed right now
from the Premier is a personal commitment to sit down and talk
directly with teachers.
Over the past year, James has repeatedly offered to work with
the Liberal government, attacked the 1991-2001 BC NDP government
(which opened the door for the coming to power of the Liberals
by accommodating itself ever more completely to the demands of
big business) from the right, and accused Campbell of scaring
away investors by needlessly provoking strikes.
The Campbell Liberal government clearly has been shaken by
the groundswell of popular support for the teachers. But it remains
adamant that there will be no substantive changes to the contract
its has legislated, holding out the prospect of teacher participation
in a government-designed roundtable on the future of education
once the strike is terminated.
Education Minister Shirley Bond announced Wednesday that the
government will offer protection to any teachers who
try to return to work. It is possible that the government with
the help of the corporate media is planning to stage some type
of provocation in an attempt to portray the teachers as violent.
But the principal strategy of the government and of big business
is to rely on the union officialdom and the NDP to strangle the
strike, as they have done repeatedly in BC and across Canada whenever
militant struggles have erupted.
The labor bureaucrats with their pleas for negotiations and
their insistence that the strike is a political protestnot
a political strugglehave made clear that they uphold the
legitimacy of the Campbell government and are determined
to prevent the teachers strike from becoming the spearhead
of an independent political movement of the working class.
Teachers and their supporters in BC and across Canada must
make no mistake. The BC teachers strike has yet again demonstrated
that, notwithstanding the propaganda of the media and political
establishment, there is only a narrow constituency that supports
big businesss socially regressive agenda of subordinating
all social needs to the imperatives of the capitalist market.
But if the teachers strike is not to be sabotagedas
the no less powerful strike of Ontario teachers was in 1997a
new political strategy must be adopted in opposition to the pro-capitalist
unions and the NDP. Militant strike action in support of the teachers,
across BC and elsewhere in Canada, must be combined with the fight
for the building of a new mass party of the working class that
will champion a radical reorganization of economic life so that
social needs can be placed before the profits interests of the
few.
See Also:
British Columbia teachers defy anti-strike
law, court rulings
[11 October 2005]
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 |