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As support, walkouts grow
Union and NDP leaders conspire to close down British Columbia
teachers strike
By our correspondent
19 October 2005
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Hundreds of thousands of workers in British Columbia are poised
to join walkouts in the coming days in support of the provinces
40,000 public school teachers and the challenge that they are
mounting to a battery of antiunion laws and the BC Liberal governments
agenda of slashing public and social services.
On Monday, public transit, mail delivery and other government
services in the provincial capital, Victoria, and the Vancouver
Island region were disrupted when thousands of workers walked
off the job in response to a call from the BC Federation of Labour.
The highlight of the day of action was a rally of
more than twenty thousand teachers, trade unionists, and parents
and their children outside the BC legislature.
Meanwhile, Gordon Campbells Liberal government is ratcheting
up its efforts to use the powers of the state to force an end
to the strike. As the protest was unfolding in Victoria, the government
announced that it had appointed a special prosecutor to examine
whether criminal contempt proceedings should be initiated against
the union and teachers.
On Oct. 9 BC Supreme Court Justice Brenda Brown ruled the teachers
strike illegal. Then last Thursday she effectively seized control
of the finances of the BC Teachers Federation to rob teachers
of their $50 per day in picket pay. Were she to rule that the
strike constituted criminal contempt, she would have the power
to jail union leaders and fine individual teachers.
The governments increasingly draconian stance against
the teachers is born of its fear that the strike could become
the catalyst for a working-class counter-offensive. Support for
the teachers is swelling because masses of working people recognize
that in fighting for caps on class sizes and more support for
children with various learning challenges, the teachers are fighting
to defend public education. Also many rightly see the teachers
action as a means of striking back against a government that during
four-and-a-half years in office has ruthlessly imposed the dictates
of big business by slashing social spending, promoting the contracting
out of hospital and other public service jobs, gutting labour
standards and environmental regulations, and redistributing wealth
to the most privileged through cuts in corporate taxes and the
taxes levied on high-income earners.
At a press conference Sunday, BC business leaders accused the
teachers and their supporters of fomenting chaos and anarchy and
undermining the provinces economy. While charging the teachers
and their supporters with flouting democracy, the message of business
leaders was that if workers continued to resist Gordon Campbells
Liberal government the corporate elite would resort to an investment
strike, as they did during much of the 1990s, in a successful
campaign to push the then New Democratic Party (NDP) government
to abandon its timid reformist program and impose capitalist austerity.
Exclaimed Kevin Evans of the Coalition of BC Business, Theres
no question this is harkening back to some of the bad old days
of British Columbia where instability ruled. Evans went
on to voice concern that if the strike was not broken it may
look small in comparison with what we are in for in
the spring when many other public sector contracts expire.
Precisely because the teachers strike has shaken the
political and corporate establishment and stoked worker-militancy
and self-confidence, the trade union officialdom and the social
democratic politicians of the NDP are determined to smother it.
While on several occasions a substantial section of Mondays
20,000-strong rally took up the chant general strike, general
strike, the one overriding message of the union leaders
addressing the crowd was that if the government would only agree
to talks, they would shut the strike down.
I say to Mr. Campbell on behalf of British Columbians:
Get off the high horse and get down to the table and start talking,
declared BCFL President Jim Sinclair.
All we want from Gordon Campbell and his representatives,
affirmed BCTF President Jinny Sims, is a (bargaining) table.
Subsequently, Sims revealed to the press that the union leaders
and government are already involved in backroom negotiations on
a deal that would leave all the teachers key demands unmetthe
rescinding of a two-year wage freeze, the restoration of the legal
right to strike, and the right to bargain over such issues as
class sizesleave teachers potentially open to savage reprisals,
and allow the Campbell Liberal government to remain in office
to pursue its class war agenda.
Sims told the Vancouver Sun, Weve gone so
far in getting the government to the table that now they have
to make a move.
If the labour bureaucrats have sanctioned one-day walkouts,
it is with hopes of boosting their credibility with the rank-and-file
so as to better to corral the teachers back to work and snuff
out the challenge to the authority of the Liberal government.
This was starkly revealed in comments made by BC NDP leader
Carole James to reporters during Mondays rally. Two weeks
ago James urged teachers to abide by the law and remain on the
job. But she and the NDP have since postured as supporters of
the teachers, while claiming that the teachers struggle
to defend public education can be reconciled with the governments
big business agenda if the two sides would just talk.
James told the Vancouver Sun Monday: The government
should sit down with the teachers and work out a deal before
the strike mushrooms. I dont want to see a general
strike. I dont want to see people not to returning to work.
Its the premier who has to show some leadership and step
up to the plate.
Asked by the Sun why she wasnt telling teachers
to obey the law, James said, People should follow the law.
Ive made that statement. Ive made that statement publicly.
People accept consequences when they dont follow the law.
Teachers know that ...
If the teachers militant strike is not to be strangled
by the labour and NDP leaders as were the 2003 ferry workers
and 2004 hospital workers strikes, rank and file workers
must seize control of the strike and impart to it a new and radically
different strategy. Above all what must be recognized is that
workers face a political struggle not only against the Campbell
government, but against the entire political and economic elite.
The working class must constitute itself as an independent political
force so that it can fight for a program to reorganize society
and thereby make social need, not the profits of the few, the
animating principle of economic life. Militant industrial action
in support of the teachers must be coupled with the struggle to
build a new mass workers party.
See Also:
British Columbia teachers strike poses
need for a working-class political offensive
[17 October 2005]
British Columbia: Courts seize union assets,
but teachers remain defiant
[15 October 2005]
British Columbia teachers defy anti-strike
law, court rulings
[11 October 2005]
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