|
WSWS : News
& Analysis : North
America
To fight wage cuts and defend public education
Detroit teachers need a new political strategy
Statement of the Socialist Equality Party
26 August 2006
Use
this version to print
| Send this
link by email | Email
the author
The following statement will be distributed by supporters
of the Socialist Equality Party at a mass meeting of Detroit teachers
on Sunday, August 27. The teachers are meeting to vote on strike
action against the demand of the school district for drastic cuts
in wages and benefits in a new contract. The leaflet is also posted
as a PDF file. We urge teachers to
download and distribute it at Sundays meeting.
In the run-up to todays mass meeting, Detroit school
district CEO William Coleman published a column in Fridays
Detroit Free Press threatening teachers with fines and
other penalties if they strike against the wage and benefits concessions
the district is demanding.
Coleman cited the state law against public employee strikes
and said it imposes daily fines of $5,000 on the union and one
days pay on workers for every day they remain on strike.
He further threatened to retaliate for a teachers strike
by furloughing thousands of other employees.
The tactics of intimidation and strike-breaking are being used
to impose a 15 percent reduction in wages and medical, dental
and optical benefits, as well as a lengthening of the workday
and regressive work rules changes. For teachers struggling to
meet mortgage payments and support their families, these cutbacks
will have devastating consequences.
Coleman seeks to place the onus for a strike on the teachers,
blaming them for the crisis of the school system. This is a fraud!
With a salary of $180,000 (and six educational directors under
him pulling in $150,000 each), he speaks for the financial elite
that dominates one of the most impoverished cities in the country.
It is not the teachers, whose starting pay is below $40,000,
who are responsible for the crisis, it is the school district,
the politicians in Detroit and Lansing, and the big business interests
they serve.
Mayor Kwame Kilpatrick, at a press conference Thursday to build
support for the reelection campaign of fellow Democrat Governor
Jennifer Granholm, joined the gang-up against the teachers, declaring
that a strike would be the beginning of the end for our
school system.
The united front of school officials, politicians, corporate
interests and the media against the teachers demonstrates that
the fight to defend their living standards and the right of youth
to a decent public education is a political fight against the
entire political and corporate establishment. It is necessary
to call a strike, but strike action and trade union militancy
in and of themselves are inadequate. A strike can be successful
only if it is conducted as part of a new political strategy aimed
at mobilizing the entire working class against the two parties
of big business and the failed profit system they uphold.
This means:
* Launching a mass campaign to mobilize behind the teachers
the entire working class population in Detroit and Michigan. Calls
must go out for mass demonstrations and sympathy actions to back
the teachers and oppose any fines or penalties.
* Breaking from the Democratic and Republican parties, which
collaborate to enrich the few at the expense of the vast majority
of the people, and fighting for the building of a mass, independent
political movement of the working class based on a democratic
and socialist program.
There is no shortage of determination among Detroit teachers
to oppose the latest assault on their living conditions. The principal
obstacle they face is the bankrupt policy of the Detroit Federation
of Teachers (DFT). The union bureaucracy opposes the type of industrial
and political mobilization that is needed because it means a struggle
against the Democratic Party, with which the union is allied.
The alliance of the DFT with the Democrats is bound up with
the unions defense of the profit system, which subordinates
all social and human needs to corporate profit-making and the
accumulation of personal wealth. This system is producing ever
greater social inequalitymore obscene levels of wealth for
the top 1 percent together with worsening hardship and poverty
for the mass of working people.
Starting from the defense of the existing economic system,
the DFT accepts the premise that there is no money
for decent salaries and decent schools, and collaborates in imposing
the crisis of the system on the backs of teachers. DFT President
Jana Garrison goes so far as to advise the school district on
which schools should be closed and what programs eliminated.
This in a city where billions are being allocated to expand
the casinos and build luxury condos for the wealthy!
Then there is the vast squandering of resourceshundreds
of billions of dollarsto prosecute a colonial-style war
in Iraq that is killing hundreds of thousands of Iraqis and killing
and maiming tens of thousands of American soldiersa war
based on lies and conducted with the support of the Democratic
as well as the Republican party.
The one-year anniversary of the Katrina disaster is a reminder
of what the ruling elite and its two parties have wrought at home:
a rotting infrastructure and a corrupt political system that is
utterly indifferent to the lives of ordinary working people.
The Socialist Equality Party advocates a fundamental restructuring
of the economy to place the needs of working people and society
as a whole before corporate profit and the accumulation of private
wealth. To start with, we support a radical revamping of the tax
system, to take the burden off of working people and increase
the tax burden on big business and the rich.
Socialism means public ownership of the major levers of economic
lifethe big banks, manufacturing monopolies, transport,
utilities, telecommunications, pharmaceuticals and hospital chainsunder
the democratic control of the working population, so that the
wealth produced by workers labor can be used to meet social
needs. Our goal is genuine democracy and social equality.
The democratic notion that all citizens have a right to be
educated and attain their highest potential and the ideal of an
informed citizenry as the basis for democracy have been abandoned
by the American ruling elite. A socialist policy for education
would establish as a priority the rebuilding of schools, the retooling
of classrooms, the training and mentoring of quality teachers
and the broadening of the educational experience of every young
person.
The Socialist Equality Party urges all teachers to consider
and discuss these vital issues, read the World Socialist Web
Site, and become politically active in the fight for the political
perspective they advance.
All those who wish to discuss the issues facing Detroit teachers
and the perspective of the Socialist Equality Party should contact
us at www.socialequality.com
See Also:
Socialist Equality Party
announces candidates in New York, Michigan and California
[21 March 2006]
For a socialist alternative
in the 2006 US elections
Statement of the Socialist Equality Party
[12 January 2006]
Top of page
The WSWS invites your comments.
Copyright 1998-2008
World Socialist Web Site
All rights reserved |