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German train drivers union announces new strikes
By Ulrich Rippert
22 December 2007
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On December 19, the German train drivers union GDL (Deutsche
Lokomotivführer) broke off contract talks with the management
of German Railways (Deutsche BahnDB) and two other railway
unionsTransnet and the GDBAand announced its intention
to carry out new, unlimited strikes starting from January 7. This
represents a significant intensification of the train drivers
contract dispute, which has now been going on for nine months.
For the past three weeks the GDL has carried out negotiations
with the DB executive committee and refrained from any strike
action. In the course of the talks it became clear that the DB
management is not prepared to make any compromises. Instead, it
has sought to use the period of negotiations to isolate the train
drivers and break their union.
At a press conference in Frankfurt-Main, GDL Chairman Manfred
Schell said the union had decided to break off discussions because
in the course of the negotiations the DB executive had backtracked
from its promise to grant the union its own independent
contract agreement.
Management had demanded that the GDL agree to a so-called cooperation
contract with the other two unions, Transnet and the GDBA,
before any negotiations could be carried out on the specific content
of a contract for the GDL. To accept such a proposal would mean
to abandon the GDLs key demand to negotiate independently
on pay and work hours. We will not agree to such a move,
Schell said.
Schells deputy, Claus Weselsky, told Spiegel Online:
The GDL was being called upon to vote in favour of the contract
agreement it had once had with Transnet and the GDBA, and... if
the unions could not agree on their demands the issue would go
to arbitration, even before any demands had been put to management.
Can you imagine! And this would apply to the current dispute.
Weselsky accused DB management of seeking to make the GDL look
ridiculous. He said, To put it bluntly, we were
not even to be allowed to negotiate what train drivers could earn.
Instead, the contract would pertain only to matters of minor
importance, such as whether the employer savings bonus should
remain or be increased. We are talking here about 13 euros per
month.
With regard to the GDLs wage claimthe original
claim by the union was for a raise of up to 30 percentthe
DB management were only prepared to offer 4.5 percent, i.e., the
same deal as that already negotiated by Transnet and the GDBA.
A new classification of the wage structure would make possible
a further increase of two percent. That was too little for
us, Weselsky said. We want double-digit wage increases.
In addition, the DB executive refused to recognise shunting
drivers as train drivers, thereby depriving the GDL of the right
to negotiate on behalf of this group of workers.
The GDL announced strikes in goods and passenger rail service
beginning January 7. Schell told the press conference that, in
contrast to the unions former position of taking only limited
action, the forthcoming strikes would be open-ended. The strike
action would be continued until the DB management presented an
acceptable offer, and would continue even during new
negotiations with the executive. The disputes would be ended only
if we are absolutely convinced we are heading in the right
direction, the GDL chairman said.
The DB executive reacted promptly. The company announced in
a statement that it was withdrawing all previous offers
and concessions to the GDL. The executive is now demanding
from the GDL a regulated arbitration procedure.
Political and media outlets immediately fell in behind the
DB executive and began a vicious propaganda campaign against the
train drivers. The sharpest attacks came from representatives
of the Social Democratic Party (SPD) and the German Federation
of Trade Unions (DGB).
The economics speaker for the SPD parliamentary faction, Rainer
Wend, declared that if the GDL once again announces strikes, We
will take a clear stand in opposition. There will be no solidarity.
Wend accused the GDL of seeking to realise its own special
interests at the expense of the public.
The chairman of the German police union, Konrad Freiberg, expressly
warned the GDL against calling new strikes. Otherwise it would
lose any remaining sympathy. Other union officials
called the new strikes contractual imbecility.
Transnet Chairman Norbert Hansen and his GDBA colleague, Klaus-Dieter
Hommel, put out a joint statement in which they declared: The
whole thing is just becoming absurd. Both men said they
would do everything in their power to oppose renewed strike action
by train drivers.
They announced their intention of concluding their own contract
agreement with rail management for those train drivers organized
in their unions. There are an estimated 5,000 drivers organised
in Transnet and the GDBA, and the aim of such an initiative is
clearly to isolate the GDL and split the train drivers.
This latest development underscores the urgency of organizing
the broadest solidarity and support for the train drivers. They
are to be made an object lesson because they have dared to defy
the contract policies of the German trade union federation DGB
and its associated trade unions. Following years of declining
incomes, the train drivers opted to fight for better wages and
working conditions.
Such a struggle, however, demands a complete break with the
trade union bureaucracy and the SPD, which are openly working
as strike-breakers. With its utterly limited trade union perspective,
the GDL is unable to carry out such a struggle. Their repeated
readiness to strike a compromise has only served to encourage
DB Chairman Hartmut Mehdorn and the rail executive to ever sharper
attacks and provocations.
Train drivers must take the strike into their own hands. It
is necessary to extend the struggle beyond the limited framework
laid down by the GDL leadership and begin a broad political offensive.
Action committees must be established with the aim of winning
the cooperation of all other rail personnel, as well as workers
from other industries. Such action committees must develop the
solidarity which already exists in broad layers of the population
and turn it into concrete support.
Above all, a new political perspective is required, based on
the need to consciously transform the train drivers fight
into a direct political offensive of the entire working class
against the grand coalition government and the corporate-financial
elite whose interests it represents. This political struggle must,
moreover, be conducted on an all-European scale and not limited
to Germany. As the recent strike by French rail workers has demonstrated,
the attacks on rail workers are being carried out on a European-wide
basis, as part of the offensive of European capital, coordinated
through the European Union, against the jobs and living standards
of workers across the continent.
See Also:
GDL leadership prepares sell-out
German train drivers must take strike into their own hands
[8 December 2007]
The privatisation of the German railways
system and the train drivers strike
[6 December 2007]
The Left Party and the German train drivers
strikean exchange of letters
[1 December 2007]
An open letter to striking
train drivers from the Socialist Equality Party of Germany
[29 November 2007]
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