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To Volkswagen workers in Brussels
Vote against the sell-out organised by the unions and works
councils!
Statement by the World Socialist Web Site editorial
board
6 January 2007
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On Friday, January 5, voting began at the Volkswagen Forest
plant in Brussels on the agreement negotiated between the factory
works council and VW management.
At their meeting January 4, the leadership of the Forest works
council and trade unions concluded negotiations on a deal directly
aimed at the interests of VW workers. The deal calls for the workforce
to be slashed from the current 5,400 total to just 2,200.

In line with the initial plans put forward by management, production
of the Volkswagen Golf model is to be gradually ended at the Brussels
factory. Instead of the planned production of a total of 200,000
vehicles over the next two years, production will be reduced to
82,500 units12,500 of the Golf model, 46,000 of the Polo
and 24,000 of an unconfirmed model.
The agreement only guarantees the existence of the Volkswagen
production in Forest Brussels for a further two yearsi.e.,
until the end of 2008. Any continuation of production beyond that
date, according to management demands, is bound up with the introduction
of a longer working week without payment for the extras hours
worked.
According to management strategy, either the Forest factory
is closed after this two-year period orand this is the suspicion
of many workersanother Volkswagen facility, for example,
its plant in Pamplona, Spain, will be closed and production shifted
from Pamplona to Brussels. Whatever the result, it is clear that
the offensive now being carried out against the Brussels workforce
is only the prelude to more wide-ranging attacks and rationalisations
by Volkswagen throughout its European operations.
Works council and union officials are trying to push through
the deal against the opposition of workers by claiming that the
relatively high levels of compensation for those who voluntarily
give up their jobs are a great success. The tentative
deal calls for workers who quit to receive between 25,000 (US$32,500)
and 144,000 euros (US$187,000)depending upon seniority.
In addition, so-called generous compensation payments
have been scheduled for approximately 900 workers over 50, who
take early retirement.
Workers at the plant explain that the vote on the destruction
of 3,200 jobs is to be directly tied to agreement over the compensations
and early retirement schedule. In other words: whoever votes against
the loss of jobs also votes against the compensation and pensions
package. In this way, the unions are playing off older and younger
workers, as well as production workers and office employees, against
one another.
The WSWS editorial board calls on Volkswagen workers in Brussels
to reject the deal decisively and vote down this foul corporatist
manoeuvre.
The selling off of jobs in the form of redundancy and compensation
payments not only undermines the position of the working class
as a whole, it places a question mark over the future of the younger
generation of workers, for whom these jobs are lost forever. Entire
industrial regions, including the steel and coal heartlands in
Wallonia (southern Belgium) and the German Ruhr district, have
been transformed into wastelands in precisely the same waywith
devastating effects for the whole population.
The fact that many workers have already agreed to the compensation
package, or are considering voting in favour of the deal, does
not amount to their agreement to the destruction of jobs. Instead
it reflects a complete lack of confidence in the trade unions.
Many workers regard the sell-out organised by the unions and works
councils as signed and sealed, and no worker expects these organisations
to carry out any long-term or principled fight for the defence
of jobs.
Rejection of the negotiated deal must be made the starting
point for a struggle against the systematic blackmail of VW workers
by the work councils and union officials and for a principled
defence of all jobs at all locations.
This requires a political break with the conceptions of social
partnership and co-determination. Instead, a
completely new perspective is necessary that proceeds from the
international character of modern production and the common interests
of workers worldwide. Such a perspective calls for a socialist
transformation of society, which places social interests above
the priorities and profits of big business and the banks.
We repeat our call for the building of independent workers
committees against mass redundancies and social welfare cuts to
oppose the cowardly and bankrupt politics of the unions, whose
activities are determined by their defence of the capitalist system.
And we offer our support in combining the struggle to defend jobs
with the struggle for just such a socialist, internationalist
perspective.
See Also:
Sellout at Brussels Volkswagen plant
Trade unions organize destruction of 3,200 jobs
[3 January 2007]
Sellout at Brussels
Volkswagen plant
Trade unions agree to mass dismissals
[20 December 2006]
The role played by German
VW works councils in the attack on Belgian workers jobs
[13 December 2006]
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