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Strong opposition to CAW leadership voiced by Oshawa GM workers
By Carl Bronski
3 November 2007
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A WSWS reporting team received a warm welcome when it campaigned
at the giant General Motors Oshawa, Ontario auto plant on November
1 to denounce the historic betrayal by the Canadian Auto Workers
(CAW) union bureaucracy over its recent corporatist deal with
anti-union parts manufacturer Magna International.
The team spoke with assemblers and tradesmen at the afternoon
shift change and also intervened among auto workers and pensioners
at the union locals monthly general membership meeting just
south of the plant. Over 600 leaflets (See An
historic betrayal: Canadian Auto Workers union partners
with Magna International) were distributed to CAW Local
222 members who voiced anger and disgust, and even stronger sentiments,
against CAW President Buzz Hargrove and his supporters in the
union bureaucracy.
Hargrove better not set foot in this plant, said
one worker, or he just might end up like Jimmy Hoffa.
Get a broom and push them all out, opined another.
After reading the WSWS material, about a dozen workers came
back to request more leaflets for distribution inside the plant
and at the union general membership meeting.

Under the Framework of Fairness agreement, unveiled
by Magna boss and principal shareholder Frank Stronach and the
CAWs Hargrove last month, Magna will invite the union to
organize the workers at its 40-plus Canadian plants
and facilities in exchange for the union surrendering the right
to strike, abrogating traditional shop-floor grievance procedures
and agreeing to promote the companys corporatist labour-relations
philosophy.
Rank-and-file dissension at the 23,000-strong CAW Local 222
in Oshawa had spurred the local leadership there to reverse its
initial support of the deal when Hargrove first floated it several
months ago in closed-door sessions. In an open letter to Hargrove,
Chris Buckley, Local 222 president and chairperson of the CAW/GM
Master Bargaining Committee, in a notable about-face, said he
was writing in as forceful terms as I am able to let you
know that I cannot in good conscience support the CAW-Magana
deal. The letter was distributed to the local membership with
an invitation to discuss and debate the matter at Local 222s
November 1 general meeting.
A no-strike clause, wrote Buckley,
goes against the fundamental rights of unionized workers.
As President I represent not only our 10,000 members employed
at General Motors, but also thousands more in the parts sector.
It is obvious the threat Magna will pose to our parts jobs should
the Magna agreement go forward in its current state. The process
of awarding contracts for product is in a cut-throat state already,
suppliers employing my members completely lose any level playing
field if the right to strike becomes a factor in the competitions
favour.
It must be noted from the outset that Buckley and the rest
of the Local 222 leadership have backed Hargrove in every major
retreat over the past period, from the unions electoral
manoeuvres with both the federal and Ontario wings of the big
business Liberal Party, to a string of give-backs and concessions
in the auto plants, to the perfecting of a nationalist whipsawing
strategy that has repeatedly been used to push layoffs and plant
closures onto the backs of GM workers in the United States. If
Local 222 leaders are moving now to oppose Hargroves latest
move, it is only with an eye to retaining some credibility with
the rank and file.

Only last April, GM shocked workers in Oshawa with the announcement
that it would permanently lay off 1,200 workers this December.
It is expected that as a result of the GM production cuts, 7,000
other parts workers, many of them also Local 222 members, will
lose their jobs as well. This is only the latest blow to the working
class in the area, 40 miles east of Toronto. In 2005, GM slashed
another 3,900 jobs at the facility.
John, an autoworker at the truck plant shift change, told WSWS
reporters, First, they split the union from the Americans
and all that did was put Canadian members at the throats of American
workers. Divide and conquer, right? Then they started getting
one plant here in Canada to go against another and now with this
two-tier wage crap weve got here with this Shelf Agreement
and eight-month contracts, theyve basically got one guy
fighting another on the same damn shift.
Hargrove says he doesnt do concessions here in
Canada. But thats bullshit. They just dont admit it,
thats all. But hes not going to be able to hide it
any more. Our next contracts going to be loaded with concessions.
I just dont know what were going to do. We should
never have split with the Americans. That opened the floodgates.
During the course of the campaign, several auto workers responded
in the same thoughtful manner. At one point, a worker after hearing
that one of the WSWS reporters was from the US, crossed the parking
lot to shake his hand and thank him for his solidarity against
the traitors in the union.
Barry, an electrician, could not get to the union meeting due
to his shift responsibilities, but he stopped to speak with a
WSWS reporter before going into work, Listen. Hargroves
got to retire. Hes no good to anybody except maybe Stronach.
Or the Liberals. But this Buckleys a snake too. Dont
kid yourself. Tell them that for me at the meeting. Hes
backed Buzz every step of the way until now. Hes going along
with creating a temporary workforce here. We dont have two
tiers here. Weve got three and four. When there are layoffs
he just cries and shoots off his mouth, but he doesnt fight
them.
At the union meeting held later in the day, workers again were
eager to take the WSWS leaflets and there was no shortage of denunciations
of Hargroves deal with Magna and the local leaderships
concessions contracts at the plant. I absolutely dont
believe how they think they can get away with this, said
one incredulous worker, Theyre basically bringing
back the company unions like they had in the old days. Its
unacceptable.
Workers were aware of growing resistance to Hargroves
sweetheart deal and cited the decision by auto workers in CAW
Local 88 at the CAMI-Suzuki plant in Ingersoll, Ontario also to
oppose the agreement at this Decembers CAW National Conference.
Many saw how the top union leadership is closing ranks with the
aim of stifling all opposition.
Hargrove, who initially dismissed the criticism of the deal
as coming from an inconsequential rump with an axe to grind over
the CAWs alliance with the big business Liberal Party, suddenly
changed tack and called a meeting of the national executive board
this Tuesday. It endorsed the Magna partnership by a vote of 16-1.
Former CAW President Bob White has also applauded the deal, saying
that the union must face new realities and noting
that nowadays, work stoppages are almost ineffective because
of economic circumstances.
Later, inside the Local 222 meeting, workers overwhelmingly
rejected the Framework of Fairness rapprochement with
Magna. On the way out, more workers who had earlier read the WSWS
team leaflet stopped to ask for more supplies so they could take
them in for the Friday day shift.
There is growing trepidation amongst workers that in the wake
of the massive concessions contracts signed by the UAW with GM
and Chrysler south of the border, more layoffs and concessions
will be demanded of them when Canadian Big Three contracts expire
in September 2008. Indeed, during the WSWS campaign at the plant,
breaking news came over the radio that Cerberus, the new owners
of Chrysler Corporation, had just announced 12,000 more permanent
redundancies, with 1,100 job losses in Brampton, Ontario and perhaps
as much as 500 more in Windsor, Ontario.
This past summer, Hargrove had remarked while endorsing the
Cerberus takeover that he believed there would be no substantial
job losses resulting from the deal. And only last March Hargrove
and the CAW leadership exhorted workers at the DaimlerChrysler
assembly plant in Brampton, just northwest of Toronto, to agree
to a significant package of concessions that they had strongly
voted down in a February plant-wide vote.
Riding roughshod over its own constitution that restricts re-votes
on matters duly settled, Hargrove and his assistant Bob Chernecki
made it clear to the membership that they had to vote to accept
$5,000 in annual givebacks through the elimination of shift premiums,
the intensification of work practices, and the contracting out
of union janitorial jobs or accept the consequences. Should they
reject the concessions, Chrysler would move auto production out
of Brampton without opposition from the union bureaucracy. Its
just a matter of smart bargaining, explained Chernecki.
The elimination of the third shift and the sacking of 1,100 workers
in Brampton and the creation of a company union at Magna are just
the latest bitter fruits of Hargroves collusion with the
auto bosses.
See Also:
Auto workers oppose CAWs sweetheart
deal with Magna
[1 November 2007]
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