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WSWS : Workers
Struggles : Europe
: 1998
Air France Strike
A note on the Air France struggle --
lessons of the 1989 Australian pilots strike
Comment by Terry Cook
10 June 1998
When I read the reports on the Air France strike and the invective
heaped on the pilots by the leaders of the Socialist Party and
Communist Party, it immediately brought to mind the 1989 Australian
pilots strike.
Like their French colleagues, the Australian pilots became
the target of vilification and slander by the social democratic
government of the day. The Hawke Labor Party government, backed
by the Australian Council of Trade Union (ACTU) and the entire
trade union apparatus, branded the pilots as "bloody minded,"
elite "silver tails" and "greedy mavericks"
who were holding the country to ransom. Treasurer Paul Keating
declared: "That sort of gross behaviour cannot be tolerated."
The Labor leaders were joined by the corporate media, which
condemned the pilots as "foul smelling". One particularly
rabid commentator compared them to a convicted sodomist and rapist,
"who did to his victims what the airline pilots are doing
to the aviation and tourism industries".
The pilots were subjected to this foul abuse because they had
the audacity to strike for a wage increase in defiance of the
prices and incomes Accord -- a pact struck between the ACTU and
the Labor government to impose real wage cuts and prevent industrial
action throughout the working class.
The frenzied accusations of greed and privilege were designed
to isolate the pilots and block support from other workers. This
allowed the Hawke government to organise an international strike-breaking
operation that included the use of military aircraft, the hiring
of scab pilots and the provision of funds to the two domestic
airlines, Ansett and TAA (now Qantas), to charter aircraft and
utilise overseas airlines.
The government also backed legal action by the airlines to
deregister the pilots' union, the Australian Federation of Air
Pilots, and impose millions of dollars in damages on the union
and individual pilots.
Every union official and Labor politician, especially those
from the "left", collaborated with the government and
gave the scab operation their unstinting support.
One final word of warning must be made to the Air France pilots
and all French workers. Far from the attack on the Australian
pilots being a special case, dealing with a pampered minority,
their defeat and the smashing of their union was a major political
turning point. It intensified the Labor government's offensive
on behalf of big business to discipline the working class and
deepen the attacks on wages, jobs and working conditions across
the board.
See Also:
Air France strike disrupts World Cup football
match
[10 June 1998]
Air France threatens to impose pay cuts
on striking pilots
[9 June 1998]
Unions desperate to secure a deal in Air
France strike
[6 June 1998]
Jospin government threatens to use military
to break Air France pilots' strike
[5 June 1998]
Marxism and the
Trade Unions - A lecture by David North
[January 1998]
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