www.newsandletters.org












NEWS & LETTERS, August-September 2002

Docker solidarity

Oakland, Cal.--International Longshore and Warehouse Union (ILWU) Local 10 held a unity rally on June 27, where they were joined by thousands of other workers demanding an end to management’s effort to outsource ILWU work and break the power of the union in the present contract negotiations.

The employers in the Pacific Maritime Association (PMA) are feeling like they can go after the ILWU in this post-September 11 climate. For years they have campaigned hard for more federal government intervention in the maritime industry to undermine the ILWU. Now government security czar Tom Ridge has called the ILWU directly, telling them to settle their contract negotiations without a strike. Hanging over the ILWU is the threat that Bush will issue a Taft-Hartley injunction, to force workers to stay on the job.

WORLD TRADE NEEDS DOCKERS

During a brief, symbolic work stoppage trucks lined up for miles awaiting loads to feed the new economy’s lean, just-in-time inventory. What capitalists and their men in the White House fear most is not a security breach on the docks but the power of dockworkers to shut down the world economy and their willingness to use that power to support other workers.

Jack Heyman of the ILWU said the agenda of the PMA is to “restrict trade union power on the docks by banning the right to strike.” He added, “Under the rubric of ‘national security,’ the impending Maritime Security Act, and passage of the USA Patriot Act not only basic liberties will be affected but background checks will be required to screen port workers, the bulk of whom are minority or immigrant workers.”

ILWU has been in the forefront of international workers’ solidarity, supporting the mostly African-American Charleston, S.C. dockworkers and the Liverpool dockworkers in England. An International Dockworkers Council, affiliated with a five-million-member International Transport Workers Federation, came out of these solidarity struggles.

At the December AFL-CIO convention, the Teamsters, ILA (the east coast longshore union) and ILWU formed a transportation union pact. All pledged at the unity rally to support the dockworkers in any showdown with management.

The solidarity campaign continues to attract more support as at a July 24 rally outside of PMA headquarters in San Francisco’s financial district. Since the ILWU contract expired on July 1, they have been renewing the old contract on a day-to-day basis.

PROMOTING LAYOFFS

The ILWU says they are willing to have their clerical positions computerized, eliminating many of the 2,300 jobs, as long as the remaining work is still done by ILWU. The ILWU gained their relatively good pay and benefits because they accepted dramatic cuts in their ranks from new technologies like containerization.

A deeper question for dockworkers and their friends expressing solidarity with them is how to deal with the continued use of technology as a weapon that erodes the ranks of militant unions, leaving other workers in the two-tier economy behind. We have to confront this slow drip of technological innovation used as a weapon against us and transform its very existence as capital.

--Marxist-Humanist supporters

Return to top


Home l News & Letters Newspaper l Back issues l News and Letters Committees l Dialogues l Raya Dunayevskaya l Contact us l Search

Subscribe to News & Letters

Published by News and Letters Committees
Designed and maintained by  Internet Horizons