Labor Day Poses Hard Questions
by Peter Rachleff
It s
impossible to celebrate Labor Day 2005 without asking some hard questions: How
organized is organized labor? How much of a movement is the labor movement ?
The last six weeks have torn away whatever shreds of clothing the emperor might
have been wearing. We can deny the crisis no longer.
In late July at the AFL-CIO s national convention in Chicago, the Service
Employees International Union (SEIU) and the International Brotherhood of
Teamsters announced their withdrawal to form the Change to Win Coalition (CtW).
They were joined by the International Brotherhood of Carpenters and Joiners, who
had left the AFL-CIO four years ago, and, a week later, by the United Food and
Commercial Workers Union. Other unions are considering similar action. All
told, unions representing more than a third of the AFL-CIO s 13,000,000 members
have disaffiliated.
Inside and outside the labor movement, activists and observers have agreed
more on the long term causes of the split than on the immediate issues which
divide the two sides. Over the past fifty years, the ranks of organized labor
have plunged from one worker in three to one in seven. With this radical
decline in size, unions have lost power at the bargaining table, in the
workplace, and in the political arena, while they have lost recognition within
our mass culture, our media, and our community life. Both sides insist that
they have the best interests of the labor movement and working women and men at
heart, but they claim to differ in their responses to this long-term decline.
The CtWers call for the redirection of union resources to organizing new
members, the development of new strategies for organizing, and the merger of
unions into fewer bodies, while the AFL-CIOers call for more emphasis on
political work, campaigns, lobbying, and the like. Few activists or observers
considered these strategic differences to be of an order that merited such
drastic action as disaffiliation and splitting. Honestly, many of us are still
scratching our heads.
In the ensuing weeks, leaders of both factions at the national, state, and
local levels tripped all over themselves trying to explain the consequences of
the new organizational arrangement. Some state and regional leaders insisted
that nothing would change, while others predicted a surge of cannibalistic
raiding. AFL-CIO President Sweeney first decreed that locals of the newly
disaffiliated unions must withdraw from state and local bodies; later, he
relented, sort of. He invited locals to remain affiliated if they would
continue to pay dues and accept the loss of voting and office-holding
status. I doubt that anyone has been surprised that his offer met with
wholesale rejection.
In the midst of this organizational disarray, on August 19, more than 4,000
mechanics, cleaners, and custodians, members of the Aircraft Mechanics Fraternal
Association (AMFA), struck Northwest Airlines. They refused to accept the loss
of more than half their jobs, a wage cut of 26%, and the replacement of their
defined benefit pensions by a 401K plan. If they are forced to accept such
terms of employment, other NWA unions the flight attendants, the baggage
handlers and ticket agents, the pilots will find themselves, one group at a
time, lowered into the same boiling cauldron. The issues they face contracting
out within the global economy, the loss of earning power, the gutting of
pensions are the very same issues faced by millions upon millions of U.S.
workers. And now AMFA members face the added threat of the destruction of their
union itself, via the hiring of replacement workers, the intervention of private
security forces, and the extension of the contracting out of their work.
Here, it would seem, is a struggle around which both sides of the labor
split could put their shoulders to the wheel. Here is the materialization of
that old labor motto, An injury to one is an injury to all, for what happens to
the mechanics, cleaners, and custodians is bound to befall others, many others.
And here is an opportunity for labor leaders to demonstrate their opposition to
union-busting, their commitment to solidarity, and their understanding that
history suggests the best way to revive the labor movement is by mobilizing
around a specific group of workers who face the central issues of the era. Such
was the case with the great railroad strike of 1877, the Pullman strike and
boycott of 1894, the steel strike of 1919, the Minneapolis teamsters strike of
1934, the meatpacking strike of 1948, the steelworkers strike of 1959, and
others. Some local labor leaders and activists here in the Twin Cities, and in
Detroit, Boston, San Francisco, Portland, Oregon, and elsewhere get it, and they
have offered support and material assistance to the NWA strikers.
But most of today s labor leaders, especially at a national level, seem to
be studying different pages from the labor history books, pages which detail the
conflict between the Knights of Labor and the nascent AFL in the 1880s, the
conflict between the AFL and the new Industrial Workers of the World (IWW) in
the early 20th century, that between the AFL and the new Congress of
Industrial Organizations (CIO) in the 1930s and 1940s, the refusal of labor
officialdom to support PATCO in 1981 and the Hormel strikers in 1985-86. In
these and similar situations unions crossed other unions picket lines,
encouraged the taking of striking workers jobs, and signed contracts which
undercut other unions. Here was and is the embodiment of the IWW s scorn of the
AFL as the American Separation of Labor. And in each of these cases, while
some unions and some workers might have gained at the expense of
other workers, these gains were of a short duration, and, in the long run,
all unions and all workers lost ground.
These labor leaders are able to offer reasons for their refusal to assist
the 4,400 mechanics, cleaners, and custodians, who belong to AMFA. AMFA did not
affiliate with the AFL-CIO. It raided the International Association of
Machinists, took away some of their members. AMFA advocates and leaders scorned
other airlines workers, some say, even used derogatory terms, thought themselves
better than other workers.
There is probably some truth to every one of these accusations, but how do
they stack up compared to the damage that NWA management is doing to all of its
workers and that other airlines and other employers will seek to do to theirs?
And how does acting on the basis of this hostility to AMFA stack up compared to
the possibilities of inspiration, mobilization, and movement that supporting
those 4,400 mechanics, cleaners, and custodians that solidarity might generate?
Yes, it s impossible to celebrate Labor Day 2005 without asking some hard
questions.
Peter Rachleff is a professor of history at
Macalester College and a specialist in U.S. labor history. In 1985-86, he was
the chairperson of the Twin Cities Local P-9 Support Committee, which organized
support for the Hormel strikers. He has been consulting with AMFA Local 33 for
the past month.