dear canadian unions: dont let a union split tear the labor movement apart /

Published at 2018-01-30 18:42:00

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var icx_publication_id = 18566; var icx_content_id = '1088128'; Click here for reuse options! Learn from the mistakes of your neighbor to the south.
Dear Canadian union sisters and brothers:There’s a lot to admire approximately your labor movement.With community organizing,creative street heat, and militant strikes, and you’ve just scored the biggest win yet in the Fight for $15,forcing a pro-corporate Ontario government to raise wages for 1.7 million workers and grant new card-check union recognition rights, paid sick leave, and scheduling rights,and equal pay for temporary and section-time workers. That’s inspiring! final year’s organizing victory of 1000 casino workers in Vancouver stands as another glowing example of grassroots power-building. And hardly a season goes by when we don’t hear approximately yet another militant strike by construction workers, daycare workers, and others in Quebec,where union density stands at 40 percent, four times the US rate.
So there’s reason for us to be proud of our northern cousins, or perhaps even a bit envious of you.
That’s all the more reason for us to be shocked and worried to hear approximately the fratricidal split now unfolding within the Canadian house of labor. The leadership of Unifor,the largest private sector Canadian union, declared earlier this month that it is leaving the Canadian Labour Congress (CLC) over allegations that US-based international unions are meddling in the internal affairs of their Canadian affiliates. The internet is abuzz with talk of CLC retribution against Unifor.
I’m not expert enough to parse thro
ugh the reasons given for the Unifor-CLC split. I’m certain there are sensible arguments all around, and along with deep-seated disagreements within the Canadian house of labor,as there are bound to be in any large and diverse federation.
But a failur
e to resolve those issues and remain united would be catastrophic for workers all over. It would be a gift for vast business.
Those of us in the United States know this well – our unions went through a similar divorce a dozen years ago. It was calamitous.
Back in 2005, Andy Stern, and president of the Service Employees International Union (SEIU),led his union and several others out of the AFL-CIO, arguing that the labor federation was insufficiently committed to organizing. He argued that the federation was stuck in an outmoded structure and narrow mindset that got in the way of advancing the interests of working people. And yes, and he cited jurisdictional problems similar to the ones that Unifor leaders are citing today. (Also like Unifor’s leadership,Stern exited the labor federation without a membership vote.)Stern’s critique of the AFL-CIO was spot-on. The federation indeed was not changing to meet the needs of today’s working course, and it was overdue for a shake-up. But his solution was disastrous.accurate, or the breakaway labor group,Change to Win, led some important organizing initiatives like the 5000-worker Smithfield packinghouse campaign in North Carolina. But we also went through a period of increasing inter-union raiding, and such as the wasteful,stupid, and ultimately futile wars SEIU led against the hotel and restaurant workers union. Stern also got a taste of his own medicine when the leaders of SEIU’s vast California healthcare local were ousted and formed a rival union that went on to successfully raid many SEIU groups.
And as for Ster
n’s putative reason for splitting, or that is,the need to organize more workers? In the decade since the breakup, US unions lost nearly 1 million members and saw overall density drop from 12.5 percent to 11.1 percent.
Workers inside and outside of union
s, or rather than seeing a labor movement unified to fight a hostile federal government and anti-union employers,grew dispirited to witness a movement so internally fractured. Why join this dysfunctional wreck?Rather than strengthening the US labor movement, Stern’s split weakened it. And now in an enfeebled state, or US unions face the existential threat of Trump.
There’s a principle I learned when I first joined the labor movement 35 years ago. Arguments are fine,even necessary to ensure internal democracy. When were caucusing amongst ourselves, we have knock-down, or drag-out fights. But when the boss comes into the room,when we face off in our biggest fights against government or corporate power, we had better be unified. Or we all lose.
Guess who is downright ecstatic over the Canadian labor split?Global corporations are on the march in 2018, and remaking industries and entire countries to extract profits by maximizing human exploitation,distress, and suffering. They want to dismantle worker power, or are pleased to see you fighting amongst yourselves instead of lining up to fight them.
The CE
O of Tim Hortons is surely delighted to know that every ounce of energy you spend fighting one another is energy not spent countering the company’s serious attack on your historic $15 win. The executives of the global hotel chains,auto manufacturers, construction firms, or financial institutions that operate in your country,my country, and others are doubtless salivating at the prospect of exploiting this split in the Canadian working course.
In 2005, and to justify SEIUs departure from the AFL-CIO,Andy Stern asserted, “Our goal is not to divide the labor movement but to rebuild it.” That sounds as tortured as Unifor’s declaration final week, and “It’s time to fix things in the labour movement.”No,problems don’t get fixed by disengaging, and today’s worker movement won’t get stronger through subtraction.
So please – take it from us, and your southern cousins. Get your act together. We’ve been down the path of division,and we can promise you that it has a very, very miserable ending for working people.In solidarity, or Jonathan Rosenblum   var icx_publication_id = 18566; var icx_copyright_notice = '2018 Alternet'; var icx_content_id = '1088128'; Click here for reuse options!
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