Nature and Politics
by Jeffrey St. Clair and Alexander Cockburn
Strikers as Terrorists? [868]
At the rate things are going, it won't be long before labor organizers are
being thrown into military prisons and held without warrant as "enemy
combatants." Tom Ridge, director of the Office of Homeland Security, has
been phoning Jim Spinosa, head of the West Coast's Longshoremen's Union,
saying that a strike would be bad for the national interest. June 30 saw
the expiration of the current three-year contract between the Longshoremen
and the employers, grouped in the Pacific Maritime Association (PMA).
If the 10,000-strong longshoremen go on strike, ports from Seattle to San
Diego could shut down, meaning a big jolt to the already floundering US
economy. Steve Stallone of the ILWU says the union does not contemplate a
strike and the only way a stoppage could occur is if the PMA stages a
lockout.
A call to Spinosa by the Secretary of Labor would not be surprising, given
the stakes, but a call from the man in charge of coordinating the battle
against terrorism on America's home turf confirms widespread fears that as
so often throughout the twentieth century, national security can be used to
justify strike-breaking, invocation of the Taft-Hartley Act, and
declarations of national emergency to shut down labor activism and, if
necessary, throw labor organizers in jail.
Longshoremen don't need to be told this. They know it's what happened to
their most famous leader, Harry Bridges. In World War II the US government,
particularly on the East Coast through the US Navy, cut deals with the Mob
(mainly involving a hands-off posture on the drug trade), giving the
gangsters specific orders on which labor leaders to rough up and murder.
Between 1942 and 1946 there were 26 unsolved murders of labor organizers
and dockworkers dumped in the water by the Mob, working in collusion with
Navy intelligence.
Jack Heyman, business agent of the San Francisco Longshore Union (ILWU),
tells us that Ridge called Spinosa, ILWU international president, about two
weeks ago in the midst of negotiations. "He said that he didn't think it
would be a good idea if there was a disruption in trade and went on to say
it is important to continue negotiating."
Ridge's astounding and sinister intervention comes in the midst of tense
negotiations between the Pacific Maritime Association representing
shipowners operating on the West Coast and the ILWU. The prime issue is
technology, where the employers seek changes in work rules. In early July,
Longshore workers staged a rally in Oakland.
"The big thing," Heyman says, "is the hiring hall." The PMA wants to
computerize the hall. Longshore workers died in the 1934 strike for the
hiring hall. It dictates who controls distribution of jobs, who controls
the waterfront. We eliminated corruption and favoritism with establishment
of the union hiring hall. They want to put computer cards. When you go to
hiring hall you schmooze, see what is going on. Employers don't want that."
The trans-Pacific trade has grown to become one of the largest in the
world. The West Coast now has four of the top six US container ports.
Longshoremen have always made it a rule in negotiations not to make any
concession without an equivalent concession from the employers. Heyman
mentions the push by European unions for shorter work weeks as one model
for demands here.
This year's contract negotiations are particularly fraught. The rapid gains
in trade volume are over for the moment, as both the US and Asian economies
struggle to emerge from recession.
Shipping revenues are down. Since September 11, security has replaced
commerce as the transportation industry's main priority. Residents of port
communities beef about the long lines of trucks at container terminals that
cause gridlock on their roads and pollute the air. With the huge new
container ships now being built, such problems will get worse.
According to the Journal of Commerce, "Over the past year, PMA President
Joseph Miniace has publicly called for the introduction of contemporary
technology to increase the efficiency of cargo-handling activities at West
Coast ports. ILWU President James Spinosa responded that the union would
never accept the type of robotics he personally witnessed at the Port of
Rotterdam."
Ridge's call comes in the context of urgent PMA lobbying in Washington.
Again according to the Journal of Commerce, "Management forces, pointing
out that shipments through West Coast ports account for 70 percent of the
nation's gross domestic product, have been trying to line up support in
Washington, DC. PMA President Joseph Miniace has been a frequent visitor to
the nation's capital, meeting with members of Congress and administration
officials. Importers and exporters have also joined the fray. They note
that what happens on the West Coast will affect companies across the
country. They're trying to keep the pressure on the PMA to stand firm in
the bargaining."
There are other sinister signs that "homeland security" is being used as a
club to bash labor. The right wing is working fiercely to make the
prospective new umbrella Homeland Security Agency non-union, again citing
national security. Once again, this takes us back to the darkest days of
domestic repression at the dawn of the Cold War.
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