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October 12, 2005EARLY GIVES DAH BOWFF OF EM DAH BOID. Both Labor Federations Fail Test of Strike Solidarity >From October, 2005, issue of Labor Notes http://labornotes.org/index.shtml By Steve Early Having two labor federations, instead of one, is not a new idea in America--or necessarily a negative development. Prior to the 1955 merger of the American Federation of Labor (AFL) and Congress of Industrial Organizations (CIO), union competition was more often the norm in the U.S. than not. As a result, workers often had a wider range of options when they decided to organize or became dissatisfied with their existing union representation. In the 1880s and '90s, for example, fledgling AFL building trades unions wooed members away from the more loosely-organized and less practical-minded Knights of Labor. During the first two decades of the 20th century, the radical Industrial Workers of the World (IWW) challenged the then-dominant AFL by recruiting unskilled factory workers ignored by the building trades. Between 1935 and 1955, craft and industrial unions were again bitter foes. But their political and workplace conflict provided millions of workers with a clear choice between the continuing conservatism of the AFL and the left-leaning militancy of the CIO. Unfortunately, the current split between the AFL-CIO and its new rival, the Change To Win Coalition (CTWC), did not emerge from any transformative grassroots movement--of the kind that has made unions a more progressive force in the past. The CTWC's break with the AFL-CIO developed out of inside-the-Beltway bureaucratic squabbles that union members have little interest in and no say about. The AFL-CIO and its defectors don't have radically different workplace organizing or political agendas. Unlike the Knights of Labor, IWW, or early CIO, no labor grouping today is projecting an alternative vision of how the economy should be re-structured to aid and empower America workers. Most revealing of all, both the AFL-CIO and its former affiliates in the CTWC are currently failing a fundamental test of labor solidarity. At Northwest Airlines and other carriers, thousands of mechanics have formed an independent union, the Aircraft Mechanics Fraternal Association (AMFA). AMFA is now striking against massive job cuts and contract concessions at Northwest. Rather than recognizing everyone's stake in the outcome of this fight, many labor officials are either denouncing AMFA or ignoring its pleas for help--because the workers it represents at North West and other airlines have, for good reason, voted out unions affiliated with either the AFL-CIO and CTWC. (Some national unions have at least discouraged members and staffers from flying on the airline during the strike--and the UAW, to its enormous credit, has made an $800,000 strike fund contribution to AMFA.) But, at the national level, organized labor in general is just repeating its terrible mistake in 1981 when air traffic controllers walked out and were similarly ostracized--in that case, because of their prior support for Ronald Reagan (the president who then fired and replaced them!). Fortunately, union members in many cities--like Boston, Minneapolis, Detroit, and San Franciso--are rallying behind AMFA, just as they did around PATCO. If the future of unions is going to be any less bleak than their recent past, we need many more such examples of bottom-up solidarity and rank-and-file initiative. What makes labor a real movement is not the machinations of its national bureaucracies or officials--whether they're merging or splitting up. Effective unionism is rooted in the collective activity of workers on the job and in their communities. Now, as in the past, that's the only reliable source of mutual aid and protection for all working people. (Steve Early has been active in the labor movement since 1972. He works for CWA District 1 in Boston and is part of the Solidarity Committee of Massachusetts Jobs With Justice, which is aiding Northwest strikers.)Posted by herb jr. jr. at October 12, 2005 02:17 PM Comments
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