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NYC Transit Strike: Class, Capitalism & Exploitation

posted Thursday, 22 December 2005
UPDATE: Thirty-four thousand rank and file members of TWU Local 100 are under siege. The union is being fined $1 million a day.

Members are losing two days’ pay for each day of the strike. Billionaire Mayor Bloomberg, who has called the members “thugs,” is seeking a temporary court injunction charging the union with “criminal contempt."

If the judge agrees, the TWU leaders could be jailed and additional fines added of $25,000 a day on each member. The judge also fined two Queens TWU locals—Local 726 at $50,000 a day and Local 1056 at $75,000 a day for going on strike earlier. Both unions work for private sector bus companies and are not subject to the anti-union Taylor Law.

In spite of the major holiday season, the MTA provoked this costly shutdown. MTA chairperson Peter Kalikow, Gov. George Pataki and Mayor Michael Bloomberg, blinded by their sense of power, had refused to bargain in good faith.

Throughout the negotiations they threatened the transit union with the repressive, anti-union Taylor Law, but they miscalculated the anger of the rank and file.

The fury against these servants of the ruling class—who are racist, pompous and arrogant—was clearly evident hours before the strike.

Thousands of trade unionists from every major union in the city converged on Governor Pataki’s office in midtown Manhattan.

With speeches, placards and chants, they sent a powerful message that the labor movement was ready to back up the decision of TWU Local 100 to shut the city down. It was an awesome display of union power.

For two days now, the transit workers have exercised their righteous democratic right to withhold their labor power. Hundreds of trains and buses have stopped running.

This citywide shutdown, not seen for 25 years, could be the catalyst to push back the repressive, anti-union racist climate in this city and far beyond. WORKERS WORLD

CLASS STRUGGLE

We salute the 34,000 transit workers of New York City, whose courage in the face of draconian threats has provided an inspiring example of determination and solidarity to the working class throughout the United States and, indeed, internationally. The strike by transit workers is an event of international significance.

Defying massive fines and even the threat of jail, the strike represents a direct challenge to a super-rich Wall Street elite that is accustomed to imposing its economic interests and its will not only on New York City, but on the world.

In no other country is the existence of social class, not to mention class struggle, so vehemently denied as in the United States. But in no other country are the class divisions so deep.

And nowhere else is class war practiced with a viciousness that equals that of the American ruling class. It has taken less than 24 hours for the strike of transit workers to expose before the eyes of the world the brutal reality of American society.

The strike exemplifies the unbridgeable class divisions in American society, in which a corrupt and reactionary financial oligarchy utilizes the most brutal methods to smash all resistance to its lust for profits and personal wealth.

One has only to look at the cast of characters leading the assault on transit workers to get a sense of the real social issues at stake in this conflict.

First, there is Michael Bloomberg, who spent lavishly out of his vast personal fortune of more than $5 billion to buy the mayoralty. He had the effrontery to go before cameras Tuesday to denounce bus and subway workers as “selfish,” “thuggish,” “disgraceful” and “shameful.”

Second, there is real estate mogul Peter Kalikow, with a net worth of more than $1 billion, who is negotiating on behalf of the Metropolitan Transportation Authority (MTA).

Third, leading the anti-transit worker hate campaign of the gutter media is Rupert Murdoch, the owner of the New York Post and Fox News. His personal fortune is estimated to be approximately $8 billion.

These individuals pocket in one day more than even the highest paid transit worker takes home in a year.

These are the people demanding that transit workers—whose wages barely cover basic necessities in New York, one of the most expensive cities in the world—sacrifice their wages, pensions and benefits in order to meet the interest payments to rich investors, who augment their fortunes by purchasing high-yield MTA bonds.

The Bloomberg administration and MTA have secured multiple injunctions against the transit workers. Under the provisions of New York state’s anti-labor Taylor Law, each individual worker faces fines of two day’s pay for every day on the picket line.

The city, meanwhile, has convinced a judge to impose $1 million a day in fines against Transport Workers Union Local 100, which represents the bus and subway workers.

The city has also called for fines against individual workers of $25,000 for the first day on strike, to be doubled for each additional day of the walkout—a sum that would rise to over $1 million in less than a week and bankrupt the workers and their families far sooner.

The MTA has also threatened to fire any workers who participated in the 1980 strike and join their co-workers in the current walkout. There have also been strident calls for the jailing of Local 100 President Roger Toussaint, other union officials, and rank-and-file workers themselves.

The immense international significance of the transit strike is that it has shattered the façade of a monolithic American “national unity” endlessly proclaimed by the government and the media.

There exists within the United States a powerful social force that is capable of fighting and resisting the reactionary and inhuman policies of the ruling oligarchy—policies imposed not only within the United States, but also internationally.

In this regard, it is especially significant to note the national, religious and ethnic diversity of the New Yorkers engaged in this struggle. Walking on the picket lines are workers from every part of the world.

The solidarity of striking transit workers represents in microcosmic form the emerging unity of the international working class.

This is the first strike by New York’s transit workers in 25 years. The eleven-day walkout of 1980 brought the city and state to the brink of surrender, but was betrayed by the union’s leadership, which accepted a concessions agreement and the imposition of massive fines involving the loss of nearly a month’s pay for every worker.

The betrayal of that struggle set the stage for a wave of strike-breaking, union-busting and layoffs that was initiated by the Reagan administration in the firing of 11,000 air traffic controllers a year later, and then unleashed throughout basic industry.

These attacks signaled the near elimination of the working class as a visible social force in the US for an entire period, and created the conditions for the piling up of the fortunes of the likes of Bloomberg, Kalikow and Murdoch.

Successive administrations, both Democratic and Republican, on the national, state and municipal level, have presided ever since over a vast transfer of wealth from the working class to the financial elite and the upper layers of the privileged middle class. Workers’ real wages have stagnated or fallen for decades, while social benefits have been systematically dismantled.

In New York City, the wealthy and the corporations have been largely relieved of the burden of financing a public transportation system upon which their businesses depend, with the cost shifted onto the backs of workers and passengers.

The floating of interest-bearing bonds as the principal source of capital funding has turned the labor of bus and subway workers into yet another source of profit linked to financial speculation.

The immense international significance of the current transit strike is that it has brought the American working class forward once again as a powerful social force being propelled into struggle by the relentless drive of corporations and public employers to boost profits by cutting jobs, pensions and medical benefits.

The workers are in a powerful position. The MTA and the ruling establishment are unable to replace 34,000 workers and run the huge transit system with scab labor, as was done against the PATCO air traffic controllers.

It cannot outsource public transportation or shift it to a low-wage haven. And the cost of the walkout to the city’s businesses is estimated in the hundreds of millions of dollars daily. The frenzied ultimatums and threats cannot conceal the weakness of the city’s and state’s position.

At the same time, the strike has underscored the tremendous crisis of political perspective and leadership within the working class.

The greatest obstacle to the victory of the transit workers comes from their own union leadership. Local 100’s parent union, the TWU International, has branded the walkout as illegal and unsanctioned.

The union’s international president, Michael O’Brien, intervened in the Monday night Local 100 executive board meeting that voted to call the strike.

He called on the local to accept the MTA’s takeaway offer and refused to authorize the strike, depriving the city’s transit workers of the logistical, legal and financial support that is paid for by their own dues.

At Tuesday’s court proceedings to impose fines on Local 100, lawyers for the international union intervened to insist that it bore no responsibility for the walkout, because it opposed the strike.

The TWU International’s web site has posted a statement calling on Local 100 to end its strike and return to work.

Local 100 sources, meanwhile, report that the international union is threatening to place the local in receivership, a measure normally used in cases of gross corruption, where local officers are replaced by staff appointed by the international union.

If this action is taken, the union will order workers to abandon the picket lines and add its own penalties to those of the city and state against those who refuse to submit.

Nothing could more graphically demonstrate the way in which the official trade unions have been transformed into instruments for suppressing workers’ struggles and blocking any challenge to American capitalism.

They have integrated themselves into the Democratic Party, an unswerving defender of the financial oligarchy, while promoting baseless illusions that this party is somehow a “friend of labor.”

The current transit strike has once again demonstrated the fraudulent character of such claims. No prominent Democrat has come forward to defend the bus and subway workers against the savage attacks being carried out against them.

New York’s Senator Hillary Clinton, for example, proclaimed her “neutrality” in this bitter battle, offering her services as a mediator while declaring her support for the Taylor Law, the principal weapon being used to bludgeon the workers into submission.

More starkly than any event in the past twenty years, the present strike by New York City transit workers poses before the entire working class the need to develop a new leadership and a new political strategy to carry forward their struggle, founded on a program that upholds the interests and needs of working people against the profit drive of the financial elite.

Because the transit strike, like every serious social struggle, pits workers against the profit system as a whole, it poses the urgent need for an independent political movement of the working class.

If this strike is to be successful, transit workers must be guided by a perspective that rejects the social, economic and political assumptions of the financial oligarchy and its political parties.

The unending demands for reductions in the living standards of workers clearly demonstrate that their interests are incompatible with the requirements of the capitalist profit system.

Editorial @ World Socialist

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1. Jack ballinger left...
Thursday, 22 December 2005 2:39 pm :: http://bluecollarpolitics.com

I keep reading variations of "making $55,000 a year with no educational requirements" or "there are high school graduates earning up to $60,000 in the TWU!"

These posts are often written by otherwise progressive people, who, in an act of fiscal insanity, don't realize that they have entered themselves into a race . . . nay, a marathon to the bottom.

I still remember when Mike Quill, back in 1980, was asked "There are folks with better educations making less than some of your members. What do you say to that!" And Mike answered with something like: "I say it's time for those folks to get a raise, and I'd honor their picket line should they strike to do so."

See folks, if you believe your education, experience or work product does not receive the same appreciation as a union worker receives, FORM/JOIN A UNION! Don't just snipe at others, when the ricochet will surely be hitting you someday.

I also can't get over how quickly middle class America will sell itself out based on propaganda and sloganeering. Billionaires are taking multi-million$ tax cuts from Bush, that you and your kids will be paying for, and, while some of you moan and complain, it continues and the majority of the middle class either avoids the polls on election day or, in a show of mental illness bordering on masochism, votes Republican. But when a union balks at being forced to take less from the corp./authority that runs it, many Americans begin screaming to hang the union. And if that union is striking NOT out of the personal greed of its members, but over the rights of the next generation, many scream "Off With Their Heads" all the louder. It seems that personal greed is understandable; interest in the welfare of the yet unborn should end with the discussion of abortion, and certainly never be the subject of a strike to assist them in their lives AFTER their birth?

If you are middle-class, or ever want to be: <strong>THIS IS YOUR FIGHT!</strong>

So start educating yourself. Be aware that, while you NEVER hear it from the New Yorkers Adjust As Transit Strike Stymies CommutesMSM, the TWU is on strike NOT for personal greed. They had everything they wanted PRIOR to the MTA/Pataki/Kalikow's decision to FORCE a strike. This is a political lock out, caused by Pataki's desire to look strong to wary Conservatives that aren't enamored of Pataki's run for the Presidency. And it's helped by bad blood between the TWU and the known-to-be-crooked International Union. (see Tom Robbins and Wayne Barrett links below.)

In yesterday's <a href="http://www.nytimes.com/2005/12/21/nyregion/nyreg ionspecial3/21collapse.html?pagewanted=all">NY Times</a> they publish, <strong>FOR THE FIRST TIME,</strong> the truth behind the strike. And, it turns out that, at the very last minute, Kalikow tried to begin the process pf screwing future workers. (Same-same Bush with Social Security, Education and Medicaid.) As the Conservatives strategy gels, you should see that by bypassing today's voters they hope to put feudalism back into play. (We'll only change SS for your kids, you'll still get checks when you retire. THEY WON'T, as we'll gamble on stocks and/or lend money to favorite corporate donors, with their retirement funds.) I'd recommend reading both Tom Robbins and Wayne Barret in this week's Village Voice, but that might seem to be a bit too left leaning in the discussion. I'd also recommend Jimmy Breslin's column on this in yesterday's Newsday. But please, I BEG YOU, read the NY Times article "In Final Hours, M.T.A. Took a Big Risk on Pensions" and you'll find that, just like WMD and domestic spying, there's more you DON'T find out in today's mainstream media than you do.

Especially note this in the article:

"Yet for all the rage and bluster that followed, this war was declared over a pension proposal that would have saved the transit authority less than $20 million over the next three years."

So, the MTA, AT THE LAST MINUTE, forced a strike, a strike that Mayor Bloomberg cries is "costing the city over $400 million a day", over an item that would cost "$20 million over 3 years"??? Why would they pull such a dumb stunt? Because they depend on the average Joe/Joan to miss the big picture and, instead, scream about "greedy union members" and they're own travails in getting to work. (It absolutely amazes me when someone who claims great respect for Martin Luther King or Thomas Jefferson HAS THE NERVE to then bitch and moan about walking in the cold, when that is due to a fight that both Jefferson and King would have gladly joined!) WAKE UP SHEEPLE!!!

(Okay, take a deep breath, Ballinger! Now exhale.)

Please forgive me if I come off strident here. It's just that days of reading posts on the 'Net, from people who usually impress me with their displays of intelligence AND compassion when it comes to other Liberal causes suddenly turn ugly because they had to walk to work, or stay home, because of a battle over principle, I get upset. And when I see these folks placing the blame on the wrong side of the battle, and siding with those who, in the end, will harm most of us, I get strident. I've written on this at Blue Collar Politics, and will again. But I'm starting to see that the middle-class is not only ignoring the flesh eating corporate bacteria that is intent on doing away with it, but, like in today's transit strike, the middle-class is rooting for the bacteria!

<a href="http://www.bluecollarpolitics.com">Jack</a>


2. Ed Strong left...
Thursday, 22 December 2005 8:48 pm

Jack, you're good to go! So right about liberal websites. Not an iota of solidarity with striking workers. Democrats represent the 'soft' side of capitalism, America's ruling ideology.

  • I want to post your comment for others to read. Alright? - Ed