Leave a twig for the birds to perch on... don't let the capitalists do your thinking for you... if you are in the neighborhood, stop on in; the coffee is always hot and the cookie jar is full... looking forward to the day when the real decisions in America are made by working class families gathered around the kitchen table... new postings daily...Yours in the struggle...Alan L. Maki
The status quo is not working for working people. Unions need to
seriously overhaul the way they operate if they are to remain relevant.
One key example that reveals the directionlessness and impotence of
contemporary unions is the perennial convention charade where the
organized labour movement convenes with the professed aims of advancing
the interests of workers and improving society as a whole. If only this
were the case.
With few exceptions, a recurring drama plays out at conventions on
the backs of working people, “full of sound and fury; signifying
nothing” (to quote Macbeth.) Here are some of those recurring acts that paralyze a movement.
Every convention begins with some kind of rhetoric about “democracy”
and the importance of the labour movement coming together to debate and
participate with a view to social progress. Seriously, who are we
kidding with this pretend democracy? Labour conventions are typically
contrived. Everyone knows the fix is in – but no one wants to say it out
loud. In some cases the problem goes as far as paid staffers attempting
to influence the proceedings in the backrooms or even acting as
delegates, when for all intents and purposes they are actually
representing their employers, the top elected officers.
Limited debate
During these precarious times, one would think this coming together
every three years would lead to deep and fiery discussions on where our
labour movement is headed and what it will take to develop an effective
resistance. Just the opposite is true. For example, during the 2011
Canadian Labour Congress (CLC) convention,
debate was limited to approximately nine hours for an entire week. This
script ensures that workers, representing their unions as delegates,
will have precious little time to debate the issues. Further, the show
is always conducted by those orchestrating the front stage at the
expense of the delegates who become mere spectators of the labour scene.
Speaking out in the context of a union convention feels much like
speaking out of turn in church. You know how far you can go and where to
stop. Some topics, like any critical reflection on the relationship to
the New Democratic Party (NDP), capitalism, class, strategy, and especially direct action, are mostly off limits and treated as unmentionable.
Time is typically stuffed with uninspiring speakers – very few could
be described as especially challenging or insightful. Given that some
unions hold seminars for the purpose of educating members, this is
highly disappointing. Another problem is that some speakers from the
floor have more rights than others, which is reflected in the amount of
time allocated to delegates to speak.
The CLC achieved a new low at the last convention when space was taken up by CBC
personalities Ian Hanomansing and Wendy Mesley. Hanomansing, serving as
a moderator, voiced his disapproval with the claim that a corporate
bias exists in mainstream reporting. The problem, according to
Hanomansing, is that the left fails at both making their stories sexy
enough and packaging their message as well as the right, thus confirming
that journalism in today’s mainstream media is more of a public
relations exercise than about finding and reporting the news. I guess
Hanomansing means that journalists shouldn’t be doing the work of
putting stories together and that in essence everyone is on the same
playing field with equal resources to have our stories told. Migrant
farm workers, for example, then must be assumed to be in the same
position to tell their story as Jason Kenney, the Minister of
Citizenship, Immigration and Multiculturalism. To further demonstrate
the disingenuous nature of union convention debates, questions for
panellists had to be submitted in writing, thus ensuring no challenging
or embarrassing moments for invited guests. A debate that is scripted is
in fact not a debate at all.
Rhetoric no substitute for action
Labour conventions are long on rhetoric but short on substance. The
process is predictable and repetitious. Speaking to the converted, the
right is assailed and the NDP lionized.
Meanwhile, labour leaders – except during the occasional election – prop
each other up, slap one another on the back and avoid discussing the
systemic problems plaguing workers or naming the elephants in the room
all the while preferring instead to heap on personal accolades.
Personality politics, not discussions of political systems, fill the
space and agendas. So-and-so is a “great guy,” a fighter for their
members, a hero in the fight against Prime Minister Harper, or whichever
non-NDP leader is in office. Delegates cheer.
Little happens. But in those moments, under the lights in the house of
labour, we sure do feel good about ourselves. There is a fetish about
leadership and playing follow-the-leader, but nothing comparably
passionate about the significance of struggle and the necessity of
resistance. It’s easier for the union aristocracy that way. No one need
feel uncomfortable.
I wonder if anyone was listening when the Manitoba Federation of Labour (MFL)
convention guest speaker, Canadian Union of Postal Workers President
Denis Lemelin, broke the mould somewhat by calling on labour to develop
our own “social project”? Lemelin explains that sectoral divisions and
defensiveness can be replaced by a basis of unity with a clear long-term
strategic plan to gain public support and fight for all of society.
Silencing dissidents
It is noteworthy to see who gets in and who doesn’t at labour conventions. At the Montreal 2005 CLC
Convention anti-poverty activists from the Belleville Tenant Action
Group, fundraising in the main lobby of the convention center, were
threatened with expulsion until delegates passing by came to their
defence using a little direct action of their own.
While labour conventions are a place to pick up information, finding
a table of radical or challenging literature may be difficult. There is
limited space, and the organizers have final say over who is invited
and who isn’t. A number of spaces were taken up by insurance companies
at the recent MFL convention held in June 2012. Regrettably, challenging or critical materials were in much shorter supply.
Backroom mechanisms, never out in the open, are used to keep
resolutions that may not be palatable to the leaders from ever making it
to the floor. It matters not where the resolution came from (a local
union, workers from the shop floor). If it seems “controversial” or
doesn’t fit the pre-structured schemes of leadership it may magically
disappear in spite of “process.” A case in point is the recent MFL resolution on Boycott, Divestment and Sanctions (BDS) directed at Israeli Apartheid. While the resolutions committee recommended concurrence unanimously, behind the scenes the MFL
executive asked the committee to reconsider its decision. Concurrence
was pulled under the guise that the resolution did not reflect CLC
policy. This raises the question of who gets to decide policy for
organized workers in Manitoba. It does not appear to be a bottom-up
process, but instead, a top-down corporate model. After some wrangling,
face-saving, and negotiation, the resolution received again the desired
concurrence only to have the motion tabled on the floor after a number
of delegates spoke in its favour. To add further insult, activists were
prevented from distributing information on BDS and the situation of Palestinians to delegates, even though that literature was produced in a unionized print shop.
Manitoba requires 65 per cent sign-up to certify a union. Two bold
activists held a silent protest during Premier Greg Selinger’s speech to
convention delegates by holding up signs pointing out that a government
majority can be achieved with much less than 50 per cent of the votes
but for workers in Manitoba, the bar is set at 65 per cent, the highest
in the country. They were told to sit down. Silence and politeness
remain the order of the day, thus making any criticism of the NDP off limits. The Manitoba NDP
have been in power for 13 years and did not deliver on anti-scab
legislation (now called “replacement workers” by organized labour, an
example of neoliberal Newspeak that incorporates the language of the
right). While perhaps an NDP government is not
quite as hostile as a Tory one, can a “lesser of the evils” really be
considered enough of a victory? Neither the NDP
nor organized labour challenge the neoliberal capitalist system; in
fact, neither can even bring themselves to utter the words to address
its very existence.
Toothless resolutions
Resolutions have become a kind of shopping list without any pith or
substance. Mostly toothless, they allow us to feel good about ourselves,
as if we crossed another one off the list of things that need doing
without the slightest mention of how we are going to do them. At the MFL
convention 172 non-administrative resolutions were submitted. Of these
the resolved action called on lobbying the provincial government 110
times. Sometimes the resolution stated the MFL
will “continue to lobby” on an issue indicating that this is not the
first time the issue was raised. The word “urge” is used 12 times,
“encourage” five times, and “call on” three times. Stronger words like
“demand” and “insist” were used four and two times respectively. This
begs the question, what do we mean by lobby, urge, and encourage
exactly? Does it mean beg, plead, take a minister to dinner, or mobilize
a movement that can ensure the stated goals are met? Why do union
conventions spend so much time, effort, and expense to make empty pleas
and to obediently prop up governments and their agendas that clearly
work against workers’ interests?
When potentially popular and effective resolutions appear, they are
frequently watered down inside policy papers to give the appearance of
democratic process while keeping the lid on things.
Waste of scarce resources
Conventions are financially costly. For a CLC
convention, delegates fly in from across the country and typically book
one delegate per costly hotel room and receive generous per diems for
meals. Imagine what kind of organizing and support for real struggle and
change there could be were we a little more frugal, creative, and
long-sighted. Meanwhile, labour organizers in the Global South often
seem to be able to consistently do more with less, while producing far
more effective results.
According to David Camfield, associate professor in labour studies at the University of Manitoba and author of Canadian Labour in Crisis,
“it’s worth noting that in many cases the people who attend as
delegates aren’t the best activists, the ones who are troublemakers on
the job, supporters of community struggles, and critics of complacency
in the unions. Such activists often aren’t delegates, either because
they don’t get elected or – in unions where delegates are selected, not
elected – because officials deny them delegate credentials. Some people
on the left think conventions are the most important moments in the life
of a union. I disagree, for two reasons. First, conventions often don’t
have that much impact on what happens in the union. For example, if a
resolution gets passed that the top brass don’t like, they can often
find a way to ensure it never gets acted on. Second, unions matter most
when ‘union’ means workers taking action together in the workplace or on
the streets.”
What now?
What is the purpose of a labour convention? I would argue that it is
to challenge the growing capitalist disaster with a strong and vibrant
force of organized workers, both unionized and non-unionized, including
the unemployed and underemployed.
Labour centrals and organizations need to stop spending significant
amounts of members’ dues money to stage events that maintain the status
quo and privilege a few at the expense of the many. The International
Trade Union Confederation, CLC and provincial
federations of labour have proven themselves to be lacking vision, which
robs workers while reproducing a labour aristocracy void of ideas for
these times. It is time for critical questions and tough
self-reflection.
What is unclear is how trade unions intend to challenge the
austerity agenda. Merely coping, hanging on, and focusing a great deal
of energy on electoral politics at the expense of other forms of
struggle will not be enough to overcome the challenges that lay before
us. Given the state of the current economic arrangements, it’s probably
safe to say that it won’t serve future generations well either.
What is to be learned from our history? Labour movements and the
victories gained from them were not built by “urging” and “lobbying.”
They were created by the collective dignity and expression of human
beings who took risks and action against capital. What can be learned
and applied from autonomous, anti-capitalist, anti-colonial, migrant,
Indigenous, student, and social movements that might shift this theatre
of empty rhetoric and surrender to create a coordinated body of workers
prepared to take the offensive, not just in the present, but for future
generations?
The questions to be asked are not about Harper and the corporations. The questions to be asked are of us.
Dave Bleakney is a member of the
Canadian Union of Postal Workers and the national union representative
for education (Anglophone). On matters of anti-capitalism, the dude
abides.