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Military Intervention vs. Maritime Union Power
For the first time in 40 years, the U.S. Armed Forces will be deployed to intervene in a labor dispute, facilitating a scab operation against union dockworkers at the Port of Longview in Washington.
In the long dispute between International Longshore Workers Union (ILWU) Local 21 and EGT Development, the international conglomerate is now poised to make its first grain shipment from its new $200 million export terminal, violating its contract with the publicly-owned port and the union’s jurisdiction on the waterfront.
But it may take an army to cross the picket line.
The ILWU has fought militantly against EGT’s employment of non-ILWU labor at its new facility in Longview where both leaders and rank-and-file activists have engaged in civil disobedience, blockading grain shipments by rail and facing off with police. On January 3rd ILWU President Robert McEllrath sent a letter to dockworkers explaining that EGT would likely receive its first vessel to be loaded for grain export at the terminal this month.
“We have been told that this vessel will be escorted by armed United States Coast Guard, including the use of small vessels and helicopters, from the mouth of the Columbia River to the EGT facility,” McEllrath wrote.
He added that the facility itself will be guarded by a massive presence of law enforcement, dispatched from multiple jurisdictions in the area.
Last week the San Francisco Labor Council adopted a resolution condemning the use of the military to escort the ship.
“This is the first known use of the U.S. military to intervene in a labor dispute on the side of management in 40 years – not since the Great 1970 Postal Strike when President Nixon called out the Army and National Guard in an (unsuccessful) attempt to break the strike,” according to the resolution.
“The use of the Armed Forces against labor unions is something you expect to see in a police state.”
The specter of Coast Guard vessels and helicopters escorting a scab grain ship to help break the union comes on the heels of President Obama’s signing of the National Defense Authorization Act, a law that codifies a new level of militarization in domestic law enforcement.
But while the timing may be coincidental, the decision to militarily intervene in this particular labor struggle is not. The ILWU, a union with a radical reputation, has fought aggressively against EGT’s union-busting enterprise and the stakes are high for both sides.
“EGT is attempting to break the master grain agreement and become the first grain export terminal in the Pacific Northwest to operate without ILWU,” McEllrath explained back in September.
EGT is owned by three corporations – Bunge North America, Itochu Corporation, and STX Pan Ocean. Bunge, a grain cartel player and dominating partner in EGT, insisted in negotiations that ILWU submit to two 12-hour straight-time shifts per day. Bunge also refused to allow any longshoremen work in the master console of the facility. The workers bargained with Bunge for almost 14 months before negotiations broke down early last year.
In May EGT began violating its lease agreement with the port by contracting with a third party using labor from International Union of Operating Engineers (IUOE) Local 701. ILWU’s hard-won agreement with the port that guarantees all work be done by its members has been in place for nearly 80 years. The IUOE has been roundly condemned by the labor movement throughout the Pacific Northwestfor provided scab labor at the terminal.
Longshore workers escalated the fight over the summer as informational pickets gave way to more confrontational direct actions. In July workers forced a train delivering grain to the terminal to turn back as several hundred workers blocked the tracks. When the ILWU blockaded trains again in September the workers’ action was met with riot police armed with rubber bullets and tear gas. In response, some ILWU members and allies reportedly cut brake cables and dumped grain from train cars. Several ports in the region were shut down by the union for two days in early September.
But EGT has won court injunctions against ILWU, effectively restricting pickets and condemning what it calls“violent protest.” Over the past several months 220 members and supporters have been arrested for engaging in nonviolent civil disobedience, including McEllrath and the president of Local 21. The union has also been slapped with over $300,000 in fines for blocking trains and trespassing on EGT property.
Police brutality and surveillance used to intimidate the workers have led to protests by members of the ILWU Ladies Auxiliary. In September two Local 21 officials were arrested when they tried to defend a 57-year old woman who was arrested and injured by cops during a nonviolent civil disobedience action to block a train carrying wheat to the new facility. Both union officials were tackled, held down by police and pepper-sprayed in the eyes.
Yet, in addition to finding itself up against police violence and a pack of Fortune 500 companies, the ILWU has had to contend with the National Labor Relations Board (NLRB), which has taken management’s side in the dispute. The NLRB has called for an end to what it describes as “violent and aggressive” picketing by ILWU members.
For McEllrath, the NLRB’s stance is not surprising. Since the 1949 Taft-Hartley Act, the central role of the NLRB has often been “to protect commerce at the expense of workers,” he argued in a statement to workers.
The impact of the struggle in Longview could be far-reaching. A victory for EGT might unravel and break the ILWU entirely. A dangerous precedent would be set as other grain elevators will be emboldened to spurn longshore jurisdiction throughout the region. Indeed, the end result in Longview will seriously affect the union’s bargaining strength in 2014 when ILWU is set to negotiate its master agreement with the Pacific Maritime Association.
And in the context of nationwide attacks on labor unions and collective bargaining rights, the outcome in this battle could have sweeping consequences for organized labor and workers beyond the ports.
But even with the stakes so high for labor, the national leadership of the AFL-CIO has been virtually mum on the conflict. Both the ILWU and IUOE are affiliated with the AFL-CIO whose president, Richard Trumka, has described the struggle as merely a“jurisdictional dispute.”
It’s unclear why Trumka has not been compelled to draw the line as one of his federation’s members is raiding the jurisdiction of another AFL-CIO union. But if he is willing to allow EGT to potentially break the ILWU in order to avoid condemning IUOE and risk creating a rift between that union and the AFL-CIO, it may boil down to money.
As a relatively conservative union closely aligned with the United Brotherhood of Carpenters which left the AFL-CIO in 2001, the Operating Engineers have intimated their intent to follow the Carpenters’ lead and pull out of the AFL-CIO as well. In 2006 the IUOE quit the AFL-CIO Building and Construction Trades Department, a move that indicated differences with the federation.
It’s possible that Trumka is reluctant to call out the IUOE for its behavior in Longview because losing the Operating Engineers’ roughly $3 million in yearly membership dues to the AFL-CIO is a bigger financial loss compared to the ILWU’s less-than $300,000 annual payment.
Whatever the case may be, what hangs in the balance at the Port of Longview is the survival of a union whose strength is defined by both its militant history and its powerful hold at a critical juncture of global commerce. Even in its recent history, the ILWU has stood out in the labor movement for its use of industrial action in solidarity with social justice movements around the world. The ILWU has shut down ports on the West Coast to protest South African Apartheid, the World Trade Organization, the wars in Iraqand Afghanistan, and in support of political prisoner Mumia Abu-Jamal.
Now longshore workers are asking for solidarity with their own struggle. On January 2nd the Cowlitz-Wahkiakum Central Labor Council passed a resolution to “call out to the friends of labor and the ‘99 percent’ everywhere to come to the aid of ILWU Local 21.”
Much was made of the tensions that flared between ILWU officials and Occupy during the West Coast Port Shutdown called by the Occupy movement in December. While many ILWU rank-and-file members and port truck drivers joined Occupy activists in the port action, critics accused Occupy protesters of calling a strike without ILWU approval. Of course, there are some Occupy activists who do not understand organized labor and who have failed to work cooperatively with unions and their members. There are also some in the labor movement who failed to see the December 12th action for what it was – a community picket, not a strike.
Still, the Occupy movement has pledged its full support for workers in the fight against EGT. Occupy Oakland is organizing a caravan of activists to join protesters in Longview pending the arrival of the scab grain ship, and Occupy protesters from Portland and Seattle are also mobilizing for action at the terminal.
The Occupy call has gone out nationwide, urging tens of thousands to converge on Longview while others are encouraged to organize solidarity actions in their cities targeting EGT and its shareholder locations. On Monday Occupy Oakland and other supporters will march to protest military intervention against longshore workers.
Solidarity from the Occupy movement may be decisive in this labor battle.
The workers are fighting to defend fair standards and working conditions for the 99 percent at the docks. They are confronting a profit-hungry syndicate of the one percent. EGT has complained about the $1 million in extra labor costs for ILWU work while its biggest shareholder, Bunge, made $2.5 billion in profit in the U.S. alone in 2010.
Dockworkers will need the support of Occupy and other allies, especially as their union faces the wrath of the courts and the overall strictures of labor law. As McEllrath wrote to ILWU members, “Locals need to be aware of the narrow path that we must cut through [with] a federal labor law (the Taft-Hartley Act) that criminalizes worker solidarity, outlaws labor’s most effective tools, and protects commerce while severely restricting unions.”
In the coming days, EGT will attempt to ship grain with the help of the U.S. Coast Guard, an entity whose roots go back to 1790 when then-Treasury Secretary Alexander Hamilton established a fleet to collect import tariffs and crack down on piracy.
The Coast Guard may be an appropriate force to intervene at the ports from the perspective of the ruling class, which has always considered the power of organized labor as a kind of piracy.
For the workers in Longview, fighting for the very heart and soul of the modern labor movement, only solidarity can fortify their picket line against the marauding one percent.
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25 Comments so far
Show AllDo you mean we haven't provided our city police forces with the essential air- and water-craft to enforce a 100% effective air and naval blockade against those unionist goons. I can't wait until Newt wins the presidency so he can use the National Defense Authorization Act to label them all terrorists (and any of their journalist pals). Then we can finally indulge all our torture fantasies in one of the fun rooms. Wait a minute... if you are reading this, aren't you a terrorist too?
"Robert Callaghan"
You don't have to wait for a Gingrich presidency.
We are already living under the corporate presidency, the corporate congress, and the corporate judiciary.
ANY of the so-called leading candidates will follow the orders of the same elite greedy owners.
It appears to me the Obama administration is doing just as much as any republican administration has promised to do, but hasn't actually.
The great perversity of the religion of Fascist Corporate Domination (which is the faith of democrats and republicans) will do whatever is necessary to remove power from the workers.
Any union member who supports the democrats is also supporting the republicans and the shared agenda of the removal of all civil rights for corporate profits.
This perversity is indeed ALL about money because, to the corporate elite who control Washington, everything and every being are reduced to monetary assessment and greed. The removal of monetary wealth from the vast majority for the private greed of an extreme minority is the agenda of both corporate parties. To them, this is "freedom."
Until there is a massive boycott against the democrats and their republican twins, things will continue to get worse.
The protesting dockworkers and the OWS participants are saying that EQUAL JUSTICE is more important than money.
It is clear that the corporate parties have no intention of allowing equal justice to be the priority of their corporate church.
It's asserted by the corporate masters that the union is engaging in violent acts, yet the only ones arrested were arrested for nonviolent acts. Which is it? How is the involvement of the US military being justified if nothing but nonviolent protest is taking place? Isn't that expensive response to a constitutionally ensured right of citizens?
Where does Obama stand on the use of military intervention to break this union for the benefit of a large corporation? Obama is Commander In Chief and feels entitled to the union vote. Is Obama unaware of what is happening in his name?
Leave the guy alone. He's busy auditioning for American Idol. Just in case he loses the White House in November. It's as good a back up plan as any. :)
amerika was at its best when union membership was at its highest - that is a simple fact
but - not unlike the health care debate where amerikans have been brainwashed into a paradigm that says no healthcare is better than free healthcare - the real world has been turned on its head
somehow, their fascist argument goes - it is better to let the ultra rich do whatever the hell they like (repress wages, deny basic rights, deny healthcare, deny the right to assembly, maintain deplorable working conditions, no overtime etc) - than it is for workers to organize and demand better conditions as a group rather than as individual and easily crushed bugs
best example: 2 working adults working full time at walmart are still eligible for food stamps and medicaid
so walmart has dumped their healthcare responsibilities upon the taxpayers while they rail against government socialism while, at the same time, they take billions in government welfare themselves
now that's one hell of a situation
governor huey long knew the score:
"They've got a set of Republican waiters on one side and a set of Democratic waiters on the other side, but no matter which set of waiters brings you the dish, the legislative grub is all prepared in the same Wall Street kitchen."
"god told you what the trouble was. The philosophers told you what the trouble was; and when you have a country where one man owns more than 100,000 people, or a million people, and when you have a country where there are four men, as in America that have got more control over things than all the 120 million people together, you know what the trouble is."
βThe only difference I ever found between the Democratic leadership and the Republican leadership is that one of them is skinning you from the ankle up and the other, from the ear down.β
"Huey Pierce Long, Jr. (August 30, 1893 β September 10, 1935), nicknamed The Kingfish, served as the 40th Governor of Louisiana from 1928β1932 and as a U.S. Senator from 1932 to 1935. A Democrat, he was noted for his radical populist policies. Though a backer of Franklin D. Roosevelt in the 1932 presidential election, Long split with Roosevelt in June 1933 and planned to mount his own presidential bid for 1936.
Long created the Share Our Wealth program in 1934 with the motto "Every Man a King", proposing new wealth redistribution measures in the form of a net asset tax on corporations and individuals to curb the poverty and homelessness endemic nationwide during the Great Depression. To stimulate the economy, Long advocated federal spending on public works, schools and colleges, and old age pensions. He was an ardent critic of the Federal Reserve System's policies"
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Huey_Long
It would appear as if the classic weakness of American labor, the failure to be united against management (whom love using divide and conquer tactics) is rearing it's ugly head again all the way up to what passes for national union leadership these days.
good point nate
if you look at the spanish civil war 1936-1939, a precursor to the big one ww2 you find the republicans pitted against the nationalists
at the outbreak - which was stewing for many years - the country was divided almost 50 - 50
the republicans - the democratic forces against the fascist nationalists
in its simplest sense the war was won by the nationalist fascists because they were better organized
of course the fascists got more help from hitler and mussolini - that was huge
the russians assisted the republicans but to a lesser extent
general franco - the soon to be fascist dictator - was neatly ensconced at a remote post in the canary islands away from the fray but plotting to take over
when he made his move he went to morroco and got the african morrocan army and the french foreign legion - both well trained and battle hardened armies
they were flown from morrocco to spain by the nazis and they were one of the determining forces in that brutal and ugly war
the republicans - comprised of the democratic left, the communists and the anarchists (who were a large force) rarely fought as a unified force and in the end that did them in
the unions today are playing that same sucker's game
sadly...
Sun-Tzu postulated that a better organized & disciplined force would beat a more numerous but disorganized force almost every time. Military history has shown this be largely true with notable examples of this: Ceaser's conquest of Gaul & the Nazi Blitzkrieg of 1940. The ILWU has the right idea to conduct their strike with aggressive guerrilla tactics, as their tactical position virtually demands. This moment of the cultural climate (thanks largely to Occupy Wall Street) has put such formerly archaic concepts as a fair labor deal back into the public conversation. That another union is short sighted enough to be scabs (whom the companies would ditch the moment they are no longer necessary) bespeaks of a true ignorance of history and a narcissism to rival those in the corporate upper management suite.
Oh, lord, so it begins...DNAA at work already.
if you live on the West coast- your local Occupy in conjunction with the unions may be staging a protest. Consider getting involved in the next few days as the EGT ship comes to port in Longview....
Stick a fork in them, they are done. It's end game for unions in US America. President Ronny Raygun head union buster got it started with PATCO and President whoever will stand by and do nothing while the few remaining unions twist in the wind becoming less and less effective until they are nothing but a faded memory. Is it ironic that some of the last unions to go will be police and prison guards? I'm just not sure anymore about irony, maybe I've overdosed on it. The Corporate State is coming into being, and the only union in their plan is the North American Union. If there is any hope for the remaining unions they will have to base their new strategies on dealing with the Corporate State not the Nation State. Unions beware they are lusting after your pension funds, and are coming to loot them. If the unions want to survive they should use their funds to hit the 1%ers where it hurts attack Wall St in the markets.
"Stick a fork in them, they are done. It's end game for unions in US America"
iwonder where you can stick your fork?
O I know! How about up your bourgeoisie chicken little ass.
This is the Longshoreman's union we'e talking about here. Ever had any experience with them?
Still, there is an ounce of truth to your comment. If the freikorporations can take out the ILWU, the rest of labor is just waiting their turn at the gallows.
Come one, come all. Time to take a stand, Force the Feds to call their hounds to heel.
Fight the Power! Join a Picket!
I'd like to see the ILWU secede from the AFL and form the nexus of a militant workers organization..
Dream on Mr dreamhill, If you don't think unions are done in US America then don't worry I'm sure it's all going to be just fine. There's a lot of hard talk on this site. If you talked to me like this face to face I'll guaranty where that fork would end up!
" If you talked to me like this face to face I'll guaranty where that fork would end up!
.."
Nice fascist thug talk tough guy.
Go f-ck yourself with the fork, you reactionary pig!
Unionize the military
This is very sad.
Fuck the AFL-CIO. I wouldn't blame any worker for refusing to have anything to do with mainstream organized labor.
At the Harlan County coal mine I was at last week - owned by the fiercely anti-union Alpha Natural Resources (formerly Massey), and noting the anti-union bullshit poster in the mine office, with the miners, at his point, only a few years from being back to the J.H. Blair days (few of them these days even knowing who J.H. Blair was), I found myself unable to say anything positive about even the UMWA. I have always been a supporter of the "one big union' concept of the IWW, but right now, it is probably better that the workers simply organize militant wildcat unions at their workplaces. But, from what I can discern from the clueless workers, fat fucking chance!
PJD, U.S. Dept. of Labor, AFGE Local 644
Sue the bastards.
Why has the ILGWU been unable to get an injunction against the port and the cartel if their agreement with the port has been breached by the port and interfered with by the cartel with such consequences as these to the union and its workers?
when the world was younger, the conflict between the landed and the non was seen as economic, and understandable from that point of view...
the world is no longer young, nor unspoiled, and cannot be viewed as only an economic entity, or factor...
industry and labor have poisoned our planet, increasingly driving the world to conditions that make birth and life difficult, if not impossible...
the heroes that were once union members fighting the evil bastards that were the bosses are roles no longer so clean...
industry must come to be seen, not as a leveler of economic playing fields, but as a destroyer of our only world...
we are not after economic fairness, we are after a life filled with joy...
sickness and death do not foster joy...
industry brings sickness and death, exponentially...
is that what we are fighting for?
people may be harmed or killed in this action, but it will not stop the overall harming and killing...
that will require sacrifice of a much larger kind...
property, money, electricity, lifestyle...
a unanimous withdrawal on September 22, 2012...
There is obviously something missing from this account. If you remember Michael Moore's first movie "Roger and Me" about General Motors closing their plant in Flint, Michigan, you remember that through the entire film the United Auto Workers was never once, even once, mentioned. In that movie the UAW, one of the most powerful unions in America simply didn't exist. Why? because they utterly FAILED their members and that didn't fit in with Moore's "wicked capitalist destroying helpless workers" narrative. Unions are power structures and they become corrupt over time and they have to be replaced with new labor movements from the bottom up. Now that our infrastructure is crumbling they may finally find Jimmy Hoffa in the bridge-pier where he's been all these decades, and maybe that will supply the missing piece in this story, namely the old-style union bosses are just that: bosses taking money out of worker's pockets and feeding them lies in exchange.
Hmmm
So lets get the facts straight here: We have a "democrat" engaging in Union busting activities. There are 3 corporations demanding the military break the picket lines. TWO of those corporations are NOT US companies. One is Korean and the other is Japanese. The third is incorporated in the US but is very closely held and ownership is difficult to a ascertain. So in point of fact this corporation could be foreign owned as well.
SO on top of the obvious legal, ethical and moral implications of using US troops to enforce the break up of a legally created Union organization we have direct Constitutional implications that go far beyond this situation. And frankly it looks very very bad for the Republic. On the other hand if you like fascist police states, then you are applauding whats happened...
You can't mine coal without machine guns. --Richard B. Mellon, Congressional testimony quoted in Time, June 14, 1937
Seems that was true in the 30s and remains true in 2010+