01)
FOR A UNITED, MILITANT AND MASS STRUGGLE
(The following
article is from the May 1-15, 2009, issue of People's Voice, Canada's
leading communist
newspaper. Articles can be reprinted free if the source is credited.
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May Day 2009
statement from the Central Executive Committee, Communist Party of
Canada
May Day Greetings to working people
around the world, struggling for peace, jobs, economic and social
justice, democracy, equality, sovereignty and socialism!
May Day
Greetings to the workers
in Greece, France, Ireland, the Caribbean islands of Martinique and
Guadeloupe, and other countries who have organized mass political
strikes against the national and transnational corporations (TNCs) and
their governments, which are responsible for global depression, mass
unemployment, hunger and misery.
May
Day Greetings to the people
of Cuba as they celebrate 50 years of working class power in 2009, and
to the people of Vietnam, who survived decades of continuous war to
defeat French, Japanese and finally US imperialism, to achieve working
class power and to build socialism. Holding their own against the power
of US imperialism, their example is helping to create a better world,
where people's needs trump corporate greed. Today, despite US
aggression and the economic blockade, Cuba has become the most
influential state in Latin America, a beacon to those struggling
against imperialism and neo‑colonialism, and a support to countries
embarking on a socialist path.
May Day
Greetings to all those
struggling against imperialism, for national liberation and
self‑determination, including the heroic Palestinian people, and the
people of South Africa, led by the alliance of the ANC, COSATU and the
SACP in their struggle for a non‑racialized and socialist future.
May Day
Greetings to all those
fighting against war and reaction, in particular the US‑led occupations
of Iraq and Afghanistan, where Canada is also deeply involved, to those
campaigning for the abolition of nuclear weapons and for collective
security; and to all those struggling to save our planet from
environmental catastrophe caused by imperialism's predatory
exploitation of nature.
Imperialism's Offensive Against Labour
The economic recession, which is
rapidly descending into global Depression, was caused by the insatiable
greed of the corporations, and by their governments, which adopted
neo‑liberal policies of free trade, privatization, deregulation,
corporate tax cuts, and attacks on labour and democratic rights. The
capitalist meltdown is devastating industries and communities across
Canada, such as auto and steel in Ontario, and forestry in Quebec and
British Columbia.
Deregulation
has freed the
transnational corporations (TNCs) of restraints, enabling them to
trample over national and international laws, risking the health and
security of nations and peoples around the world, with the objective of
increasing their super‑sized profits.
In Canada,
this agenda led to
the listeria outbreak and the Walkerton tragedy, which caused the
deaths of 30 people and permanent injury to hundreds more. In the name
of "cutting red tape", key parts of the health care system,
post‑secondary education, child care, social programs and
transportation have been privatized. The neoliberal drive has paved the
way for TILMA, giving corporations the right to strike down municipal
and provincial laws protecting public assets and programs built up by
labour over generations.
The attack
on civil, human and
democratic rights has gained momentum since the so‑called
"anti‑terrorism" legislation of 2001, in Canada and in other countries,
enabled police to seize people and hold them indefinitely, without
divulging charges or evidence.
The economic
crisis is now being
used to attack labour rights like a sledgehammer. Corporations and
their governments demand trade unions open collective agreements and
accept deep cuts to wages, benefits, and pensions, under threat of
bankruptcy and the loss of all jobs, pensions and benefits. This
union‑busting is happening in all the capitalist countries, carried out
jointly by governments and corporations. The aim is to break the back
of opposition to the massive redistribution of wealth from the pockets
of workers to the bank accounts of the global corporate/capitalist
elite.
Hammer or Anvil?
In Canada, the front line of the
attack on labour is in the manufacturing sector. The union on the line
this spring is the Canadian Auto Workers, traditionally the most
militant private sector union and still the most resistant to
concessions. The CAW is also still outside the Ontario Federation of
Labour, and therefore more vulnerable. Corporations and governments are
trying to turn unorganized, lower‑paid workers against organized
workers, falsely blaming the relatively high wages of unionized
autoworkers for the crisis. This campaign aims to pit worker against
worker, and to blur or erase the class divide between workers and
bosses.
While the
union is weakened by
these factors, and also by a tendency (since the Auto Pact was struck
down in 2001 by the WTO) to accept responsibility for the corporate
bottom line, the CAW has refused to make any further concessions
despite intense pressure from the Harper Tories, the McGuinty Liberals,
Obama and the Democrats, the Big Three automakers, and the unorganized
automakers including Toyota, Honda, and other Asian and European
automakers with plants in Canada.
This is the
cause that all of
labour must rally to, with the understanding that an injury to one, is
an injury to all. But this won't be just an injury. If the corporations
and their governments break the CAW, they set the pattern that federal
Labour Minister Tony Clement wants, a pattern that will break the back
of the trade union movement across Canada. This cannot be allowed to
happen. Labour and its allies must meet the challenge by mobilizing
workers across Canada to take mass independent labour political action
to protect free collective bargaining, which is what the CAW's struggle
now represents.
The ferocity
of the attack on
autoworkers and the CAW, and through them on all unions and all
workers, has exposed capitalism's authoritarian nature. The gloves are
off and the right to free collective bargaining, the right to organize
and strike, and virtually all labour rights are on the line.
Right‑wing, authoritarian governments like the Harper Tories are quite
willing follow the example set by "Iron Heel" Bennett in the Dirty
Thirties, when he attacked workers, jailed their leaders, passed
anti‑labour and anti‑democratic laws. Like RB Bennett, Harper is
prepared to do whatever it takes to save capitalism and corporate
profits.
Labour has
always been the main
target of this right‑wing, reactionary, corporate agenda. They know
that labour is at the core of the resistance to right wing policies,
and is at the core of the counter‑offensive to push forward a people's
agenda. Labour's militant action in France, Greece and in Latin America
and other places, has frightened the right, and made them more
determined to break the labour movement in North America before it too
takes militant political action including general strikes to fightback.
Organize! Educate! Resist!
There is a rich history of working
class struggle in Canada, including the Winnipeg General Strike, which
took place 90 years ago in 1919. In October 1976, labour again took to
the streets in a general strike against wage controls. Labour in
Ontario organized rotating political strikes against the Harris
government in 1996‑97, which were on the verge of becoming
province‑wide before being cut down by right‑wing leadership in the
trade union movement. Since then, sectoral struggles across the
country, especially in the public sector, have become more militant,
and more inclusive of labour's friends and allies. The call by the
Confederation of National Trade Unions in Quebec for widespread
protests on May 1 to fight for jobs and access to Employment Insurance
benefits is an important step in the right direction.
There is no
room for complacency
today. Instead of summit meetings with governments and employers, the
CLC must call together its affiliates and labour's friends and allies
to determine a course of militant, collective and workplace action.
This will open up a mass struggle against the corporate offensive, to
demand a People's Agenda: free collective bargaining, a Canadian auto
industry and manufacturing sector, good jobs and wages for all, secure
pensions, strong and universal Medicare, public and post‑secondary
education, social programs, and child care, massive investment in
affordable housing construction, progressive tax reform to put the load
on the greedy not the needy, fair trade not free trade, serious action
to cut greenhouse gas emissions and protect the environment, withdrawal
from NAFTA, and a foreign policy of peace and disarmament, including
the immediate withdrawal of Canadian troops from Afghanistan, reducing
the arms budget by 50% and redirecting to civilian spending.
The NDP
would be a stronger and
more effective opposition in Parliament were it to wholeheartedly adopt
these demands as its own, and support mass action, including strikes
and occupations by workers and unions, and the public, under attack.
For our
part, Communists in the
labour movement will continue to fight for a strong, united and
militant trade union movement and for independent labour political
action in defence of workers jobs, rights and standards.
The
Communist Party will
continue to work to build a strong and broad‑based People's Coalition,
including the labour and democratic movements, Aboriginal peoples, the
womens', seniors', youth and students' movements, and all those forces
opposed to the demolition of free collective bargaining, jobs,
pensions, and living standards, and the social gains of decades of
struggle. A People's Coalition which includes labour, NDPers,
progressive Greens, Quebec Solidaire, the Communist Party, and others
committed to a People's Agenda, can build a powerful front of
resistance, and campaign for a different future for working people in
Canada.
Mass
independent labour
political action in Europe and elsewhere is building up a strong and
united resistance. But it will take international labour unity and
solidarity to move labour and its allies onto the counter‑offensive to
turn back the corporate assault. More than ever the trade union
movement in Quebec and English‑speaking Canada need to raise the banner
of unity in the world trade union movement, advancing a common program
of action between the International Trade Union Confederation and the
World Federation of Trade Unions in defence of workers rights and
interests, and against war and reaction.
Unity,
solidarity and struggle! That's the job on May Day 2009.