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blake 3:17
3rd February 2012, 15:26
The following piece is by a long time radical public sector union activist. I think it's a good attempt to deal with the tempests in teapots that have been plaguing the workers movement here.

Labour Leadership Squabbles in Ontario

Gary Lawrence

As the capitalist crisis intensifies, austerity measures against public sector workers continue to mount. In Ontario, another round of cuts will soon be proposed by the Commission on the Reform of Ontario's Public Services, headed by Don Drummond. Still, some Ontario labour leaders prefer to fight each other than the bosses. In some respects, inter-union solidarity in Ontario has reached an all-time low. A large public sector union is leaving the 700,000 worker Ontario Federation of Labour (OFL). Why is this happening at this time when international working-class forces opposing capitalism are attempting to regroup to combat the austerity agenda sweeping across capitalism?


It wasn't always this way. Fifteen years ago Ontario was in the throes of its first major neoliberal attack. The Conservative government of Premier Mike Harris smashed social services, privatized public assets and laid-off public workers. These practises have continued to this day under current Liberal Premier Dalton McGuinty (and it needs to be acknowledged that the opening for these policies came under 1990s NDP government of Premier Bob Rae).

Fighting Neoliberalism Under Harris – The Days of Action

In the fightback against the Harris cuts (which were being prodded at the time by the radical turn by the federal government of Jean Chretien to neoliberalism, and also engineered by then federal civil servant Don Drummond), unions and community partners formed a powerful movement that led to the so-called Ontario Days of Action. The Days of Action featured roving general strikes in a dozen cities over a two year period. It helped keep capitalist government attacks in check. It also united the labour movement and strengthened local membership through participation in fightback and solidarity.

The Days of Action solidarity eventually reached an impasse through union insularity, rivalry and leadership rejection of militancy. But they played a major role in putting a brake on the Harris agenda, and warning subsequent governments of the labour unrest and economic turmoil that could follow. Though the struggle against private and public sector employers continued to increase and collective agreement strength diminished over the following decade, inter-union activity and co-operation outside of parliamentary lobbying, has been rare. Despite often good localized labour council campaigns in Ontario, notably some of the strike support work in Sudbury, Ottawa and Toronto, cross-union picket support is more the exception than the rule.

The country's largest industrial union, the Canadian Auto Workers (CAW) was excluded from the OFL over the last decade over the issue of raiding (a real problem, but one that is pervasive across the entire Canadian union movement without sanction or seeming purpose in how policy is being implemented). Historically, the CAW had a reputation of militancy and opposition to capitalist demands for concessions, and there was some division with it and other unions over policy and political action. Neither is really the case anymore, and in 2011 the CAW rejoined the OFL.

The OPSEU Split

Ironically, 2011 was the same year the leadership of the 125,000 worker Ontario Public Service Employees Union (OPSEU) decided to author another split. Many trade unionists are concerned that another crack in the house of labour could be more detrimental. How has this come about?

OPSEU has been withholding dues from the federation since 2010 after current OFL President Sid Ryan, former Ontario head of the Canadian Union of Public Employees (CUPE), was first elected. In the last two years the OFL executive has been dysfunctional with bitter rancour between Ryan and sisters Marie Kelly (Steelworkers), the former Secretary-Treasurer, and Terry Downey (OPSEU), the former Executive Vice-President. From the point of view of OPSEU leaders their move was all about the malfeasance of Ryan. But a political analysis reveals a more complicated picture.

Turf wars are one major contradiction separating union bureaucrats. This divisive tactic of withholding dues has its roots as far back as 2005 in OPSEU's support of its sister Manitoba Government Employees Union (MGEU) against raiding at the Manitoba Lottery Corporation. Their parent body, the National Union of Public and General Employees (NUPGE) protested to the Canadian Labour Congress (CLC), the umbrella body for 3 million unionized Canadian workers. NUPGE withheld dues to the CLC which briefly resulted in the suspension of its provincial affiliates, including OPSEU, in 2008. NUPGE President James Clancy went on a national crusade over the issue of raiding, further withheld CLC dues and threatened to pull out of the Congress prior to the 2011 CLC convention. Fortunately, an agreement between leaders to restrain raiding headed off a national split.

Though Clancy backed down nationally, OPSEU President Smokey Thomas was inspired to resume Clancy's divisive tactics to punish the OFL. To the chagrin of many OPSEU activists, including myself, virtually the entire union executive board voted to leave the OFL. (This will be subject to debate at the spring 2012 annual OPSEU Convention). The leadership seemed unable or unwilling to recognize the implications for union solidarity, particularly in this period of employer aggression toward public section unions. Political divisions between union officials, though less apparent than turf wars, underlie this split.

OPSEU and Political Divisions in Ontario Labour

Support for Canadian social democracy and the New Democratic Party (NDP) has been a defining feature of Canadian labour. Union officials in Canada have focused their political efforts on reforming the capitalist system via support for the NDP. With the incorporation of social democracy within the global onslaught of neoliberalism, and the ideological and organizational re-alignment of social democracy internationally and in Canada, the leadership of Canadian unions – and especially those centred in the industrial heartland of Ontario – have been in disarray.

It is apparent that former partnerships between capitalists, their governments and the labour leadership bear little or no fruit anymore. In Europe and the Canadian provinces, these governments implement austerity and defend the banks. They seldom even implement the most minimal legislation to facilitate union organizing; and they increasingly centre their political campaigns on anti-tax policies. The legacy of both the NDP provincial government and the NDP-centred progressive Council of former Toronto Mayor David Miller were calls for union restraint that reinforced neoliberal policies and split progressive voting blocs. Moreover, both regimes opened space in the subsequent political disillusionment for the far right regimes of Mike Harris and current Toronto Mayor Rob Ford. With the Ontario NDP remaining on the political margins, and even in a minority government situation being strategically directionless, some Ontario unions have found it practical to make deals with the provincial Liberal government. This is notably the case for some of the teachers’ unions, CAW, many unions in the construction trades.

Full article: http://www.socialistproject.ca/bullet/594.php

getfiscal
3rd February 2012, 16:14
He doesn't seem to explain why his views are so unpopular in his union.

blake 3:17
3rd February 2012, 20:09
He doesn't seem to explain why his views are so unpopular in his union.

The OPSEU leadership's views aren't popular either. The most immediate objection is that they made very big decisions, violating their constitution, without taking it to the membership.

The level of infighting is enormous, and destructive for the movement as a whole. I'm certainly not for unity at all costs.

Here's a backgrounder from a left reform caucus in OPSEU:
Unionized public sector workers are becoming more and more isolated. Job security, fair wages and benefits, pension plans – they are all gravy, gravy and more gravy as far as big business, governments and the media are concerned. Political fragmentation of the Ontario labour movement can only weaken our side. It can only help McGuinty and Harper.

Full piece here: http://opseusolidaritygroup.wordpress.com/2011/11/22/opseu-belongs-in-the-ofl/