Showing posts with label internationalism. Show all posts
Showing posts with label internationalism. Show all posts

Friday, May 01, 2009


CANADIAN LABOUR:
CUPE ON MAY DAY:
Here is the May Day statement of the Canadian Union of Public Employees (CUPE). It is, of course, a little sparse on the full details of the origins of this day, but it has a good trend to saying what should be done in the future.
LLLLLLLLLLLL
CUPE May Day Statement:
On May 1, 1886, hundreds of thousands of North American workers mobilized to fight for an eight-hour work day. The events that took place that week – at Haymarket Square in Chicago and beyond – have come to symbolize the tenacious and revolutionary spirit of the labour movement.

For more than 100 years, May Day has been a time for workers around the globe to take stock of how far we’ve come, and the distance we have yet to go.

In the international spirit of May Day, we must remember that the fight for a safe and fair workplace extends beyond our borders. This May Day, CUPE will be working to prevent the ratification of a free trade agreement with Colombia, a country that has violently suppressed the rights of trade unionists. Trade unionists and civil society activists risk death simply for advocating basic labour rights; since 1986, over 2,500 have been killed by the state and its paramilitaries in Colombia. In 2008 alone, over 49 trade unionists were assassinated. Now more than ever, it is essential that the Canadian labour movement stand in solidarity with workers around the globe who are fighting to achieve even the most fundamental labour rights.

The global economic crisis has only emphasized the need for a strong labour movement. Workers across Canada are fighting to protect their jobs and pensions, and to improve access to employment insurance. CUPE and the labour movement will not stand idly by and watch employers and governments attack workers and public services. The solution is not to break unions; the solution is to provide stimulus through public services, create jobs in all sectors, and to keep money in our communities rather than in corporate pockets.

CUPE members from coast to coast to coast can be proud of the accomplishments of our brothers and sisters in our union. We have had countless positive contract negotiations, and our membership has worked hard to make our union better and stronger.

While May Day is a time to celebrate all that we have achieved in the past, let it also be a time to rejuvenate, refocus, and reaffirm our conviction to move forward.
In solidarity,
Paul Moist
National President
Claude Généreux
National Secretary-Treasurer

Friday, December 07, 2007






LABOUR SOLIDARITY:

ONE MORE DAY: ANOTHER CALL FOR STRIKING RUSSIAN FORD WORKERS:

Since last week the online labour solidarity site Labour Start has been calling for solidarity messages from the world community to pressure the bosses both corporate and government to accede to the demands of striking workers at a Ford plant outside of St. Petersburg for decent wages and working conditions (see previous story here at Molly's Blog). The Russian workers are now calling for further solidarity. Their strike fund is running low, and they need donations to keep on struggling. What follows is the appeal from Labour Start for their case. You can donate by credit card. If the embedded link for the campaign doesn't work please go to the Labour Start home site (http://www.labourstart.org ).
"As we told you last week, Russian workers at a Ford factory near St. Petersburg have embarked on an historic strike. Nearly all strikes in Russia last a day or so. Labour laws in that country make it very difficult for workers to strike for more than a day. But this one has gone on for several weeks as Ford refuses to engage in meaningful bargaining. Your thousands of messages of support have been a real boost to the workers---but now they need something more. The Ford workers have asked Labour Start to help raise money for the union's strike fund---which is rapidly running out.
Workers all over Russia who have very little money to give have been generously donating. We now need workers from all over the world to reach deep into their pockets. We have learned that it costs US $20 per day to keep a Ford worker in Russia out on strike. The union is trying to pay 700 workers this amount every day. The union needs to come up with $14,000 every single day. That's a lot of money anywhere, but especially in a country like Russia.
There's a saying in the trade union movement---something along the lines of we can win a strike if we can last one day longer than the boss. That's what we need to do here. we need to help Ford workers last one day longer than the company, to keep the strike going on long enough to compel Ford to come to the bargaining table. If we do that it will send shock waves through the Russian trade union movement. It will mean that this historic strike has led to an historic victory.
Here's what I am asking us all to do.
Let's raise at least $14,000---to keep the strike going that one extra day.
Let's each donate at least US $20---more if you can---to the Ford workers special fund we've set up.
Every $20 pays for one workers to be on strike for one more day.
We want the union to see exactly how much we have given in real time and to make the process as transparent as possible, which is why we're using Chipin.
Please encourage your union to make a more substantial donation as well, and please spread the word.
I know I can count on you. Thanks.
Eric Lee"
Molly Note:
Molly has sent her Peters' Pence this way. Why is this struggle important ? It is a catalyst for the union movement in Russia, and the union movement may be the only reliable force that can hold back the oligarchs and the government of Putin from their drive towards authoritarianism and (the old lefty word) revanchism, to recover their former imperial glory. It is important for the peace of the world that Russia's new ruling class be confronted with an independent and strong union movement. Given the state of politics in the Russian Republic today it may be the only possible break on their ambitions. Back in the country where my mother was born they, like they do in the former Yugoslavia, take their "identity politics" in a deadly serious manner, unlike the juvenile academic and bureaucratic game that it is here in North America. The thing about unionism is that it transcends whether you are Russian, Chechin, Ingush, Kazak, Balkir, Tatar or whatever. It builds solidarity and cooperation across tribal identities. The present Russian population is being trained in ethnic hatred by its government. What they need as "counter-training" is the solidarity experience of unionism. Transnational solidarity is important here not just for the Russians but also as part of our own struggle to redefine leftism as closer to its original internationalism and further from the tribalism that infects so much of the left today. So sign up and give your pennies goddammit.