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Title: Focus On Precarity Author: Workers Solidarity Movement Date: October 2006 Language: en Topics: poverty, trade unions, Red & Black Revolution, United Kingdom, Ireland, United States of America Source: Retrieved on 15th November 2021 from http://www.wsm.ie/c/red-and-black-revolution-11-october-2006 Notes: Published in Red and Black Revolution No. 11.
Precarity is a term synonymous with precariousness. It is perhaps best
conceived as chronic insecurity. In recent times with the dismantling of
the welfare state, the destruction of social security, workersâ
existence is becoming more and more insecure. Precarity is a term that
has been developed to describe these changes and the new form of working
class existence that has developed due to them.
The term is used in particular to refer to the demise of the
job-for-life and job security. In this sense it is closely linked to the
process of casualisation. For anti-capitalists the significance of these
changes has been quite large. The social-democratic/mass trade union
model of working class action does not seem fit to deal with this new
situation. The level of union membership in the working class is
continuously on the decrease. This decrease in union membership is,
unfortunately, not being replaced with any new form of workplace
organisation.
The difficulties posed by organising precarious workers have led the
trade union movement to, for the most part, abandon these workers.
Precarious workers, those who are most in need of protection and
organisation are today the least organised.
As many anti-capitalist activists are precarious workers, the issue of
precarity is one that has been widely debated within the international
anti-capitalist movement.
Some hold that it is a completely new phenomenon, while other hold that
it is a return to what existed before the exceptional period of
Keynesian capitalism, or social-democracy. Still others question whether
the âjob for lifeâ ever existed for the mass of society. [1]
Part of the whole debate about precarity is driven by those who once
identified industrial workers as the vanguard of revolutionary change,
and who now see precarious workers as fulfilling this role. While this
may not be a particularly useful analysis, we should not ignore the
question of how to organise these workers.
Here we offer a few samples of what is happening around this issue of
precarity. We open with an article by James Redmond on some attempts by
Irish libertarians to engage with this issue. He discusses the âGet Up,
Stand Upâ campaign which attempted to direct some of the anti-capitalist
energy thrown up by the âanti-globalisationâ movement into grassroots
workplace organising. He also writes about the Polish Temp Workers
Defence Committee and the struggle in the Tesco distribution centre and
how our involvement in organising solidarity with those workers raised
issues about the content of the âGet Up, Stand Upâ campaign. We follow
this with an article by a member of the British anarchist group, the
WOMBLES, and a T&G (Transport and General Workers Union) activist on the
organising drive taken up by the T&G. He discusses both the potentials
and limitations of this model of union organizing for activists. This
model is based on that developed by the SEIU (Service Employees
International Union) on the States. The SEIUâs new attention to
organising has led to them being the major driving force behind the
Change to Win Coalition, which split from the AFL-CIO last September.
The final article, by Alan Mac Simoin, a WSM member and SIPTU activist,
discusses this split, its significance and its limitations.
Over the past year there has been an emerging preoccupation among
anarchists and socialists with precarity as itâs an expression of a new
work discipline imposed by neo-liberalism. Already there have been
several precarity forums in European cities aimed at etching out a sense
of the identities formed through the shared experience of the demands of
job market flexibility.
There have also been five successive years of Euromayday parades across
Europe calling for âflexicurity.â None of this escaped the notice of
Irish activists. In Ireland, the WSM has so far been involved in two
campaigns that can be linked to the issue. Our members were involved in
providing solidarity to a group of Polish temp workers in an attempt to
highlight the exploitative use of agency staff by Tesco, and also in
giving out information on workplace and union rights in the Get Up,
Stand Up Campaign.
The Get Up, Stand Up initiative emerged from discussions between members
of the Workers Solidarity Movement, Irish Socialist Network, Independent
Workers Union and other individuals in order to spread information on
unions and workplace rights to the largely unorganised sectors of the
main retail streets and malls in Dublin city centre.
Starting off on Mayday 2005, the campaign distributed over 5,000
multilingual leaflets containing information on basic employment rights
and union contact details, directly to workers in high street shops and
shopping centres. The campaign also played another role, by attempting
to revitalise the idea that workers and bosses have nothing in common.
We argued that this manifests itself most clearly in the need for
distinctly worker based organisations like unions.
The campaign also offered an alternative to the spectacular and short
term strategies that characterised much of the recent anti-capitalist
era. It was at this level that the precarity discussions were most
influential, allowing ourselves to revaluate the class relationship as
well as increasing our political work that is more closely related to
our own everyday experiences. Speaking of ourselves as part of a class,
instead of as an activist community and develop coping mechanisms which
can strengthen and broaden the appeal of our politics as a result of
this recognition.
Already there is a wealth of statutory bodies who give out information
on workplace rights; equally the unions should be taking a much more
proactive approach to this work. In a sense the campaign just ended up
substituting itself for these bodies, with no real sense of going beyond
and developing a coherent and valid criticism of them. Eventually
dialogue within the campaign revolved around questions of what shopping
centre should be leafleted next. The ability to learn from the activity
we were engaged in was sidelined for the safety of a campaign of
information dispersion, with the campaignâs aesthetics speaking of one
thing but the form of the campaign remaining very much short sighted.
Later in the summer and independently of Get Up, Stand Up contact was
made with a group of young Polish workers, who were facing into protests
with management of a Tesco distribution centre in Greenhills. Coming
from a background in militant politics, these workers took the
initiative to use their own experiences as temps used to undermine the
security of the workforce as a propaganda vehicle to highlight an
increasingly common work experience. Tesco never breached a piece of
employment legislation; the workersâ direct employer was an agency
called Grafton Recruitment. To Tesco they were immediately disposable
and the old rights we relied on in the Get Up, Stand Up Campaign were no
longer relevant. Members of the WSM provided solidarity, by helping
organise a protest outside a Tesco store on Baggot Street and in calling
for solidarity elsewhere, which led to several demos across the UK and
Poland co-ordinated by activists in the libertarian milieu and
organisers in the T and G. The protests garnered a huge degree of media
attention within the new Polish media in Ireland and back in Poland.
For a time these two experiences were a healthy breakaway from the sort
of activity that is dependent upon mobilizing for the next big event, as
well as a start to formulating strategies of how we move towards
workplace-geared activity. Equally, here were opportunities to explore a
political language of struggle based on how identities are emerging in
workplaces rather than having to rely on the baggage of an awkwardly
represented archaic class struggle; a rhetoric that in the long run only
isolates us from those who class struggle anarchists need to enter into
dialogue with.
The application of organizing skills which have developed out of the
anti-globalisation period, the use of subvertisements, the aesthetic
separation from the corporate branding of mainstream unions, the success
of internet based organisation in mobilising for the Tesco pickets can
only be a positive addition to an organizational vocabulary that can
speak to workers apathetic and distrustful of a politics and unions
which to a large extent simply do not challenge the reality facing
increasing numbers of people.
During the Irish ferries dispute, Irish unionism had a moment of brief
respite. Contrary to the fears of many, huge numbers of workers left
their employment and protested in solidarity with the workers of Irish
Ferries. Listening to popular chat shows and reading bulletin boards
left an impression that there was a considerable popular desire to
mobilise in employment sectors where there are weak unions or bullying
bosses. Thereâs a lesson here that significant organisational drives are
needed.
Had Get Up, Stand Up retained a more self-critical awareness of the work
it was entering into, it might have been a forum where issues of
workplace solidarity could have been raised and teased out separate to
the capital political parties seek to gain from them. With the breakdown
in democracy in many unions, and the recent Collen and Delaney cases
thereâs no doubt that there is a need for the permanence of such a
network within the movement.
Get Up, Stand Up style initiatives and ventures such as the Polish Temp
Workers Defence Committee have a role to play in briefly sketching and
experimenting in how this can be done both from within and outside the
unions. For the moment though, many of those involved in these campaigns
have become active in the IWU, setting up a Polish Workers Section and
joining its recruitment drives.
In the UK union membership has been in steady decline for the past 25
years, not least due to how people are being employed â casualised
labour, increased imposition of agency work, temporary, short term
contracts & contracts of âself-employmentâ, along with the general lack
of confidence in unions after years of complacency, compromises and
defeats.One of the UKâs âbig fourâ unions, the Transport and General
Workers Union (T & G), has sought to address this by adopting the model
created by the American Service Employees International Union (SEIU)
with its strategy of a national unit of professional âunion organisersâ
to target traditionally untouched areas of unionisation (precarious work
in fragmented workplaces â most significantly in the UK Polish immigrant
labour in the north & cleaners on London Underground and in the City). A
lot of finances and resources have gone into ensuring this experiment is
a âsuccessâ. The model is on a 3 year probationary period and for this
year the organising unit should have recruited 10,000 new members.
On the surface this looks an impressive undertaking, especially the work
done around the Polish workers in Crewe, yet we need to look closely
just how they are operating and how much they encourage solidarity and
militancy rather than compliance and acceptance of union leadership.
An organising team is typically made up of a team leader, an organiser
and an organiser in training. These teams are usually from an activist
or academic backgrounds (âbecause of their political commitment &
willingness to work extra hoursâ) who go to workplaces to talk to and
encourage workers to join the union. The more militant workers are
encouraged to become organisers themselves who in turn organise in their
respective workplaces.
The problem with this imposed structure is it is geared towards getting
results. Essentially your energy and responsibility goes into meeting
targets rather than meeting the needs of the workers (this is amplified
when you do not share the same common conditions and problems at work).
In effect organisers become the tools of the union teaching workers how
to organise rather than being the delegates of workers in the workplace.
It is an artificially informal hierarchy that re-imposes the formal
hierarchy of the leadership, although a lot of effort is done on the
ground to alleviate the impression the members answer to the union.
What is retained though is the leadership speaking on behalf of the
workers, as evidenced with workplace grievances being dealt with
directly by the ârepresentation teamâ, sidelining any progressive
dialogue between organisers and the people theyâve unionised, indicating
the primary objective of âunion organisersâ is to simply recruit new
members. Plus this doesnât bode well if we look at way the T & G handled
the Gate Gourmet dispute, where the union stepped in to negotiate to get
all the sacked workers reinstated only to sell them out in a compromised
deal. Ironically the evening of a tube cleanersâ organisers meeting at T
& G headquarters there was a picket outside by Gate Gourmet workers
demanding their hardship pay be reinstated, having been withdrawn by the
union. Despite all the fine words, activist commitment and workersâ
militancy the union leadership will always have the last say.
The question then is can there be a genuine model for grassroots rank
and file political activity and organising within a union setting, and
if not what are the alternatives?
One initiative has emerged, on the back of the T & G tube cleaners
campaign, called The Solidarity Collective â a group set up by people
involved in the IWW, the Wombles, T & G organisers and other left groups
to support ongoing workplace struggles independently of union hierarchy.
How this develops is dependent on those involved but the intention is to
link up with, and support the development of, autonomous and self
organised workers struggles (not reliant on unions or political parties)
as a means to foster forms of solidarity and collective strategies sadly
missing in this current political climate. What is paramount is the
recognition that we must work together in creating methods of
confronting capital together. These are our collective struggles and we
all have a part to play in them.
Last September saw a split in the USAâs Congress of Trade Unions, the
AFL-CIO. The Change to Win Federation held its founding convention in
St. Louis, Missouri, where they set out their plans: cut down on
bureaucracy, devote a lot more resources to organising the unorganised,
and start building industry-wide super-unions.The seven founding unions
were the Teamsters (a general union and the USAâs biggest), the Building
Labourers, Service Employees (third biggest in the USA), UNITE-HERE
(clothing and restaurant workers), Farmworkers, Food workers, and the
Carpenters. Together they made up about 35% of the AFL-CIOâs members.
Literally from day one, we could see this was not going to be some
radical break from the undemocratic practices of the AFL-CIO. There was
no membership vote over affiliation to this new federation, the handful
of people on each union executive took the decision themselves.
So, is this new formation simply an attempt by a few discontented senior
union leaders to increase their power or do they have ideas that merit
serious consideration? Most of their literature has been long on
describing the problems faced by working people, but short on offering
solutions.
Well, there are very real problems in the US trade union movement.
Whether you are a radical or a conservative, you canât avoid the fact
that the percentage of American workers in a union has dropped to an
all-time low of about 12%. And thatâs an open invitation to the bosses
to stick the boot in, an invitation the bosses have been more than happy
to accept.
âWe are focusing our resources on organising tens of millions of workers
who are without union representation. We are shifting our resources into
organisingâ, said Anna Burger, Change to Win Chair. Indeed the
federation has put it like this:
â1. Working people, including current union members, cannot win
consistently without uniting millions more workers in unions.
2. Every worker in America has the right to a union that has the focus,
strategy, and resources to unite workers in that industry and win.â
Among their proposals to achieve these objectives are encouraging unions
to organize on an industry- wide basis, merging smaller unions into a
few large unions, and spending more money on organising as opposed to
electoral politics.
All well and good, but unions have to be seen to do more than merely
hold the line against employer demands for cutbacks. They need to
actually spearhead a fight for higher wages, more job security, better
healthcare, shorter hours and improved pensions. There has to be a sense
that we are going forward, that any sacrifices or risks we are asked to
take will be worth it.
Just as important, even a brief look at labour history suggests that
ideas, politics, and grassroots worker involvement are far more
important than changes in organisational structures in the recipe for
reviving union strength.
There are no shortcuts to rebuilding our movement, and that it will take
far more than a few mergers or spending more on recruitment to produce
the reversal in union fortunes that so many of us desire. After all,
thatâs what has been done here by SIPTU and IMPACT, to name but two of
our own big unions which were formed through mergers.
This is not to say that the heads of the new federation are âsell-outsâ,
âtraitorsâ or any of the other silly names that sometimes get thrown at
union leaders. By and large they represent the general ideas of the
members who elected them. When most workers see no alternative to the
conservative political parties, let alone to capitalism, we should not
be surprised that our unions are not some sort of revolutionary
movement.
What is needed is not âbetter leadersâ. We are not sheep who simply
require a better or more farsighted shepherd. Real change necessitates
the active participation of a lot of people.
All over the world we need to convince our work colleagues and fellow
union members that a militant fight for workersâ interests is a good
thing, that ordinary member involvement and control of our unions is a
good thing, that a fundamental change in the way society is ordered is
possible.
In our unions, whether in the USA or Ireland, experience suggests that
we need a programme that puts far greater weight on political and social
change, rank-and-file education and empowerment, and a commitment to
reinvigorating collective bargaining as well as rebuilding membership.
This was the experience of Connolly and Larkin, of the US Congress of
Industrial Organisations in the 1930s, and of every large-scale union
movement since.
[1] For a detailed look at work in the 21^(st) Century see âThe Nomad,
the Displaced and the Settler: Work in the 21^(st) Centuryâ in Red &
Black Revolution 9.