Change to Win holds founding convention
By
Sharon Black
St. Louis
Published Oct 6, 2005 2:23 AM
Close to 900 delegates,
alternates and observers crowded into a hotel convention floor in downtown St.
Louis on Sept. 27 for the founding convention of Change to Win. This newly
formed federation of unions represents 5.4 million workers who have broken with
the AFL-CIO. The move was initiated primarily by the Service Employees, led by
Andrew Stern. The Teamsters, United Food and Commercial Workers (UFCW),
UNITE-HERE, Carpenters, Laborers and the United Farm Workers have joined the new
federation.
The apparent core issue behind this split in the labor
movement has been its failure to organize millions of low-paid and exploited
workers while existing union jobs were disappearing. Unfor tu nately, very
little of this debate has trickled down to the union members, who could provide
the energy and initiative needed to develop new strategies.
The newly
formed federation announ ced that 75 percent of its $16 million bud get will be
earmarked for union organizing, along with the development of “Sector
Coordinating Committees” targeting specific industries and
“Strategic Organizing Centers.”
The conference took place in
one day. Delegates from each of the seven unions were carefully picked.
Resolutions were presented without the usual debate common to union conventions
and were interspersed between presentations by rank-and-file workers from
organizing campaigns.
All seven heads of the represented unions gave
prepared remarks. Each delegation was in proportion to its union size. For
instance, the Service Employ ees had 117 voting delegates and the Teamsters 108.
Altogether there were 460 voting delegates.
Cintas laundry workers,
Wal-Mart employees, DHL delivery drivers, First Student school bus drivers,
Tyson poultry workers and workers from various hotel chains spoke about the
exploitation that drove them to campaign for a union. Their energy was felt at
the convention as they described their hardships and sacrifice.
War
issue is conspicuously absent
Conspicuously absent from discussion at
the convention was the Iraq War. Just three days earlier close to half a million
people had marched in the streets, from Washington, D.C., to Los Angeles. It is
workers and poor communities who most feel the devastation of the
war—particularly Iraqi workers who have suffered under U.S. imperialist
occupation.
International solidarity cannot be an empty platitude. The
union movement cannot develop a successful strategy without taking into account
the imperialist war. What good is it for workers to achieve a needed wage
increase if it is taken away by the high cost of oil? What about the youth who
are maimed or killed in the war or the rampant racism so viciously unmasked in
the Katrina crisis—aren’t these issues for the union movement? What
about the budget cuts that have devastated whole communities because the money
is going to the Pentagon?
If the working class is to fight effectively it
will need a movement that can take on the capitalist system both politically and
economically. Unity is one important part of this strategy. How can it be
helpful to separate janitors, hotel and hospital workers, now in the new
federation, from steel workers and public employees, who remain in the AFL-CIO?
Woman, African American
in top posts
A new
10-member Leadership Coun cil was made up of the heads of the seven represented
unions, who are male and white with the exception of the United Farm Workers,
plus three seats set aside to strengthen race and gender diversity. The council
elected Anna Burger, secretary treasurer of SEIU, as chair of Change to Win and
Edgar Romney, African American exe cutive vice president of UNITE-HERE, as its
secretary treasurer. Geral dyn Lutty, international vice president of the UFCW,
will hold the third seat.
This marks a first for a labor federation of
this size. The three choices were enthusiastically endorsed at the convention.
Many women’s and civil rights groups will certainly see this as a step in
the right direction.
It is critical to note that this is a response to
protracted protests by the leadership of the Million Worker March, the Coalition
of Black Trade Unionists, Black Workers for Justice, the Coalition of Labor
Union Women and many others in the immigrant rights and women’s movement
who continue to fight for more representation.
It is also a reflection of
the aspirations of the rank and file, who are primarily people of color, women
and immigrant workers. Much more needs to be done to address the issue of racism
and national oppression at all levels in workers’ organizations if the
union movement is to succeed.
Response to Katrina crisis
The
Teamsters announced plans to respond to the Katrina disaster. IBT president
James Hoffa, who spoke first and received a standing ovation, proclaimed,
“Who got the first no-bid contract? That’s right—Halliburton.
What was George Bush’s first action in the devastated region? To repeal
Davis-Bacon. That means Halli burton won’t have to pay construction
workers 13 bucks an hour. $27,000 a year is too much for Cheney’s
cronies.”
Hoffa also exclaimed, “We are reaching out to new
worker communities: African-American waste workers in the South; Latino port
drivers on both coasts; and Hispanic construction workers across the
country.”
Change to Win announced plans to develop worker training
centers in the Gulf Coast region to rebuild the devastated communities. Before
the convention on Monday morning, the federation held a press conference with
the Rev. Jesse Jackson of the PUSH organization on the Katrina crisis.
How can we organize without addres sing the issue of national oppression?
The African American community and all those who are oppressed and poor need
aid, yes, and the right to return to New Orleans and the region. But labor
should also take on the issue of who will control the reconstruction—the
people or the corporations? This would do more than any one organizing campaign
to advance labor’s cause.
These are just a few of the questions
that the union movement will have to answer in the coming months.
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