The Socialist

The Socialist 26 January 2001

Put the Fat Cats on Trial

Put the Fat Cats on Trial

Hackney Council Crisis Workers strike back at jobs threat

Car workers: Turn pressure into strike action

Show of strength from car workers

Huntingdon Life Sciences: Big Business rescues a friend

Scotland - an exchange of letters

10th anniversary of the Gulf War

Privatised power blacks out California

 
 
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Car workers: Turn pressure into strike action

SATURDAY'S MAGNIFICENT 10,000-strong demo of Luton car workers, their families and other supporters reflected the anger people feel against the multinational companies who threaten to close down whole towns after the first nervous twitch of their shareholders.

The delegations of General Motors (GM) workers from Ellesmere Port and plants in Germany, Belgium, France and Spain showed there is a basis for organising European-wide strike action to stop GM's plans in their tracks. The messages of support read out from the platform gave a small inkling of the widespread opposition within the GM plants in Europe, the USA and Canada against the company's "retrenchment" plans.

But what strategy was proposed by the union leaders at the rally after the demonstration? They have promised a European-wide day of action on 25 January and even though there was an expectation that something would happen in Luton and perhaps Ellesmere Port, little else concrete was proposed from the platform. It was left to a local radio DJ who was chairing the rally to say everyone should go sick on the day!

Tony Woodley, the chief transport union negotiator for the car industry, talked about the traumatic year for the industry with the closure plans for Dagenham, the threats still hanging over Longbridge and now Vauxhall. He complained how the Luton closure demonstrated the role of a multinational like GM and revealed the nature of globalisation. It was he said, quick cheap and easy to sack workers in Britain compared to elsewhere.

He pointed out that GM have made £1.2 billion profit from Britain in the last 12 years and alleged that they have abused taxpayers' money and the wages of the workers to get that. "GM have acted illegally and immorally".

The union leaders strategy seems to solely consist of holding out for mass pressure to change GM's collective mind. But what is required is a call to arms, including strike action, if the pressure is to have any effect. Workers at Luton and Ellesmere Port need to build on the success of the demonstration to pressurise the union leaders to prepare such effective action.

GM are proposing these plant closures to impress their investors as they prepare for a new recession. Already there has been a big fall in the world and US car market.

Trade unions both in Britain and across Europe organising in GM plants have a responsibility to explain what a forthcoming recession will mean for workers' jobs and conditions. They should be campaigning for the nationalisation of all GM plants under threat of closure, whether in Britain or any European country.

They should demand to open the accounts of these multinational companies. The records of where the profits and government subsidies have gone over the years should be opened up to public scrutiny.

The car bosses are preparing for the future, it is time the European unions did so too by effectively mobilising the anger that exists among car workers.

A socialist programme of nationalisation of the industry under workers' control and management, along with and democratically controlled planning on an all-European basis could meet the transport needs of society at large. This would be widely supported by workers everywhere.


In this issue

Put the Fat Cats on Trial

Hackney Council Crisis Workers strike back at jobs threat

Car workers: Turn pressure into strike action

Show of strength from car workers

Huntingdon Life Sciences: Big Business rescues a friend

Scotland - an exchange of letters

10th anniversary of the Gulf War

Privatised power blacks out California


 

Home   |   The Socialist 26 January 2001   |   Join the Socialist Party

Subscribe   |   Donate   |   Bookshop

Related links:

Car workers:

triangleSouth Wales: Fight for car workers' jobs

triangleCome to the National Shop Stewards Network conference 2009

triangleDefend victimised trade unionist

triangleNational Shop Stewards Network national conference

triangleVisteon car workers fight for their rights

triangleCar workers' jobs slaughter - begin the fightback!

Strike:

triangleStrike at Sussex Downs College

triangleWorkplace news in brief

triangleCome to the 6th annual NSSN conference!

triangleSecond strike by Tilbury dockers over attack on contracts

GM:

triangleGeneral Motors - no to 'divide and rule' in Germany

triangleVauxhall jobs threat - unions must organise a fightback

triangleGM, Chrysler, and Ford's 'race to the bottom'

Britain:

triangleWe stand 100% with the Greek workers

triangleThe boss exploiting China (and Britain)

triangleThe Queen's Speech - What readers thought

Luton:

trianglePolice restrict anti-racist protesters in Luton

triangleJarrow March for Jobs: Luton

triangleEDL racists terrorise Luton

Nationalisation:

triangleArgentina: Nationalisation provokes wrath of imperialism

triangleWhen workers planned production: the Lucas Aerospace plan

triangleNationalise Bombardier to save jobs

General Motors:

triangleVietnam 25 years on: Now it's Clinton's mercenaries

Dagenham:

triangleCampaigning against all cuts and privatisation

triangleWhy the BNP offers no way forward for working class people

triangleYouth Fight for Jobs organises demo in Barking