The Socialist

The Socialist 11 November 2009

Fight for real jobs and free education

Fight for real jobs and free education


End the war in Afghanistan: Bring the troops back now!


Socialism 2009: An excellent weekend!


Postal workers force management back


Unison witch-hunt: Defend the Four campaign gets a boost


RMT conference on political representation


20 years after fall of Berlin Wall, capitalist triumphalism turns rotten

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

Ireland: 90,000 march against government cuts

United Socialist Party congress delegates defy difficult conditions in Sri Lanka


Leeds bin strike - week ten

London bus strike

Strikes force concessions

Steelworkers get organised and score a victory over bonus payments

Fujitsu

College strike


Big business fights for fees: Students must fight back

Internationally young people fight for their rights


Reclaim the game by John Reid

Anti-fascists tactics - What happened in Newport?

 
 
Socialist Party logo Socialist Party on the climate change demo December 2007, pic Paul Mattsson Socialist Party News
Socialist Party Policy statements
Socialist Party contemporary Marxist analysis

Link to this page: http://www.socialistparty.org.uk/issue/601/8343

Seach this siteGoogle search the site

Printable versionPrintable version

email to friendemail to friend

Facebook

Twitter

Home   |   The Socialist 11 November 2009   |   Join the Socialist Party

Subscribe   |   Donate   |   Bookshop

General Motors - no to 'divide and rule'

THOUSANDS OF General Motors (GM) car workers walked out across Germany on 5 November after the company pulled out of the sale of Opel/Vauxhall to Magna-Sberbank, the Austrian/Canadian/Russian consortium.

Stephan Kimmerle, Committee for a Workers' International (CWI)

In a blatant act of political opportunism, before being re-elected chancellor in the recent German general election, Angela Merkel had been pushing Magna-Sberbank to buy GM's European business, including a 1.5 billion euro bridging loan to ensure the survival of the operation.

Now that the sale is off, GM has revived its previous plan to cut 30% of expenditure. This would mean the loss of at least 11,000 out of the 50,000 Opel/Vauxhall jobs in Europe and the threatened closure of plants in Antwerp (Belgium), Eisenach and Kaiserslautern (in Germany), Luton (England), as well as severe cuts in other plants like Bochum (Germany).

GM is again blackmailing the workers with the demand, 'make concessions or you will suffer when Opel/Vauxhall goes bankrupt'.

Union leaders

The fight against threatened cuts in jobs and working conditions by either GM or Magna-Sberbank requires a united approach by European trade unions. Disappointingly this has not been adopted by the trade union leaders who instead have adopted a 'beggar-thy-neighbour' approach.

Klaus Franz, chair of the all-German Opel works' council has been cooperating with the right-wing Merkel government, even though the Magna buyout would have led to plant closures elsewhere in Europe. Similarly, in Britain Unite leader Tony Woodley praised GM's u-turn as the "best deal for Britain".

However, the differences between the Magna deal and the current plan to keep Opel/Vauxhall with GM are minimal as far as the workers are concerned. For workers in Germany, the Magna deal also included the loss of 4,500 jobs - accepted by the works' council. For British workers the 5,500 jobs at Vauxhall in Ellesmere Port and Luton have not been rescued. The plant at Luton in particular has a question mark over it under the plans of GM.

The refusal of union leaders to adopt an international strategy has led to severe problems for the workers. The outrage that exists in Germany is not being used to strengthen the struggle and fight the cuts. Instead, it can be used by the government to play on national divisions.

This nationalist approach has led to a situation where workers in Britain and Poland have welcomed a development that still puts thousands of jobs in their plants at risk. Management can continue with their divide and rule policy, not only between countries but also between different plants in the same country.

Workers cannot rely on their respective capitalist governments or politicians to solve their problems - as is clearly evident from the moves of all capitalist governments to bail out the banks and other capitalist institutions and companies at the expense of workers' jobs, and to make cuts in public services and living standards.

The jobs crisis is not simply one in GM or just the auto industry. It is part of the crisis in the world capitalist economy and a lasting solution requires a socialist solution.

The struggle to save jobs is linked to the need to use the vast technology, knowledge and wealth of the car industry to develop green technology and public transport on a massive scale as well as other socially useful goods.

Abridged article. See full text on www.socialistworld.net


In this issue

Fight for real jobs and free education


War and occupation

End the war in Afghanistan: Bring the troops back now!


Socialism 2009

Socialism 2009: An excellent weekend!


Postal workers strike

Postal workers force management back


Defend the four campaign

Unison witch-hunt: Defend the Four campaign gets a boost


Campaign for a New Workers Party

RMT conference on political representation


International socialist news and analysis

20 years after fall of Berlin Wall, capitalist triumphalism turns rotten

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

Ireland: 90,000 march against government cuts

United Socialist Party congress delegates defy difficult conditions in Sri Lanka


Socialist Party workplace news

Leeds bin strike - week ten

London bus strike

Strikes force concessions

Steelworkers get organised and score a victory over bonus payments

Fujitsu

College strike


Young People

Big business fights for fees: Students must fight back

Internationally young people fight for their rights


Socialist Party review

Reclaim the game by John Reid

Anti-fascists tactics - What happened in Newport?


 

Home   |   The Socialist 11 November 2009   |   Join the Socialist Party

Subscribe   |   Donate   |   Bookshop

Related links:

General Motors:

triangleCar industry in crisis: A fighting strategy

triangleGeneral Motors meets workers' resistance

triangleOpel Workers - Down But Not Out

triangleGerman Walkout Starts Fightback

triangleVAUXHALL WORKERS STRIKE BACK

triangleCar workers: Turn pressure into strike action

GM:

triangleVauxhall jobs threat - unions must organise a fightback

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

triangleA 'race to the bottom' for workers' rights and a disaster for the environment

triangleFighting strategy needed to save jobs

Jobs:

triangleUN reports rise in global youth unemployment

triangleBack to work? How the system fails the unemployed

triangleCon-Dems' hypocrisy over children's care

Vauxhall:

triangleLambeth & Southwark Socialist Party: Stephen Lawrence Murder - The untold story;

triangleVauxhall school: Privatisers Bring In Agency Staff

triangleVauxhall threatened by profits crisis

Germany:

triangleEurope - Young people fight ACTA

triangleEurozone crisis - capitalists have no solution

triangleSolidarity message to UK public sector workers, from Berlin, Germany