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European Alternative Unions Meet
The following report is based on Jacques Toubles' article, "Recontre
europeene des syndicats alternatifs," published in January in Le Monde
Libertaire.
A "Meeting of European Alternative Trade Unions" was held in Barcelona,
Spain, Nov. 29 through Dec. 1, 1991, sponsored by the Spanish General
Confederation of Workers (CGT). Attending the three day conference were
delegations from union confederations such as the Swedish Workers Central
(SAC) and the Romande Confederation of Labor; autonomous workers' groups
such as the Italian base committees (Cobas) and an Irish
anarcho-syndicalist group; local trade unions or federations affiliated
with "official" union centers, for example a delegation of railway workers
from the French Confederation of Democratic Unions (CFDT) and the Proof
Readers Union of the French General Confederation of Workers (CGT); some
organizations formed by fellow workers excluded from the main
confederations such as the SUD Postal Federation; and, finally, a
delegation from the Moscow section of the Russian Confederation of
Anarcho-syndicalists (KAS) and some militants from the Russian Solidarity
trade union.
The New European Order
In discussing the developing political/economic landscape in Europe,
the Spanish CGT delegates noted that the new order being constructed in
the various Ministerial cabinets, in Brussels, and in the board rooms of
the multi-national corporations will undoubtedly mean an increase in
inequality and poverty within nations and in different regions of the
continent, as well as reduction of trade union rights and restrictions on
the right to strike. It was estimated that two million people would be
added to the fifteen million already unemployed. In addition, there are at
least six million workers toiling under temporary or part-time work
contracts, and fifty million people living in poverty. The drive towards
the privatization of public services is going ahead, and will most likely
result in a further increase in part- time and temporary contract labor.
Underneath all of this is developing a parallel society made up of 20
million immigrants.
The Swedish delegation made special note of the changing division of
labor being constructed and the greater stratification of the labor force
that this will engender. They see the working class being sub-divided into
three groupings: 1) a highly skilled stratum of technical workers with
secure employment organized within corporatist trade unions whose only
function will be to protect their status; 2) a less skilled and more
precariously employed group; and 3) a totally marginalized group without
skills and without employment. Such a development would make achieving
political and economic unity among the three groups very difficult, which
would be to the advantage of the capitalists an the State.
Rank and File Action
The fellow workers from the Italian Cobas discussed the growing
importance of the base committees, which are primarily found in the public
services but are also present in the metal industry. In the past few years
the committees have proven their ability to successfully mobilize workers
within local branches of industry and even within entire industries both
on a regional and on a national level, thus making them a force to be
reckoned with. Thanks to this type of organization (the base committee) a
number of trades - teachers, rail workers - have been able to successfully
resist employers' plans to reduce their standard of living and working. On
the railroads, for example, Italy is the only nation in Western Europe
where the practice of operating locomotives with two crew members is still
in force, thanks largely to the efforts of the base committees in
mobilizing resistance to the attempts to introduce one-person operation.
This hard struggle has twice resulted in the conscription of the entire
rail workforce by the government, something that hadn't been seen since
the fascist era.
From the Ex-USSR
Of particular interest at the conference was the report of the Russian
delegates of the KAS. The KAS comrade acknowledged that the organization
was going through a difficult period with a number of fellow workers
leaving the organization. These defections can be explained by the fact
that when the KAS was formed there were no other libertarian groupings in
the USSR and some joined the group without really understanding what the
KAS was all about. When the organization defined itself, in its congress,
as an organization made up of anarcho-syndicalists and anarchists engaged
within the workers movement, those who disagreed drew the proper
conclusion and withdrew from the organization, not without first accusing
the KAS of being bureaucrats, etc.
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