By: Mike Westfall
American labor is now experiencing possibly the
most difficult period in its history. Because of the concession
aftermath and due to the frustrations of deep layoffs and plant
closings, many domestic unions have already allowed real so called
“cooperation” to take pace. Other unions are factoring out whether to
“Lighten up” their economic contractual demands and agree to a new
definition of labor relations or continue their historic adversarial
role.
Profit Sharing- To see how much integrity General
Motors has pertaining to cooperation, you only have to look at profit
sharing
General Motors is a master of illusion and is
working on the destruction of the present definition of a fair days
work for a fair days pay. An internal document that surfaced in 1984
stated that G.M. would develop productivity improvements that would
slice the North American Work force by tens of thousands of jobs and
that G.M. intended to resist wage increases through profit
sharing.
There is deep dissatisfaction among GM workers
who, even in light of a strong GM sales period, received much smaller
profit sharing checks for three years in a row than their
counterparts at Ford. Using profit sharing in place of the historic
“real wage increases” has allowed GM to adjust downward at will their
labor cost.
GM has used profit sharing as a sly company
gimmick giving in lieu of “real wage” and “real benefit”
improvements, a program that would automatically be reduced and slice
the auto workers standard of living on a sales downturn or corporate
mistake, a program that would reduce any benefit that was tied
directly to wages such as vacation pay, holiday pay, paid absence,
ect.
GM has shown their ability of losing money and
hiding money through manipulations and investments to buy expensive
companies like E.D.S., Hughes, Saturn and countless others.
Westfall speaking to group at McCormick Convention Center in Chicago.
By cooperating with General Motors
on profit sharing, G.M. has made “chumps” out of us all by growing profoundly wealthier and still reducing the profit sharing to its workers.
Cooperation- Not long ago domestic unions
encouraged militancy and there can be no question that this
adversarial relationship solidified the membership giving autoworkers
a degree of dignity and enabled negotiators to forge decent and
respectable union contracts.
I believe that many good unionists are on both
sides of the cooperative equation. I also believe that when it comes
to labor relations, General Motors could not be trusted 50 years ago
and they cannot be trusted today.
Workers are told “No more concessions” the rank
and file believe “No more concessions,” but cooperative General
Motors continues its push for deeper and deeper concessions in the
most insidious ways. By pitting worker against worker, through the
drive to redefine the role of the union and through a complete and
profound restructuring of every element of the worker’s
existence.
Because so much of the domestic competition we
face results directly from GM’s foreign sourcing deals, why should we
continue to cooperate with GM on the productivity issues when every
move they make is designed to slice our jobs and reduce our standard
of living?
U.A.W. members have done everything in their
power to make GM profitable and competitive. They have agreed to
modernize and to technological change, and GM still slices thousands
of workers, still continues to increase substantially the importation
of engines, component parts and entire vehicles from Brazil, Mexico,
Japan and elsewhere while treating our displaced workers callously.
Obviously, the whole cooperative trend is out of control.
Issues that count like jobs, negotiated
contractual matters, including work rules and classification
reductions, are being set back 50 years in just a few short
months.
General Motor’s brand of cooperation is nothing
less than a device to manipulate workers into lowering their defense
so the corporation can deliver a knockout punch that will blast the
historical definition of union into extinction.
It wasn’t “hand holding” and “back slapping” but
“militancy” and the “adversarial” relationship that garnered every
benefit ever won for workers and the corporation prospered.
The U.A.W. is all that domestic auto workers have
and any significant positive changes that take place for labor will
occur only by hard collective bargaining and there is nothing that
further unlimited cooperation can do except weaken trade unions from
within. In the end, why should we give back anything to GM?
We should not only be fighting to keep what we
have, but we should be fighting to achieve more.
Our European competitors are moving towards
shorter work times and why can’t we? What is so wrong in working on
retirement benefits that eliminate pension check shock with full
C.O.L.A. or with new pensions that allows workers to retire earlier
to save younger workers?
It is crazy to cooperate with GM who is racing to
restructure away our jobs.
We are all heirs to our past U.A.W. members who
faced bloody confrontations to create the strongest labor movement on
earth, which would give us all a measure of prosperity and
dignity.
It is up to us to think forward, not backward,
and keep up the fight with our clearly identified opposition… General
Motors.
Mike Westfall
Copyright 2004: " Web Site Creator/Editor : Bernie Lowthian / America's Workers For Historical Accuracy ": October 15, 2004