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Weekly Worker 577 Thursday May 19 2005
Left unity in NZ
Since Labour got back into power in 1999, the 200 richest individuals
and families in New Zealand have increased their wealth by 250%. Real
wages, however, have been stagnant. In fact over the past 20 years, real
wages have fallen by more than six percent. In a country of just four
million people, hundreds of thousands of work over 40 hours a week, while
many tens of thousands of other workers are unemployed and several hundred
thousand are under-employed. A third of this countrys children now
live in poverty.
Clearly, a fightback is urgently needed. The union movement, however,
is largely pushing a partnership model with employers and
the state. For instance the CTU (Council of Trade Unions) has just invited
top Irish union bureaucrat Peter Cassells to speak on the joys of partnership.
One of the few bright spots in terms of organised labour in New Zealand
has been the emergence of a new union, Unite, which is organising low-paid
and casual workers - especially young workers - in fast food outlets,
petrol stations and cinemas. In Christchurch, Unite is also attempting
to organise sex workers following the recent legalisation of brothels.
Unite is the fastest-growing union in the country and recently won an
important organising and pay battle at Reading Cinemas in Wellington.
In the past several months, the Engineers Union (EPMU), by far the largest
union but also saddled with one of the most rightwing leaderships and
tied to the Labour Party, has been organising a campaign for a five percent
pay rise. The NDU (National Distribution Union) and SFWU (Service and
Food Workers Union) have also taken up this campaign. Woefully inadequate
as this is, it has seen very large stop-work meetings around the country
and represents a modest rise in workers expectations. It also provides
opportunities for us in the Anti-Capitalist Alliance (ACA), which has
a small core of members in factories covered by the EPMU, to argue the
need for militant struggle and promote our broader politics.
Even more encouragingly, in the past few weeks groups of workers have
begun taking action for much larger claims. Auckland bus drivers have
gone on strike for a 16% increase. Meanwhile, NUPE (the National Union
of Public Employees) - probably the most left union but very small - has
put in a 30% claim for the section of healthworkers it covers.
Over the weekend of May 13-15, the current state of the working class
and the task of building a revolutionary movement within the class formed
the focus of the second national workplace organising conference of the
ACA: Workers Resistance 2005. The ACA was formed in 2002 by two small
Marxist groups and a layer of independent activists and has quickly grown
into the largest group on the far left, and the only one which is involved
in workplace organising across the country, from Auckland in the north
to Dunedin in the south. For instance, the ACA has been the main far left
group participating in the Unite organising drives. Most groups have abstained
and seem to feel uncomfortable attempting to organise workers as active
subjects rather than merely talking about them as objects.
WR 2005 was attended by activists from Auckland, Hamilton, Wellington,
Nelson, Christchurch and Dunedin. It featured sessions on the overall
state of the working class, including the double oppression of women,
Maori and Pacific Island workers; organising the unorganised, including
a report on how casualised workers were organised in Sydney in recent
years; the history of the Labour Party as a bosses party; fighting
back (including looking at the modest increase in workers struggles
in recent months); workers, unions and the law; the importance of internationalism,
which also featured a special guest from India talking about the Indian
working class; and bosses arguments and our counter-arguments, based
on a number of scenarios in industrial workplaces.
The gathering also featured a session on the importance of our press -
we produce a free weekly newssheet, a 12-page paper which comes out every
three weeks and a 40-page magazine which comes out several times a year.
After the open sessions, the ACA held a national organising meeting to
plan our work over the rest of the year. We will be bringing out pamphlets
on the Labour Party, the current state of the working class and a handbook
for workplace organising based on our experiences and those of a number
of sympathetic union activists. In the 2002 general election we ran in
four seats, but our expansion since then means that this year we are able
to run up to nine candidates in the four or five main cities.
We also decided to organise a winter study retreat in the central North
Island and a major national educational conference in Auckland after the
elections.
The ACA is very small but, pretty much alone on the far left, it has actually
grown since its formation and now has experienced activists in the five
main cities. Moreover, blue-collar workers now make up a majority of the
organisation.
The ACA has also been the site of the only successful far left regroupment
to have taken place in NZ in several decades, with the two small left
groups within the ACA fusing last year, to form the Revolutionary Workers
League. In addition, the ACA overall has attracted a number of former
members of other left currents - all of them blue collar workers - who
bring extremely valuable political capital to the organisation.
Phil Duncan
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