Prospects for Real Solidarity: Contradictions
and Cross-Pressures
excerpted from the book
Workers of the World Undermined
American Labor's role in U.S. foreign policy
by Beth Sims
South End Press, 1992, paper
p91
With its global network, its multiple ties to the U.S. government,
and the continued dominance of its conservative hierarchy, the
AFL-CIO seems well-positioned to continue business as usual in
its international operations. Yet the future of the AFL-CIO's
foreign policy and its status as the vanguard democracy-intervention
organization are uncertain. Contradictory influences are at work
which could either shift the federation in more progressive directions
or reinforce the status quo.
Both at home and abroad, the federation is operating in a
more complex political environment. The internationalization of
the economy is laying waste to the notion that U.S. workers necessarily
profit from the overseas adventures of U.S. corporations. Likewise,
the contradictions of the AFL-CIO's alliance with government and
business are chickens which are coming home to roost in the form
of assaults on the material status of workers both in the United
States and overseas. A rank-and-file attack on some aspects of
the AFL-CIO's foreign policy, increasingly independent stances
taken by some of its overseas affiliates, and the breakup of the
Soviet bloc have all undermined the traditional foundations of
the AFL-CIO's policies overseas.
In addition to these influences, labor no longer stands alone
as the sole vanguard of the "democracy-building" strategy.
It now shares the field with a multitude of other players, ranging
from business associations to women's organizations. Moreover,
fiscal pressures on Washington have clamped off budgetary increases
for the labor institutes. Overall AID funding to labor has decreased
over the last few years. The National Endowment for Democracy
has made up the shortfall, but the institutes are not finding
their budgets swollen with massive funding increases, at least
for regional core programs. Even so, some of their commitments
are expanding-to Eastern Europe and the states of the former Soviet
Union, for example-and many of these initiatives are specifically
requested by Washington and come with earmarked funding.
Meanwhile, the U.S. government is committing itself ever more
completely to the use of private organizations to intervene "overtly"
overseas, and labor still has the most far-flung network and time-tested
expertise of all the groups now performing government-funded activities
abroad. Moreover, its links to the U.S. government and to the
increasingly important intervention network are firm. Labor is
still a strategic sector for economic and political reasons, if
not for Cold War purposes.
All these factors produce cross-pressures on the AFL-CIO whose
outcomes are unpredictable. There is, however, a "window
of opportunity" through which progressive labor might launch
a new foreign policy, working both within and outside of the labor
federation. Rising from the grassroots, such a foreign policy
would seek international labor unity and social justice-not the
expansion of a U.S. sphere of influence which is proving less
and less hospitable to workers both in the United States and overseas.
... The decline of the United States as an economic power,
coupled with the internationalization of capital and the growing
power of transnational corporations (TNCs) have eroded U.S. labor's
position in the global economy. TNCs take advantage of and try
to perpetuate low wage levels and labor repression in the third
world in order to increase their profits and reduce their social
responsibilities to labor. The resulting phenomenon of runaway
shops has fueled job loss, declining wage levels, employment insecurity,
and threats to trade union rights in the developed world. "American
workers," according to one analyst, "have been plunged
into a cold bath of global competition."
The hemorrhage of well-paid U.S. manufacturing jobs to assembly
shops overseas has stripped traditional AFL-CIO foreign policy
of two of its major underpinnings. New resources secured by U.S.
imperial advances such as the war in the Persian Gulf do not necessarily
translate into enhanced productivity, an expanding job market,
or job security in the United States. Instead, U.S.-based transnational
corporations may utilize such resources to fuel production in
their plants overseas. The TNCs reap profits from these resources
and productive facilities that do not return to the U.S. worker
in the form of increased wages and benefits, but in the form of
consumer imports for which they must pay increasingly large portions
of their shrinking paychecks. In addition, the continued repression
of third world workers, often at starvation wages under intolerable
working conditions, impedes the development of markets overseas
for goods produced by U.S. labor.
Aside from these problems inherent in the traditional support
of the AFL-CIO for U.S. expansionism and global capitalism, there
are deep-seated contradictions manifested by labor's support of
Washington-backed union programs while other government funding
explicitly promotes social sectors and macroeconomic policies
that hurt workers. Through the Center for International Private
Enterprise, the National Republican Institute for International
Affairs, and an assortment of other government and nongovernmental
agencies, the National Endowment for Democracy and entities like
AID are promoting economic and political forces that favor business
interests over those of workers.
In El Salvador, for example, a Salvadoran business group funded
by AID ran an advertisement in Bobbin, a clothing industry trade
magazine, that showed an attractive young woman working quietly
at a sewing machine. The advertisement pulled back the covers
on the strange bedfellows of the AFL-CIO in its government-funded
overseas activities:
Rosa Martinez produces apparel for U.S. markets on her sewing
machine in E1 Salvador. You can hire her for 57 cents an hour.
Rosa is more than just colorful. She and her coworkers are
known for their industriousness, reliability and quick learning.
They make E1 Salvador one of the best buys in the [Caribbean Basin
Initiative].
Most of the organizations funded by agencies like NED and
AID advocate free-market, neoliberal economic strategies. Frequently
such strategies directly harm workers, especially those in the
third world. For instance, privatization of publicly owned enterprises
and cutbacks in government-sponsored social services lead to a
loss of jobs, declining wages, and reduced or eliminated subsidies
on basics like food, medical care, utilities, heating fuel, and
transportation.
Similarly, when import duties are lowered, domestic economies
become vulnerable to increased foreign economic penetration and
competition. These influences often lead to weakening or closure
of domestic enterprises, with a subsequent reduction in wage levels
and benefits, tightened labor restrictions, and even job loss.
In like manner, deregulation negatively affects workers in both
the developed countries and the third world. It weakens important
safeguards such as occupational health and safety provisions and
can lead to the reduction or elimination of various social welfare
benefits provided by employers.
Such policies are being pressed by Washington and its business
allies across the world, and the labor institutes of the AFL-CIO
are providing implicit backing to them. In Africa and Eastern
Europe, for instance, both of which have been especially hard
hit by such policies, the AFL-CIO is promoting job-creation schemes
and volunteer efforts to soften the blow. A more effective strategy
for labor would require the federation to mount a full-scale analysis
and rejection of such policies. Although the AFL-CIO has made
some attempts in this direction, particularly in its analysis
of the international debt, its efforts have been primarily rhetorical.
Most significantly, the federation and its institutes have adopted
band-aid solutions such as job-creation schemes but have avoided
mobilizing workers for political actions against neoliberal policies
and the national and international forces which advance them.
Ironically, this is the case even though the federation recognizes
the problems for workers of an increasingly integrated global
economy. As observed by AFL-CIO President Kirkland in 1983, American
workers have a vested self-interest in the improvement of wages
and working conditions in other countries. They cannot compete
with workers earning 50 or 75 cents an hour; nor can such wages
generate the purchasing power to sustain markets for American
exports. And with the proliferation of multinational corporations,
organized workers in the United States need counterpart workers'
organizations abroad with which they can develop common strategies
in response to common problems.
Even with this recognition, however, the AFL-CIO hierarchy
has had difficulty jettisoning old ideas about the world in order
to keep pace with rapid global economic and political transformations.
"The top leadership of the federation is full of bureaucrats,"
observed one activist on Central America labor issues. "They
kill activism even if they're not ideologically committed to killing
it." Another activist questioned whether the federation's
staff in the international affairs department would be capable
of escaping from the Cold War straitjacket that has shaped postwar
labor programs. "These guys have become appendages of the
U.S. defense system," the unionist declared. "We [in
the rank and file] don't like what they're doing in foreign policy."
... Sentiments like these have stimulated increasing opposition
to the AFL-CIO hierarchy and its foreign policy both within the
federation and among its associates overseas. During the 1980s-spurred
by crises in Central America and South Africa-the U.S. rank and
file's willingness to accept foreign policy stands enunciated
by the AFL-CIO eroded significantly. In a historic shift, conflicts
over the AFL-CIO's foreign policy positions in Central America
were pushed to the floor of the 1985 convention in Anaheim, California.
For the first time ever, disagreements which were normally hashed
out behind the scenes exploded in floor debates which directly
challenged the AFL-CIO's executive officers over the conduct of
the federation and its institutes abroad.
Over the past few years, this increasingly savvy opposition
from rank-and-file and mid-level labor officials in the United
States has set some limits-moderate and irregular, to be sure,
but hard-won and extremely important, nonetheless-on the freedom
of movement of the AFL-CIO in some countries overseas.
p97
With the breakup of the Soviet bloc and the consequent unraveling
of its international labor arm-the World Federation of Trade Unions-the
U.S. labor institutes are facing an evaporating enemy. The concept
of promoting "free," (i.e. anticommunist and pro-U.S.)
unions is rapidly becoming outdated and irrelevant. As one top
union staffer described it, "With the collapse of communism,
the AFL's fig leaf is gone. The rationale which they used to justify
their activities has been removed." The challenge at this
point is to develop worldwide linkages among workers to combat
an exploitative international division of labor which keeps workers
competing with each other rather than confronting the economic
and political structures that produce exploitation. "We all
have the same hard life," a foreign unionist explained. "We
are bound together by one string.''
Unless there is a major shift at the leadership levels of
the AFL-CIO, however, the labor institutes are unlikely to rise
to this important task. As it is, they continue to promote U.S.
national interests over those of their natural constituencies,
while declining to ally themselves with the most progressive and
militant sectors of labor. In these ways they perpetuate the expansion
of U.S. power and, in the process, debilitate workers around the
world.
What is needed therefore is the further development of the
rank-and-file foreign policy and accompanying strategies whose
broad outlines have been drawn over the last decade. An increasing
sense of internationalism has characterized this emerging foreign
policy. A 1990 conference of unionists referred to it as a "one-world
strategy" which mimics the global corporate strategies of
the TNCs. Held in Miami under the auspices of the International
Federation of Chemical, Energy and General Workers' Unions-an
influential ITS-the meeting involved unionists from chemical,
energy, and rubber unions in 30 countries. The "one-world
strategy" elaborated at the meeting treats the world as an
interconnected and interdependent whole, emphasizing the common
needs and shared fates of workers around the world.
Cross-national linkages in pursuit of sharply elevated conditions
for workers everywhere, as well as an analysis of the diminished
importance for labor of nationalism in an age of TNC dominance
are components of this new foreign policy.
Ron Blackwell, an economist with the Amalgamated Clothing
and Textile Workers Union, has participated in the development
of this new vision. "We recognize that international economic
integration will continue, and that wages and working conditions
will equalize," Blackwell explains. "The task is to
build international worker solidarity to assure that wages and
working conditions tend to equalize at a higher rather than a
lower level.'
This objective requires workers to join hands in efforts to
shape the emerging international economy, not just react to it.
Joint international actions to promote adoption and enforcement
of a single international code of conduct for transnational corporations
is one element of this strategy. Such a code, according to the
unionists involved in formulating it, would outline corporate
responsibilities not only to labor, but also regarding environmental
issues and similar concerns for society at large. Joe Uhlein,
a representative of the AFL-CIO's Industrial Union Department,
described fundamental components of such a code:
The code would be enforceable whenever a corporation, its
agents, or its property entered, operated in, or left a country.
The code might require corporations to report investment intentions
upon entering a country and disclose any hazardous materials imported.
It might forbid employment of children or environmental discharge
of pollutants. It might require companies closing an operation
to provide advance notification and severance pay. The code would
include a 'neutrality clause' under which a company would agree
as a matter of corporate policy not to oppose union organizing
in its plants, branches, or subsidiaries in any country.
Even more important, however, is the long-range objective
of such actions: to create a global environment supportive of
the individuals whose labor keeps the world's economic wheels
in motion and whose lives must be lived out in the surroundings
ground down by those wheels. To create such an environment, it
is necessary to end the false competition between "privileged"
workers in developed countries and impoverished workers in the
third world, or between "communist" and "anticommunist"
unionists. The current competition-fueled by underdevelopment
and labor repression in the third world and a misguided call for
labor-business "harmony" in the developed capitalist
countries-drags wages down and undermines worker rights everywhere.
The new labor foreign policy aims to link workers around the world
in a common front to press for their demands against government
and business.
These international bonds are made possible in part by the
communications revolution." From fax machines to electronic
mail and even satellite links, new communications technology has
the potential to join otherwise isolated unionists in a web of
information and coordinated solidarity actions. It has already
facilitated coordinated action for a variety of U.S. unions confronting
foreign companies and their anti-union efforts in this country.
Because such networks are relatively inexpensive, these communications
hook-ups also have the potential to democratize labor's foreign
policy by breaking the hold of the AFL-CIO hierarchy on information
about foreign affairs.
In addition to a renewed emphasis on internationalism, the
foreign policy being constructed by progressive labor over the
past decade has attempted to break down divisions among groups
within national boundaries. It has been marked by the cooperation
of exploited and oppressed groups and their supporters throughout
multiple sectors of society. From churches to trade unions, from
women's groups to ethnically-based organizations, from homeless
advocacy groups to associations promoting an end to the arms race,
boundaries have been breaking down and linkages developing among
diverse groups with a common desire to increase equity and social
justice both nationally and internationally. The 1990 labor strategizing
meeting in Miami called for just such a strengthening of the ties
between labor unions, the community, and environmental groups.
Utilizing international labor structures such as the ITS and
ad hoc cross-union coalitions, unionists have mounted joint efforts
to force companies to redress worker grievances in places as far
distant as Central America, South Africa, South Korea, and the
United States. They have also joined in activities which, on their
face, are more explicitly political in objective. In response
to the U.S. war in the Persian Gulf, for example, labor councils
and unions around the country passed resolutions calling for negotiated
solutions. Their participation amplified and refined the protests
of other antiwar organizations by articulating the negative effects
on labor of war in the Gulf They also spotlighted the self-interest
of U.S. transnational corporations as a factor in the country's
war fever.
Such international and intersectoral coalitions are antidotes
to the divisive approach to labor pursued by the AFL-CIO since
the end of World War II. With the demise of the Cold War, red-baiting
progressive unionists will be less effective as a strategy to
divide and conquer the world's labor movements in the interests
of U.S. empire-building. As the "new world order" falls
into place, there is an opportunity for progressive unionists
to blow away the AFL-CIO's anticommunist smokescreen and point
out the damage done to workers by a global capitalism more interested
in the pursuit of profits than in the pursuit of equity. A shrinking
world and an increasingly transnational economic system offer
the best postwar opportunity ever to set aside the damaging assumptions
of the AFL-CIO's foreign policy and get on with the business of
building truly global solidarity among the world's workers.
Workers
of the World Undermined
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