On Nov. 29, analysts making
12-month price forecasts for General Motors Co. projected $45.16 per
share—an increase of almost 23 per cent over the current
$36.76. This is great holiday news, if you are shareholder. That
includes the GM directors who receive 60 per cent of their
compensation in stock options. It is critical, according to
business schools, to tie the interests of your directors to the
interests of the shareholder owners. But the interests of the workers
are not considered so tenderly.
The joyous forecast coincides with
announced plans by the auto giant to halt production at five
factories in North America and cut about 14,000 jobs in the company’s
most significant restructuring since its bankruptcy and taxpayer
bailout in 2008 by Stephen Harper and Barack Obama.
GM warned last summer that the
trade war instigated by President Donald Trump could force job cuts
in the United States. Trump was irate with GM, tweeting that he was
“very disappointed” with the company and CEO Mary Barra for plans
to idle plants in Ohio, Michigan, and Maryland.
“Nothing being closed in Mexico &
China. The U.S. saved General Motors, and this is the THANKS we
get,” Trump wrote. But the Donald misses the point. Just like him,
GM does what makes the most profit. It is moving to production of
autonomous EV vehicles.
GM has a plan for the estimated $6
billion to be gleaned annually from the plant closures. The
all-electric, fully automatic, no-steering-wheel, no-pedals
version of The Bolt is supposed to be on public highways by
2019.
However, what the world really
needs is non-polluting mass transportation—buses, street cars,
trains, and ships. Left to private, profit-motivated companies, the
massive waste embodied in private cars will continue. GM makes more
money that way.
The only way to get the efficient
public transportation systems we need is to nationalize the vehicle
business and retool the existing hi-tech, modern plants. That way
workers can be retrained, not scrapped. Workers know everything about
building cars. They can manage the factories. The owners’ skill is
in siphoning off profits and spiriting them away to low tax havens.
We simply do not need that skill. Let’s throw the bosses on the
scrap heap.
GM, over its history, has a long,
very shabby anti-social record. It has been a leader in some pretty
bad causes. They include the fight against regulations to enforce
auto safety for consumers, the battle against safety for its
employees, and the drive against environmental safety for the human
race. GM led the resistance to greater fuel efficiency laws aimed at
reducing greenhouse gasses emitted from engine exhaust pipes.
Generations ago, GM led a
consortium that bought streetcar lines, ripped out the tracks, set up
bus systems, and sold them. It also bought the rights to an electric
car and stifled it decades ago. GM, quite simply, is a capitalist
corporation that operates exclusively for private profit. It has
committed crime after crime to that end.
Under capitalism, the doctrine of
individual “liberty” asserts the absolute right of capitalists to
make “free” decisions about their property, entirely in their own
interests—even when it throws thousands out of work, leaves
children without support, and causes the collapse of whole
communities. Their liberty is simply imposed on workers and their
families without their consent.
What about our “liberty” as
workers? Up to Nov. 27, the Canadian Union of Postal Workers
conducted rotating strikes against Canada Post, a Crown Corporation,
opposing management-imposed speed-up, compulsory overtime, and pay
discrimination against rural, mostly female mail carriers.
The Liberal government of Justin
Trudeau and the “opposition” Conservative Party worked smoothly
together to violate the workers’ “liberty” to withdraw their
labour, their right to free collective bargaining, including the
right to strike, and ordered the workers to end their job actions or
face stiff fines.
Bosses can impoverish thousands of
workers, but workers can’t even slow down the mail, including the
packages shipped by brutally low-wage employers like Amazon. Only the
labour-based New Democratic Party spoke loudly against the move. NDP
MPs walked out of the House of Commons in protest. So much for
workers’ “liberty.”
The Conservative government in
Ontario, Canada’s most populous province, under Premier Doug
Ford, a hard right-winger and scion of a rich family, has moved
quickly since June 7 when it was elected. His Progressive
Conservative Party attained 61% of the seats, with only 40.5% of the
votes cast, in the first-past-the-post electoral system. The voter
turnout was only 58 per cent.
Ford has stripped many rights and
statutory benefits from Ontario workers, cancelled the planned
increase to a $15/hour minimum wage, cut welfare increases and made
disability benefits harder to obtain. Under his slogan “Ontario is
Open for Business,” he is forcing workers to labour under
deteriorating wages, benefits, and working conditions, fostering a
level of desperation most convenient for the Walmart and Amazon
tycoons.
Ford seems to think he has every
right to destroy the hard-won gains of workers. But he says he can do
nothing about the GM plant closures and accuses federal politicians
and union leaders of peddling false hope to the workers.
UNIFOR, Canada’s largest private
sector union with 315,000 members, represents about 25,000
autoworkers including the 2500 in the GM Oshawa plant. Jerry Dias,
UNIFOR president, demands that Trump and Trudeau impose a 40 per cent
tariff on GM cars made in Mexico. His line is to support his Canadian
members by imposing cuts on the lower paid Mexican workers. A
spokesman for Trudeau said Dias’ proposal was not discussed with
Trump.
Dias also says he may urge a mass
autoworker walkout from all Canadian and U.S. plants, but a United
Auto Workers union spokesman in the U.S. says his union has no such
plans.
Actually, a walkout is an excellent
idea. But the American labour brass is even more ossified than
its Canadian counterpart. The UAW still supports the capitalist
Democratic Party instead of setting up an independent labour-based
political party like the NDP, which the Canadian union bureaucrats
dominate (although Dias and UNIFOR have backed the Liberal Party of
late, with bitter results).
Dias’ proposals simply have no
weight unless he gets the backing of the workers themselves. The
leaders of UNIFOR like to parade as the workers’ saviours. This
highly paid, privileged layer of union bureaucrats can make a big
noise; however, they bargained away hard-won worker gains like equal
pay and good pensions. They accept the so-called rights of the owners
to do as they please and fear the power of a mobilized union rank and
file.
In the end, it is only the
mobilized rank and file that can force action by GM and the
capitalist politicians. Mobilizing the mass power of the auto workers
and of other unions in solidarity can bring home the point that
workers together can stop production, choke profits, and force boss
concessions—instead of making concessions themselves.
>> The article above was written by Gary Porter, and is reprinted from Socialist Action.
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