Epitaph on the Oshawa Fightback
The harsh
reality of the Unifor – GM agreement to “save” the jobs of Oshawa GM workers is
undeniable. Together GM workers and about
2,500 low paid workers employed by the supplier companies located in and around
GM Oshawa will see a workforce of over 5,000 shrink to about 300. What’s more, the long term employment of the
300 GM workers who will survive the assembly plant’s closure is uncertain. No one is guaranteeing these remaining jobs
to be located in a small stamping operation will survive past the 2020 Unifor –
GM contract negotiations. GM’s promises that
there could eventually be up to 500 jobs are as worthless as its unkept job
security promises to Oshawa workers in the past.
The overlooked,
poorly paid workers in the supplier operations are the most victimized by this
agreement. They get nothing. By contrast, senior Oshawa GM workers
eligible to retire or nearly eligible to retire can either get lucrative
retirement incentives with pensions or the opportunity to fill a small number
of job openings the agreement will create in what’s left of the St. Catharines
GM plant.
Oshawa will be
devastated. To grasp this one only needs
to recall how union leaders always said that every auto industry job generates
six or more jobs in surrounding communities.
Do the math in order to grasp the magnitude of the economic hit Oshawa faces. Oshawa only needs to recall what happened to
Flint, Michigan after GM gutted its operations there slashing the workforce to
a fraction of what it once was leaving behind a desperate population now living
with a water supply poisoned by lead.
This sorry outcome is all
there is to show for an ineffective Unifor fightback to save GM Oshawa. Hampered by a glaring lack of support from
the rest of a labour movement (Unifor withdrew from the CLC in 2018), little
support from Unifor leadership where GM
has other operations and an impotent boycott that pandered to xenophobia by
targeting GM vehicles made by Mexican autoworkers this fightback was little
more than a minor nuisance to GM.
Indeed, GM relished the lack of support for the fightback outside of
Oshawa. GM had to be especially pleased
by the UAW’s lack of interest in supporting a Unifor fightback.
Things did not have to
turn out so badly. GM retirees in Oshawa
and St. Catharines, who are the backbone of what activism there still is in the
auto sector, showed this. They showed
more willingness to fight back than the active members with the notable
exception of the Oshawa GM workers who staged brief sit-in strikes immediately after
the closure announcement. The retirees
also showed a degree of radicalism absent from auto since the Oshawa
Fabrication Plant was occupied during the successful twenty day strike against
GM in 1996.
Oshawa retirees did this by calling for
the nationalization of GM Oshawa and retooling it to produce future-oriented,
green vehicle technology. Likewise, St.
Catharines retirees wrote to Unifor President Jerry Dias calling for the plant
to be handed over to the workforce and the community to continue operations much
like idled factories in Argentina have been successfully occupied and run by
the workers who worked in them.
Unifor’s national leadership disregarded these
ideas. The agreement to ostensibly save
300 jobs is all they came up with instead.
In effect, the Oshawa and
St. Catharines retirees saw the closure announcement as an opportunity to save
far more jobs, protect the community of Oshawa and produce non carbon emitting
vehicles suited to addressing the accelerating climate change crisis. Top Unifor leadership and leading federal and
provincial politicians inexcusably failed to do likewise. They weren’t interested. Just as they aren’t interested in doing what’s
necessary to tackle the accelerating climate change crisis.
Consequently, most of the
affected workers face a fate of trying to make it in an increasingly low wage
economy involving more and more precarious work. Meanwhile time is running out to seriously
address an accelerating climate change crisis.
Every challenge presents
an opportunity. GM’s Oshawa closure
announcement presented an opportunity to address the crisis facing these
workers and the ecological crisis threatening the planet. That opportunity was squandered. It was squandered by leaders lacking vision who
demonstrated their subservience to Capital by bending to the will of GM.
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