Thursday, 22 November 2012

Message From Vancouver


The relationship between Mexican unions and the companies that operate in our country, be they funded by Mexican or foreign capital, has been long and complicated.  Ever since the dawn of Mexican industrialism in the 19th century there has been a relationship between workers and businesspeople which, like everywhere around the world, has always been difficult and even conflictive. Whether the role of employer has been played by men from private companies or by the State itself, this relationship is a natural reflection of the universal class struggle, which has always been implacable.
Over the course of the 20th century, however, in this historic conflict between social classes the country had a philosophy of labour which, despite its many insufficiencies, ensured that this relationship worked within constructive boundaries so that through it economic and social development in Mexico could grow and benefit the great majority of workers as well as companies. The key was in the generous and modern vision of the Constituent Congress of 1917, which sprang from a desire to revise and rebel against the horrors and repressions of Porfirio Díaz’s dictatorial regime.
In the midst of the inevitable clash of interests during the last century, employers and workers achieved a coexistence which went through various stages, some of understanding and others of confrontation. The pinnacle of this relationship came in 1945 with the now-distant Pacto Obrero-Industrial, an agreement between workers and industry which proposed to make the most of the advantages that the Second World War offered to Mexican economic activity. The country used this to deliberately evade irreconcilable conflict between factors involved in production and to facilitate their mutual understanding so as to move forwards towards the great objective of national progress.
At the same time, workers had built a powerful system of unions, inspired by the 1917 Constitution itself, which checked the irrational exploitation of the workforce and established the foundations of constructive coexistence. However, as the years went by private interests gained ground on social interests. The expansion of industrial activity did not generate a spirit of respect on the part of employers for their workers and for the people, and many companies were dedicated to ensuring that their own interests prevailed. The results were already visible in the 1960s: ours was a process of development with poverty.
In subsequent years this unjust situation got worse. The interests of the business sector wormed their way into government ranks until we arrived at the current situation, in which it is impossible to tell if the people governing the country bear any resemblance to the representatives we elect every six years, or if certain powerful businesspeople simply control public authorities using pressure or economic blackmail. Many unions, as well as many politicians, have softened under this pressure and lost their way or betrayed their roots, becoming structures that are empty of all workerism. Others of us maintained our dignified presence and our autonomy in the face of private and state power. That is why I have invariably shown in articles, speeches, press releases and different forums that it is necessary to establish a new model of development in Mexico, one that rewrites the current terms of scandalous partiality in favour of the business sector.
We have recently had an experience which shows that, even in the greatest adversity, there are ways to advance and to open up new opportunities for workers. The great majority of companies which make up the mining, metalwork and steelwork sector in Mexico came to Vancouver, Canada, in November 2012 to revise their relationships with the National Miners’ Union, at the suggestion of this organisation. At this meeting we saw the promising perspective that even today, with the forces of the so-called free market running rampant the world over, crushing social justice, it is possible to develop bonds of respect and true constructive collaboration between workers and employers in Mexico, to create jobs and to boost productivity and efficiency in the sector. And this happens despite the fact that for more than six years the Miners’ Union has been subjected to one of the most perverse political, judicial and occupational persecutions that has ever been seen by inept conservative governments of the National Action Party, which fortunately has not been re-elected, aided by a few businessmen who are determined to make unionism disappear.
In Vancouver we defined a more positive direction and destination for worker-employer relations in Mexico today. In the inevitable conjunction of workers and companies, neither side can get rid of the other because they are mutually dependent, and as such the realistic approach is to understand one another with complete mutual respect. This respect must above all be extended towards workers, who have suffered most in the period under the so-called neoliberal model which manifests as an irrational exploitation of the workforce and the extreme concentration of wealth in a few hands.
The spirit of Vancouver is transcendental and was expressed in a document published in La Jornada on Tuesday 13 November 2012, which should be applied to all worker-employer relations in Mexico. This document stated, in short, that through rational delimitation of spheres of action and respectful mutual collaboration, it is possible to develop a bond for the progress that the country needs. The businesspeople, the men and women who attended, with their presence and their analysis and critical participation in this meeting, expressed their decision to take that path. This is the only way that we can overcome the economic crisis that currently afflicts the world.

Thursday, 8 November 2012

The Truth About Union Transparency


Obama’s victory spurs democracy on
The National Miners’ Union is a long-standing organisation in the Mexican workers’ movement, and since its founding 78 years ago it has developed a politics characterised by its genuine devotion to union autonomy. Faced with the changing circumstances of life in Mexico, the miners’ union, founded in the city of Pachuca in 1934, maintained and developed the different values and principles of independent and democratic unionism.
Autonomy is not a simple abstract concept, it is an active reality. It means freedom of association for unions, the defence of collective labour contracts, the right to strike, autonomous management of union internal elections for the selection of leaders and those people who represent the union in the various branches of its influence, the responsible and autonomous use of the  economic resources that affiliated workers give to the union organisation to support its fight and for administrative, legal and political functions, as well as complete transparency in the management of those resources. This transparency is demonstrated every day but the organisation demonstrates particular accountability every two years when workers meet at the biannual general meeting.
Felipe Calderón’s labour reform proposal, with its obvious intention to benefit employers, will be a political mistake for the immediate future, one that contains a special chapter about transparency and accountability for all Mexican unions. On this topic, Calderón and the PAN (Nation Action Party)’s proposal is a trap into which all ministers and senators have fallen because they fail to understand that with it this government is set on showing itself as a defender of democracy and union transparency. Nothing could be more false.
A significant piece of information for the Miners’ Union is that, although since its beginning the union has always practiced accountability and transparency, Calderón has pursued it to an extent never seen before. This reveals that his declared support of union democracy is underpinned by a total lack of consistency and plenty of doublespeak. The union statutes clearly establish that the only people whose responsibility it is to understand these issues are the member workers themselves, and it is by no means the business of third parties, be they civil servants, politicians, government or companies, because mine workers are neither naïve nor are they new to political or social life. Calderón and the PAN specifically mean to break the principle of union autonomy in this part of their proposal. And it is precisely this principle that certain Leftist and PAN legislators support, although they fail to appreciate that PAN as well as PRI members of congress have, with 80 percent support in the chambers, approved one of the most harmful reforms ever to affect Mexican workers.
If we definitively accept Calderón’s labour reform proposals, together with the attack on union autonomy, Calderón and the PAN would gain a victory that is underserved and unethical. They are asking unions to be obediently accountable to them and to what they call society, but at no point have they asked companies or government to be similarly accountable or practice this transparency in everything they do, so that the country also is kept informed about their business.
Their hypocrisy hides the deceptive nature of this proposed reform. According to its authors, only workers’ organisations, between which no distinctions are drawn,  operate outside the law. On the other hand, the unions’ accusers and pursuers from antisocial companies and the conservative government show off how morally perfect they are and how their actions are always inscribed in absolute legality. They claim that they consequently have no need to expose themselves to external public scrutiny because the practices of corruption and impunity that they employ are simply to be applauded rather than punished. We should not presume that there are laws and budgetary authorities that govern this kind of accountability, because it has always been evident that the most powerful companies are the ones who evade their legal and budgetary responsibilities to the greatest degree, on top of their paying reduced rates of tax to the treasury. Even governments let them off their multimillion dollar debts and give them tax rebates every year. Where in Calderón’s proposal is there even the slightest attempt to level the playing field between company bosses and unions?
Right-wing governments, unscrupulous politicians and some company bosses have been acting for decades like the defenders of big capital and the ruthless pursuers of all those of us who have been upstanding in our opposition of this unfair politics, in both union and social spheres. Now that Calderón is fortunately on his way out of presidential office, the time has come to intensify his attack. They want labour reform accompanied by a union counter-reform that puts legitimate workers’ organisations, and the people who work on behalf of them and their families, into the same category as organisations whose corruption meant they ceased to be authentic unions defending the rights of their members decades ago.
Legislators are not even aware of this, and they are joining the employers’ attempt to nullify all unions. But the Right knows what it is doing: establishing a huge concentration camp to irrationally exploit Mexican workers, without a trace of any organisation that might defend them.

Thursday, 25 October 2012

Acuña Recount Violates Freedom of Association


Recently, in Ciudad Acuña, Coahuila, a recount to determine bargaining agent status with respect to a collective contract at the multinational assembly plant Arneses y Accesorios de México, part of the PKC Group, a company plagued by cheating, illegalities and fraud, granted CTM Coahuila (the Confederation of Mexican Workers) and PKC a rigged victory. The National Miners’ Union’s experience there has sent the very important message that workers across Mexico will no longer put up with being dragged along or squashed by the allied forces of obsolete businesspeople, old corporatist unionism and state and federal governments who act against their legitimate interests and their rights.
This was a further expression of changes taking place in the world of workers. It confirms our deep-rooted perception that the Mexican people are not conformist, but rather they are brave fighters. The very close vote there, with a margin of only 198 votes out of a total 7528 voters who as a result of threats and pressures favoured CTM Coahuila’s union corporatism, shows that neither the PKC company nor the workers’ centre defeated the decided attitude of the workers at this assembly plant on the border. The results were positive because the workers were in no way defeated, rather they opened a path to dignity and union autonomy which in the future will reverse the recent unfavourable result.
This leads us to various important conclusions. Firstly, that victory was snatched from the authentic workers by the corruption and betrayal of CTM Coahuila, clearly complicit with PKC’s corporate terrorism of and covered up by the municipal, state and federal governments. The PAN (National Action Party) governments’ contempt for the working class is what has allowed the emergence of these new slave-labour concentration camps.
Secondly, that a great democratic workers’ movement has started to build on the border in Ciudad Acuña and in all the assembly industries, and this is a major historical advance for a working class which has been abandoned for many years and condemned to a life of poverty and marginalisation. Despite the efforts of multinational capital, allied with the Coahuila political elites and the mercenary cooperation of local media, as well as the corporate servility of the weak CTM Coahuila, today the workers of the Arneses y Accesorios de México assembly plant, a subsidiary of the PKC company backed by Finnish capital, have taken a first step towards breaking their chains. Miners and democratic organisations across the world will continue to support this movement so as to guarantee their rights to freedom of association and to political and moral victory, just as they have wholeheartedly and unconditionally done for many years.
Thirdly, that the figures from the union recount eloquently express, better than any argument, the fact that workers, men and above all women, who make up over 60 per cent of the workforce in assembly plants across the country, will no longer tolerate brutal exploitation as a product of economic necessity, with no rights or legal protection and no knowledge of the protection contracts that companies draw up in their shady pseudo unions in order to mercilessly abuse their power. The fact that from an electoral register of  7528 workers no fewer than 2546 votes were cancelled (33.8 per cent) shows the serious irregularity tolerated and promoted by the Federal Council for Conciliation and Arbitration. The other proportions were, then, 2311 votes for the miners’ union workers’ model (30.7 per cent) and 2509 for PKC-CTM (33.3 per cent). The difference between the two options was only 198 votes (2.6 per cent).
The fourth and final conclusion is that, in terms of this recount, it is evident that the local and federal authorities joined forces to prevent the self-determination of the workers in choosing the organisation that represents them. They were also complicit with PKC, which at all times blocked the way into the manufacturing installations for members of the miners’ union-democratic workers’ option, and intimidated the workers for three months, permitting opponents of the CTM-PKC to proselytise during working hours. The role of local media, which we know are managed by the Coahuila state government, was equally asymmetrical: time and support were given to PKC-CTM and not a single minute to the miners’ proposal. What is more, through corporate terrorism, intimidation and constant blackmail, PKC itself and the weak, sell-out CTM Coahuila disseminated the libellous message that victory for miner’s union’s would cause PKC to leave Acuña.
This union recount is an example of the immoral degradation of labour policy under the PAN governments: Vicente Fox named Francisco Javier Salazar minister and Felipe Calderón did the same for Javier Lozano, and they have been the worst Ministers for Labour that the country has ever had. How much have these mediocre, extemporising and corrupt men, who should be condemned to the dustbin of history, cost Mexico in illegal conflicts? These civil servants have been a disgrace and they deserve political judgement both nationally and internationally, although for now they feel like they enjoy protection and impunity.
Our country must not and cannot support this unholy alliance of government, business and pseudo unions because with all this respectable politics will be shipwrecked. Under these circumstances, the approval of labour reform will only formalise the exploitation which is currently practiced illegally.

Thursday, 13 September 2012

Mexico is a Minefield


Mexico’s current political situation can be summed up in a few words. The outgoing PAN (National Action Party) government has planted a series of unresolved issues that it means to pass onto the next government. Felipe Calderón has been doing this at the last minute, among many other things with the prominent project for labour reform that he has presented to the Chamber of Representatives, and which from the outset attempts to achieve a new labour statute. This leaves no room for doubt about his unfair and arbitrary attitude towards workers and unions, who through his whole six-year term he has devoted himself to beating, minimising or subjecting to an antisocial policy with unquestionably corporate undertones.
This intention could not be any clearer. It consists of, by way of this reform, bringing unions and workers to their knees before the most negative interests of businesspeople, which moreover cannot easily be approved in what remains of this years legislative work. Improvisations have never given positive results, above all in areas as important as that of labour relations, which so profoundly affects the country’s future and its development and should have been the motivation for a respectful and deeply democratic consultation with all the sectors involved. As things stand we are faced with the legislative equivalent of a dawn raid.
With this initiative, Calderón makes a fine show of his boundless hate of the working class, and he will also, if his proposal is approved, harm the pro-government corporate unions that have unquestioningly obeyed his commands. No reward for them either.
But in terms of many other issues, which the outgoing government was unable to resolve in its time in office due to its evident incompetence, because it had not prepared adequate strategies and because it launched blindly into supposed solutions, it is now trying to hand down problems that the new government should not have to take on. As the old saying goes: let the dead bury their own dead. Which does not apply solely to the tens of thousands of people who have lost their lives in the misguided war on drugs trafficking and organised crime, to which there seems to be no end and which the current dying government means to pass on as a central responsibility of those who will succeed them on the 1st of December this year. Those tens of thousands of fatalities are Felipe Calderón’s responsibility. That means that, quite simply, Calderón wants to wash his hands with the President who will replace him, an attitude that is totally irresponsible and lacking in republican responsibility, characteristics associated with the worst authoritarian leaders in history.
This is only in the aspect of public security, but in social matters, as well as in the fight against poverty, social security, financing for rural areas and industry, education, economics or finance, fair economic redistribution and support for small and medium job-creating industries, there are so many unresolved matters that who knows what the government has been doing for the last six years. It did not have the talent or the maturity to do anything more important that simply trying to remain in power using superficial media techniques, merely to project an image. This, however, could not cover up the reality, which is not that of their optimistic, fabricated declarations.
In fact, what they are doing is leaving landmines everywhere, the same mines that take so many lives after a conflict has come to an end. They are bequeathing to the Mexican people and to the new government a Mexico that resembles a minefield. The bombs that are left in a country’s political and social arena are at least as deadly as those planted in battlefields.
It depends on the new authorities to work out what their commitment will be in the face of this great failure and irresponsibility. The administration entering office on the 1st of December cannot and should not take this on as its own if it acts according to the law and a strict political and moral logic, as we hope the new government will do throughout the coming years. Nothing would be more harmful for the Republic than if from one day to the next they took on the issues left hanging by the previous government as if they were their own: such issues must not and should not be passed on, as dictated by administrative decency and, above all, political ethics.
The manifestations of dissatisfaction and anger that are currently visible in large swathes of the population will be magnified to unimaginable levels if the new administration takes on those issues as their own instead of leaving them to the previous government. If they assume these social debts, we will surely see increasing impoverishment among Mexicans and further collective depression which will drag the country towards greater failure.
The new government must become aware that Mexicans are frustrated and indignant, and that this will translate into dissatisfaction and anger in the face of such abuse and exploitation. Let there be no doubt. The new authorities are politically obliged tread cautiously in the minefield that they are inheriting from previous administrations.