Members of the International Longshore and Warehouse Union — the ILWU — will lead the way by refusing to work their eight-hour morning shifts at ports in
Like many other unions and labor organizations nationwide, the ILWU has long opposed the war in
"It is not liberation," as an Iraqi labor leader, Ghasib Hassan, told delegates to a recent
The ILWU hopes the dramatic act of shutting down West Coast ports will inspire Americans everywhere to oppose the war. As one longshoreman said, "President Bush wants working and poor folks to fight his war … the sons and daughters of working-class families. We want them out of harm’s way."
That’s one of the main messages of the coalition, U.S. Labor Against the War (USLAW), which has been growing steadily since the invasion of
USLAW’s members, which represent millions of workers, significantly include the AFL-CIO and most of the federation’s 56 affiliated unions – among them, of course, the ILWU. No one can doubt USLAW’s ability to organize a massive protest such as ILWU is hoping to lead. For it was USLAW that put together the anti-war demonstration that drew half-a-million marchers to
USLAW is demanding primarily that "our elected leaders stop funding the war, bring our troops home and start meeting human needs here at home," notes Fred Mason, an AFL-CIO official in
In the meantime, says Gerald McEntee, a key public employee union leader, "We are spreading violence in
ILWU President Robert McEllrath has urged unions and allied groups outside the
The AFL-CIO’S opposition is particularly notable. For it marks the first time the federation has ever opposed a war, whether the president was a pro-labor Democrat or, as now, an anti-labor Republican. The AFL-CIO was an outspoken supporter of the Vietnam War and of the first Persian Gulf War. Even at the start of the
The longshoremen’s union, which was not affiliated with the AFL-CIO at the time, was firmly opposed to the
We can only hope — and hope fervently — that the union’s May Day show of strong opposition to the war in
Dick Meister is a San Francisco-based writer who has covered labor and political issues for a half-century as a reporter, editor and commentator. Contact him through his website, www.dickmeister.com
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