Sit-down at Republic
Will it open new doors for labor?
Roger Bybee
"When capital is so mobile and mobilized, you have to break out of the box," advises longtime activist and scholar France Fox Piven Breaking out of the box is precisely what a six-day sit-down strike by United Electrical Radio and Machine Workers Local 1110 did last December, producing a remarkable victory at Republic Windows and Doors in
The victory was particularly significant because the action contained all the dynamic elements that have generally been lacking from American labor’s playbook in recent decades:
§ An informed, unified, and audacious membership prepared to take risks.
§ Union leadership fully committed to fully supporting workers’ unconventional actions at risk to the union treasury.
§ The ability to formulate and project a compelling message that links the workers’ cause to the broader public interest.
§ A willingness to adopt a tactic so powerful that corporate-friendly politicians have declared it illegal.
Can this militancy be used by other unions or are the conditions at Republic hard to replicate? With corporations limiting their reliance on any one plant, does labor have the power to inflict direct pain through militant action at a specific choke-point?
The sit-down strike not only blocks the movement of inventory for normal distribution or relocation of machinery in preparation for a permanent closing, it also asserts workers’ years of investment of their labor in plants that are about to be closed because of decisions made by distant, highly paid CEOs Yet
Conversely, Corporate America has fully mobilized its resources and adopted wide-ranging strategies to maximize its power and weaken labor. Through funding right-wing think tanks and right-wing media, it has narrowed mainstream discourse to variants of Thomas Friedman’s infamous "golden straitjacket" design, which gives near-absolute freedom to corporations without any "rigidities" such as reciprocal economic rights for workers and communities. This undiluted free-market ideology has been translated into government policy through candidates’ dependence on corporate donors, shaping corporate policies and subsidies to create astonishing levels of inequality. The richest 1 percent (about 300,000 people) now earn 22 percent of all
The 280 Republic workers were faced not only with the firm’s abrupt (and illegal) three-day notice that their plant was closing (but with theBank of America’s refusal to extend the company credit necessary to pay workers’ accrued vacation and severance benefits. In responding with a sit-down strike, the workers effectively held the plant’s equipment and inventory hostage and spotlighted Bank of America.
The intransigence of Bank of America –which had received $45 billion in federal grants and $118 billion in loan guarantees precisely to get the flat-lining economy revived–infuriated not only the members of UE Local 1110, but wide sectors of the public.. Even President-elect Barack Obama endorsed the workers’ action: “The workers who are asking for the benefits and payments that they have earned,” he said on December 7, “I think they’re absolutely right and understand that what’s happening to them is reflective of what’s happening across this economy.”
Central to the workers’ strategy was an appeal aimed at reaching the broadest possible audience. “We made our message everybody’s message," explained Carl Rosen, president of the UE’s Western District based in
Both Republic—which had covertly started to shift equipment to a secret new non-union plant in
The current phase of the struggle ended with a Christmas-season climax straight out of It’s a Wonderful Life. Not only was money-hungry Bank of America, playing the Mr. Potter role to the hilt, thoroughly pounded, but California-based Serious Materials, a "green" firm specializing in energy-saving doors and windows, miraculously appeared, deus ex machina, to purchase the plant, retain the workforce, and recognize the union.
To put a Christmas bow on top, "Obama’s stimulus package contains money for retrofitting of schools and other public buildings, and weatherizing of low-income family homes," UE’s Mark Meinster points out. There are a number of elements that would benefit ‘green ‘building products." Serious Materials has already begun to bring in some UE members to get the plant in shape for re-starting full production [due to begin in early June]. Vice President Joe Biden recently visited the plant to hail the conjunction of the workers’ action with the
Administration’s stimulus plan and ‘green production" tax credits.
So popular was the workers’ cause during the sit-down that police action was never contemplated by elected officials, who saw where public sentiment was solidly lined up. Instead,
Despite national support, the Republic sit-down did not ignite a wave of similar actions. (Republic workers, however, did inspire non-union workers at the Colibri jewelry plant in
For New York Times reporter Steven Greenhouse, the contrast between the visible militancy in Europe and
But fears of job loss were moot at Republicwhere workers had already lost their jobs. Although Republic had violated the federal WARN Act, UE members knew that there was little likelihood that the law would be invoked in time to make a difference for them. "The workers decided they wanted to do this [the sit-down] democratically," recalls Leah Fried. "They were prepared . . . to chain themselves to the machinery and risk arrest. The national union and the regional staff were in total support."
"It’s illegal and contracts specifically ban [sit-down strikes]," admits Fried. "But the fifth of December was the last day of work, and there was no contract to be violated."
More important, "The members of the local realized that the money embodied in the machinery was either going to their pay or it was going up into to the ether and then into the coffers of Bank of America."
"We asked the workers, ‘Who all is in favor of staying?’ Some workers began crying,” she says. "That’s when it began, that Friday morning. The company wanted our people out by five, and they all said, ‘No!’ We said you’re going to have to drag us out of there. At that point, there was already a media presence in the plant."
Although mainstream media don’t cover labor well, they do cover the bailout and plant closings. “It became almost a feel-good story, here’s a group of workers doing something. And when you put a human face on an issue, it’s hard to demonize the people," she notes.
The bailout dimension was critical to the story’s appeal to the media and public, but it was also strategically necessary to put pressure on the real decision makers. "The reason we ultimately settled on the bank was practical,” says Fried. “The bank had been very deeply involved since August, and told them [Republic] they could not pay the workers or pay the WARN act. The bank took over the assets. We had a very deceitful employer, but we knew that Bank of America had the control and could resolve the crisis."
The highly supportive role of the UE at both the regional and national levels illustrates the union’s uniquely militant and member-driven ethos, observes Stanley Aronowitz, a sociologist and labor expert at
"But most unions have no understanding of this crisis, and are not interested in conflict. They’re worried about losing their treasuries and political support and will do everything to avoid it. Their philosophy: close the plant under the best possible circumstances."
Staughton Lynd, an activist in labor-community coalitions to save the steel industry in
In sharp contrast, as deindustrialization began to accelerate in the mid-1970s, sit-down strikes became a frequent response of workers in
However, all the elements present in the Republic victory—a passionately committed local willing to exert its strategic leverage at a one-plant corporation, the ability to develop a compelling message that resonated with the general public, and an exceptionally supportive national union, among others—are preconditions that exist only occasionally for U.S. labor. Corporations have duplicated production and distribution chains (excepting firms in the early stages of adopting just-in-time techniques) so that they are virtually invulnerable to militant local actions and can reverse the pressure by isolating local unions and communities for concessions through relocation threats.
AlthoughAlthough some layoffs are doubtless necessary for the financial survival of some firms, in this recession the United States faces a kind of "counter-stimulus" plan as each corporation seeks to maximize its own profits (or minimize losses) at the expense of economic recovery, primarily by offshoring and wholesale divesting of product lines:
"These jobs aren’t coming back," John E. Silvia, chief economist at Wachovia in
Such moves represent an unforgiveable abandonment of
Along with "off-shoring," several major corporations are closing down highly profitable facilities in the United States, throwing thousands out of work, all the while spurning offers from other corporations to keep the plants operating. In Hennepin, Ill., which earned profits of more than $48 million in 2008, and Lackawanna, New York (which had been consistently earning profits of about $6 million a month before the firm changed its allocation of costs and earnings about four years ago to minimize its New York tax burden) ArcelorMittal is closing down two profitable steel mills, which will result in the loss of more than five hundred jobs. In both cases, other corporations displayed strong interest in buying the plants.
Similarly, one of
Given the cautiousness exhibited thus far by the Obama team and conservative Democrats like Senator Evan Bayh and the Blue Dog Democrats, Corporate America’s capricious and rapacious conduct will not cease until labor forces the Democrats’ hand.
Labor may rarely find that it possesses the strategic leverage it held at Republic in
Roger Bybee is edited the weekly Racine Labor for 14 years and was active in four successful struggles to stop plant closings. He has written for Dissent, Z, In These Times, Yes!, The Progressive, Progressive Populist, Extra!, and American Prospect
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