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Old 01-12-11, 12:39 PM
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Default Striking workers must unite across Europe

Striking workers must unite across Europe

A Europe-wide austerity drive can only be defeated if UK nurses join forces with Portuguese teachers and Greek bus drivers

Owen Jones
guardian.co.uk, Friday 25 November 2011 14.59 GMT

Maria is a softly spoken teacher, but she's clearly furious. As far as she is concerned, she is being mugged by the economic and political elite. "I think they are stealing from us," she tells me. "It's theft." Maria Juan spoke to me in the centre of Lisbon as thousands of striking workers – some even angrier than her – surrounded Portugal's national assembly.


It's a different country, but her sentiments are instantly recognisable to a Brit. This is the indignation of someone who has dedicated their life to public service being pummelled by a crisis they had no role in causing. On Thursday, hundreds of thousands of workers ranging from train drivers to hospital staff took part in Portugal's second general strike against austerity in a year. Next Wednesday, their British equivalents will stage a similar walkout, and "theft" will be on many of their lips, too.


Anyone who has taken part in Britain's anti-cuts demonstrations over the last year would have felt right at home outside the national assembly. Many of the chants were the same: some, such as "the workers united will never be defeated", I have heard yelled on protests from London to Michigan. But – as in Britain – workers remain far from united. As I talk to two striking bus drivers, proudly waving union banners, a woman with two kids starts ranting at them. It's a familiar complaint: she works long hours for worsening pay, but – like the vast majority of private-sector workers – you don't see her out on strike. It's a hierarchy of grievances that allows rising fury at declining living standards to be directed at fellow workers, rather than at those responsible for Europe's economic collapse.


There was a familiar resentment of police, too, who formed lines to stop the national assembly being stormed (which, according to Marta, a young temp agency worker, was exactly what needed to happen). A few bottles were thrown, and protesters angrily remonstrated with them: "You should be protesting with us, not defending the bad guys!"


Of course, Britain's strike – the biggest since the general strike of 1926 – won't exactly be a replica. The focus is on pensions – or, more accurately, a tax on public-sector workers to help pay off the deficit. The narrow focus is partly a consequence of Britain's almost uniquely stringent anti-union laws. In Portugal, anger is directed at the terms of a €78bn bailout package imposed by the IMF and the EU, which is being implemented enthusiastically by the Portuguese prime minister Pedro Passos Coelho. Christmas bonuses for public-sector staff are the latest casualty. This alone is a crippling blow to workers in a country in which the minimum wage is just €450 (£386) a month, and where teachers such as Maria have a monthly salary of just €1,000 (or £858).


Both Portuguese and British strikes are part of a growing European backlash to austerity that is erupting on to the streets from Madrid to Athens. Like Britain, widespread industrial action is uncommon in Portugal. Since the authoritarian regime of Antσnio Salazar was overthrown in the 1974 carnation revolution, there have only been two national strikes – and one of them was a year ago. The strike is not a response to economic crisis, but rather resistance to attempts to use it to remake European societies. Rightwing politicians may have wanted to "shrink the state" before the crisis hit, but the radical policies needed to achieve it were not politically possible. But privatisation, cuts, the rolling back of workers' rights and the reduction of pay can now be dressed up as unavoidable decisions. Unless resistance to this project is successful, Europe will be a poorer, harsher and more insecure place long after sustained economic growth returns.


Outside the Portuguese national assembly, protesters expressed a determination to stand with other European workers. "We are joined to the people of Europe," says Francisco, a retired civil engineer. "We have to fight all together or we will lose." But talk of solidarity is easy: in practical terms, there are few links between Europe's striking workers. None of the Portuguese workers I spoke to were aware of next week's public-sector strike in Britain.


When up to 3 million British public-sector workers strike together next Wednesday, they will aim fire at the policies of David Cameron's government. But Francisco is right: it is difficult to see how a Europe-wide austerity drive will be defeated without an equally Europe-wide movement against it. That dinner ladies, bin collectors and teachers will take co-ordinated action is no small achievement. But the battle for the future of Europe will only be won when nurses in Aberdeen are making common cause with bus drivers in Athens. After all, we're all in this together.

Striking workers must unite across Europe | Owen Jones | Comment is free | guardian.co.uk
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Old 01-12-11, 02:17 PM
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Originally Posted by contracycle View Post
It's a different country, but her sentiments are instantly recognisable to a Brit. This is the indignation of someone who has dedicated their life to public service being pummelled by a crisis they had no role in causing.
I am so fucking tired of hearing that. It's like the drivers on the trains which brought the European Jewish people to the concentration camps. "Dude, we didn't kill all those people. We just drove trains". Yeah. Exactly.



Quote:
It's a hierarchy of grievances that allows rising fury at declining living standards to be directed at fellow workers, rather than at those responsible for Europe's economic collapse.
This is Europe, not the UK or US.



and...



Quote:
Rightwing politicians may have wanted to "shrink the state" before the crisis hit, but the radical policies needed to achieve it were not politically possible. But privatisation, cuts, the rolling back of workers' rights and the reduction of pay can now be dressed up as unavoidable decisions. Unless resistance to this project is successful, Europe will be a poorer, harsher and more insecure place long after sustained economic growth returns.
And, of course, reversely, if the fiscal deficit is not stamped out, we will all be broke.



Debt to GDP ratio of 300% have never existed, afaik. Not even in war time. Default is the most likely outcome...

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Outside the Portuguese national assembly, protesters expressed a determination to stand with other European workers. "We are joined to the people of Europe," says Francisco, a retired civil engineer. "We have to fight all together or we will lose."
It's easy for them to ask for solidarity. It's a bit harder for the Germans to swallow. They'll be the ones bankrolling the Portuguese and the rest. Why should they do so? [There's a very good reason, actually, but, in practice, how much love and solidarity across countries do you really have? The EU was always an elitist project. The people of Europe never felt very European].
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Old 01-12-11, 03:01 PM
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Originally Posted by Gilles de Rais View Post
I am so fucking tired of hearing that.
And I'm so fucking tired of hearing people deny it. Workers in these states had no say, no decision making powers, no ability to make these choices and we are being fucking billed for the crisis of the bankers. Fuck 'em and their apologists.

And your comparisaon of national enocmies is totally irrelevant,. It's not France versus Greece, it's Rich versus Poor.

[quote]
It's easy for them to ask for solidarity. It's a bit harder for the Germans to swallow.[/quote

Not even remotely true. German workers are also being asked to bail out bankers. The logic is exactly the same. This isn't about nationality at all.
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Old 01-12-11, 03:16 PM
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Originally Posted by contracycle View Post
And I'm so fucking tired of hearing people deny it. Workers in these states had no say, no decision making powers, no ability to make these choices and we are being fucking billed for the crisis of the bankers.
Clearly, your eyes are deceiving you...




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And your comparison of national economies is totally irrelevant,. It's not France versus Greece, it's Rich versus Poor.
In the widest sense, I agree. In practice, very few people in the streets actually see it that way... Unless they're Portuguese and need Germans' tax money...

Quote:
Not even remotely true. German workers are also being asked to bail out bankers. The logic is exactly the same. This isn't about nationality at all.
Bail out bankers who lent money to Greeks. Bail out Greeks so German banks don't go bust. At the end of the day, it's all the same:



As I said, there are good reasons for people to stand together and make it a Rich versus Poor. As I said, I really dig the slogan "we are the 99%" and, as I pointed out, it's even too restrictive and it's really the 99.9% vs. the 0.1%...

So, yes. But, in practice, nationality is still going to matter. Alas.
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Old 01-12-11, 03:31 PM
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Originally Posted by Gilles de Rais View Post
Clearly, your eyes are deceiving you...
Nope.

Quote:
In the widest sense, I agree. In practice, very few people in the streets actually see it that way... Unless they're Portuguese and need Germans' tax money...
Have you ever been on those streets? I have, and it's not really true. Here we have occupations in cities around the world becuase workers everywhere have the same problems. The linkages expressed between OWS and Tahrir suqare are not romantic at all, but entirely real.

Quote:
Bail out bankers who lent money to Greeks. Bail out Greeks so German banks don't go bust. At the end of the day, it's all the same:
It's not the same. Bailing out bankers is not the same as bailing out people, and bailing out bankers, not people, is what we are doing.

Quote:
So, yes. But, in practice, nationality is still going to matter. Alas.
Only if we play the "I'm more miserable than you" game. That's a choice you're making when you complain about "the chinese" or "the greeks" - but its not what working class activism is doing.
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Old 01-12-11, 10:05 PM
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UNISON Press | Press Releases Front Page

Yeah. Try to get the most popular guy on tv sacked. That'll earn plenty of support for your cause.
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