Car workers' jobs slaughter -
Begin the fightback!
In response to the
crisis in Britain's car industry, where thousands of job losses have
been announced and thousands of other workers have been temporarily
laid off for weeks at a time, the National Shop Stewards Network (NSSN)
hosted a very encouraging meeting in Birmingham on 14 February.
Linda Taaffe, secretary NSSN
Workers and stewards
from Ford, Honda, Jaguar, Dana, TRW (ex Lucas) JCB and Linemar (ex
Visteon and ex Fords) came together with other NSSN members to discuss
what can be done.
The discussion
revealed the real brutality of the car companies' management, who are
trying to make workers pay for the crisis. Different pay levels exist
for "down time" in different factories. Some workers are even forced
to "pay back" by working for free! Some end up with no pay at all.
Meanwhile trade union
officials keep workers in the dark about what is going on, and even
about what is going on in other car factories, like walk-outs and
similar successes. No wonder some officials come in for flak from
shop-floor workers.
The prospect of tens
of thousands of jobs being shed in the car and related industries has,
for the moment, left car workers somewhat stunned. The speed and scale
of the downturn has been so dramatic.
At the same time the
bosses know where they are going, as one worker pointed out. Why would
Honda insist on upping car production by 34% when sales indicated only
a 3% increase last year? Filling the car parks to undermine the
workers' response?
And how can companies
like Ford cry poverty and threaten to shut the Southampton Transit
plant, throwing 1,200 out of work, when Ford made £1 billion across
Europe? And when their bosses' combined salaries of £100 million is
exactly equal to what's needed to keep this plant open?
Car workers and their
families cannot contemplate a life on the dole and no jobs for the
future generation in order that bosses maintain their profits. The
closure of plants will have a devastating effect on some areas. The
mood of the meeting was to waste no time and get organised now.
We decided that the
NSSN, in conjunction with car workers, would begin to build a
fightback - with the backing of the unions where possible.
-
Oppose lay offs -
demand full pay on "down days" for all car workers.
-
When the bosses
say they can't pay, demand they open the books and let us examine
where the profits have gone. If this shows incompetence then demand
full and proper nationalisation.
-
Start
investigating how car production could be changed into producing
environmentally friendly alternative products.
To punch home this
message we will need thousands of workers to get involved, but all
agreed to start here and now. We decided to reach out to all the other
car factories with these ideas, and campaign to save jobs, involving
local communities where possible.
We will also try to
open out and extend the Southampton Ford workers' campaign by
organising a car workers' lobby of MPs as soon as possible. We will
call for a car workers' contingent on the TUC demo for the G20 summit
on 28 March and try to make contact with fellow car workers in Europe.
The NSSN will
facilitate keeping everyone informed, and create a campaign website
where car workers can post what is happening in their factory and get
information from other factories. |