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In Unity and Struggle Gregory Carey, President - BCWA (Black Construction Workers Association)
"I sit on the AFL-CIO Council. Those boys don't ask me anything." - Clayola Brown, Executive Council, AFL-CIO and CBTU "We must build an independent political struggle that will define priorities and behavior of both parties." - Rev. Jesse Jackson, President, Rainbow/PUSH Coalition "It's time to go back to Gary," William Lucy told 1,500 delegates to the 34th annual convention of the Coalition of Black Trade Unionists (CBTU), meeting in Phoenix, Arizona, last week. "It's time to go back to Gary to talk among ourselves as trade unionists, as social activists, as political leaders, as academics about what it will take to move our communities forward." Lucy, Secretary-Treasurer of the American Federation of State, County and Municipal Employees (AFSCME) and President of the CBTU since its founding in 1972, was also a convener of the historic National Black Political Convention in Gary, Indiana, that same year. In the intervening decades, Black fortunes have waxed and waned - depending on who's doing the measuring. However, under George Bush's administration, African Americans as a people have been dealt a series of catastrophic blows, including assaults from within the labor movement, itself. Lucy's call-to-convention reflects the growing realization that it's time to rethink, to regroup, to reaffirm the historical Black Political Consensus and shape a broad Black Agenda, in the spirit of Gary and of Black political conventions dating back to 1830. CBTU delegates agreed, passing a resolution for a "national convocation of grassroots advocates and leaders to achieve consensus about the elements of a Black Agenda, which would then be presented to organizations and forums for development and discussion." The road to the next Gary-type convention (not necessarily at the same location) must be mapped out quickly, before the 2006 congressional election cycle works its centrifugal pressures on Black leadership and organizations, pulling them into various camps and campaigns at the expense of the national Black mission. CBTU President Lucy stressed the urgency of the project: "We must think nationally and act locally…and use our organizing skills to build community power block by block, neighborhood by neighborhood." "Let's go back to Gary and build a movement where organized labor and the broad community can fashion an agenda of partnership. Let's go back to Gary and fashion our own strategy for mobilizing and energizing our community. Let's go back to Gary and figure out how to finance our politics and get up off our knees. Let's go back to Gary and once again change the direction of this country."
Crisis upon crisis Then, five unions led by Service Employees International Union (SEIU) President Andrew Stern - collectively known as the Group of Five, or G-5 - demanded that the Executive Council of a reorganized AFL-CIO be shrunk to 13 or 16 members, from the current 54. The council was expanded when Sweeney was elected ten years ago, specifically to make room for minorities and women. (It know includes seven African Americans.) But under the original G-5 dissident proposal, only the heads of the labor federation's largest unions would have a seat at the executive table - a catastrophic turning back of the clock for non-whites and women. Blacks also feared that the AFL-CIO's Central Labor Councils, where urban minority influence is strongest, would be weakened under the "reforms" of the G-5 dissidents: the SEIU, Teamsters, Laborers, UNITE-HERE, and United Food and Commercial Workers union (UFCW) - many of whose African American members and leaders are represented in the Coalition of Black Trade Unionists. Facing the G-5's ultimatum to withdraw from the labor federation if their demands are not met, President Sweeney terminated the jobs of one-third of his headquarters staff, in early May. However, the SEIU's Andrew Stern and his allies called the streamlining "too little, too late," and continued on the brinkmanship path. And, although Sweeney made informal promises to stand by representation of minorities and women on the Executive Council and to strengthen state federations and Central Labor Councils, he continued to avoid a firm declaration - until his appearance on the second day of the CBTU's convention in 100-plus degree Phoenix: "The Executive Council is extremely important to the labor movement; it governs the AFL-CIO between conventions. And when I ran for president of the AFL-CIO nearly ten years ago, I pushed to expand it so that women, and men and women of color, could have a greater voice in the decisions we make." "There are some leaders in our movement who are now suggesting that the Executive Council be reduced in size or its responsibilities diminished in the name of efficiency and control. John Sweeney is not among them. At the AFL-CIO, we will not turn back the clock." To the delegates assembled in the huge Phoenix Civic Center island of air conditioning, this sounded like victory. The same day, Sweeney had been endorsed by the powerful United Auto Workers (UAW) - apparently putting him over the top for reelection at the AFL-CIO's convention in Chicago, July 23. Flush with confidence, Sweeney seemed to blame the dissidents for George Bush's victory, in November. "The hostility from inside our movement began to bubble up prior to the elections last fall when some of our affiliates began to publicly go after the AFL-CIO just as we began planning for the most important presidential election we've ever faced." "… CBTU, you understood the importance of this past presidential election, and despite any challenges, obstacles or criticism you may have faced, you moved forward to stage 30 town hall meetings and worked tirelessly in your community to beat all records for voter registration and ballot protection and GOTV [Get Out The Vote]." Of course, it was under Sweeney that the CBTU and other constituent groups were denied federation funds for 2004 election activities - a fact known by virtually everyone in the convention hall. But Sweeney was on a roll: "I do not share [the dissidents'] enthusiasm for re-shaping the labor movement from the top down, forcing mergers of unions, dictating bargaining standards and dividing and weakening the AFL-CIO itself. And I certainly disagree with the threat by my own union [SEIU, which Sweeney once led] to disaffiliate from the AFL-CIO if their demands are not met - it is one of the most destructive actions I've ever witnessed and I hope the members of my union will reject it…." "Do we want a movement that is run like a corporation, with decisions and orders handed down from the top? Do we run the AFL-CIO and our unions like a business and encourage bigger organizations to gobble up smaller organizations the way Wal-Mart devours traditional retailers and entire communities? "The CBTU proposal urged us to integrate constituency group leadership into our political and organizing programs and strengthen our movement at the state and local levels where our AFL-CIO organizations are in close touch with our allies and constituencies. [Quoting CBTU leader Bill Lucy]: 'I do not believe labor's problem revolves around structure. I believe to the extent we have a problem, it's around mission…. While the composition of the Executive Council may be large, it reflects who we want to organize, mobilize and politicize.' "Bill Lucy, we heard you. And at the AFL-CIO, the voices of women and members and leaders of color will be heard…. "And we're going to steal a page from civil rights history and require that women and people of color are represented proportionately in union delegations to AFL-CIO conventions. No ifs, no excuses." Sweeney's last remarks brought down the house, but they could not alter the resolve of CBTU's leadership to break with, in Bill Lucy's words, "the politics of paternalism." "I pledge to you that we are out of the game of begging for resources to mobilize our communities," Lucy told delegates in his opening day speech. "Whether we are accepted by the powerful players in labor or not…we will continue to come to the aid of unorganized workers whenever we can with or without the help of the so-called big players. We will help to mobilize our communities…." "We are out of the begging business. We can't waste time chasing rainbows." Black folks will seek their own solutions and finances, on the road to the next "Gary" convention.
Dissidents wake up too late Said another delegate, "When I have a problem with my union, I don't start talking about decertification." Another delegate: "Ask me, don't tell me" about the positions union leadership is taking. In recent weeks, some of the five dissident union leaders softened their verbal positions on inclusion of constituent groups in the Executive Council, but whatever modifications that were made came very late in the game, and appear to have only been circulated in-house. Hudson said the new reform proposals would allocate "four or five" of twenty or so council seats to constituents. "The G-5 are increasingly getting to the point where they're saying the right things," Hudson assured the SEIU delegates. However, the CBTU convention's collective mind was made up. The full convention resolved to resist any diminution of the Executive Council; that a department be created to build formal relationships among labor and community institutions; and that constituent group leadership and structures (the six-organization Labor Coalition for Community Action) be integrated into the new department's activities. In other words, the massed CBTU demanded that the institutional role of non-whites and women in AFL-CIO structures become deeper and stronger - a functional part of the organizational chart - rather than an informal afterthought. © June 2005 By Afro Staff
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