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8, 2004
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The March on Rumsfeld's House: Is
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Reagan in a Word: Mean
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Nothing New Under the Israeli Sun
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7, 2004
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Blum
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Nothing Bush Said Has Changed Our Hopes
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4, 2004
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Mike
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Caterpillar's Assault on the UAW
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3, 2004
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Whitney
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de Rooij
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Whitney
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Corr
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Jensen
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Cockburn
"Bye, Bye Boonville!"
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1, 2004
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Leupp
Instant Karma: Bush's Sins Catch Up
with Him
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A. Cook
Manufacturers of Fear and Loathing in
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Lindorff
Will the Times Clean House?
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Zeese
Inside the Kerry / Nader Meeting: Did
the Kerry Campaign Lie About What Was Discussed?
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Levich
Coming Soon: Return of the Draft,
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Kelly
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29 / 31, 2004
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Ballinger / Dave Marsh
The Origins of Memorial Day
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Pommy Vega
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Ferner
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Alfred
W. McCoy
The Cruel Shadow: the Long History of CIA Torture Research
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Valentine
An Open Letter to the NYT: Questions, Questions, Questions
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White
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Anderson
The Awful Injustice to Tai Abreu
David
Vest
Get Ready for Kerry's War: the 100 Year Quagmire
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Landau
Torture: the Logical Outcome of Bush's War for Democracy?
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Nimmo
Abu Hamza al-Mazri, Made in the USA
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Cassel
The Secrets of Surveillance: Ashcroft, Snoops, and Gag Orders
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Potter
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Get Arrested as a "Terrorist"
Ben
Tripp
They Fiddled While Nero Got the Matches
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Susan Block
Save Abu Ghraib!
Kia
Kojouri
Nukes, the US, Israel and Iran: an
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Z
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B. Barr
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Gowans
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Gorman
Gore on Bush in Iraq: the Approach May be Exotic, But It's Hardly
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Dissing Independent Contractors:
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McGeough
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27, 2004
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June
14, 2004
Strikers
Defy Visteon's Company Thugs
Standing
Up for the Union
By
LEE SUSTAR
BEDFORD, Ind.
Striking workers and their supporters
at a Visteon Corp. auto parts plant refused to be intimidated
after security guards attacked their picket line May 30. So the
1,000 strikers--members of International Union of Electrical
Workers-Communications Workers of America (IUE-CWA) Local 84907--fought
back.
The two attacks on their picket
line by company thugs--followed by two more beatings from Indiana
State Police later on--sent more than a dozen workers to the
hospital. But workers refused to be cowed.
On the evening of June 2, a
group of strike supporters dumped two abandoned cars in front
of the Visteon plant gate. Both cars were flipped--and one was
set on fire.
Jim Lobbes, who has worked
at the plant for almost 10 years, was among the workers blocking
a vanload of scabs when guards--from the union-busting security
company Huffmaster Inc.-- first attacked. He was kneed in the
groin, then nearly run down by the van driver.
"It was pure violence,"
he told Socialist Worker. "I was in shock. I thought, 'What's
going on, this is America.' It reminded me of a newsreel of Hitler's
Germany." TV news videos showed the guards swinging sticks,
heavy belts and other weapons at workers.
A few hours later, Indiana
State Police--in full riot gear--marched to the picket line in
formation and launched their own assault. Once again, Lobbes
was beaten--forced up against a fence and then hit with a cop's
shield three times in the head.
If the company thugs and state
cops are aggressive, it's in keeping with management's demands.
Plant bosses say that the Bedford plant made a $13 million profit
in 2002, but lost $14 million in 2003. That's nonsense, given
the increase in vehicle sales.
Visteon wants to move 550 jobs
out of the plant--more than half of the 1,027 total hourly jobs.
Management also wants to start new hires at $10 an hour, with
a maximum of about $11 over the life of a six-year contract--compared
to average pay of about $16 per hour for assembly workers and
$19 for skilled trades.
"We already have a two-tier
within our contract, but those people get to full pay [after
eight years]," said Theressa Turpin, a 13-year worker and
assembly tester. "We didn't like it when we voted it in,
but it got in because they eventually were going to get to full
pay. This time they wanted to split the union, and it didn't
work."
Under management's proposals,
retirees would have to spend more than a third of the proposed
$960 monthly pension on health insurance premiums--not including
payments for prescription drugs. The company also wants big changes
in work rules. "They want to take our union out so they
can go in and fire people," said Melody Gratzer, a nine-year
worker at the plant.
Visteon officials first told
workers that production would be moved to Mexico--but admitted
on the eve of the strike that the jobs would go to a Visteon
plant in Rawsonville, Mich., where United Auto Workers (UAW)
Local 898 represents workers. "They said it's not about
the people here, it's about the product. We can take the product
to Mexico, and make $38 million more," Local 84907 President
Earl Wilson told Socialist Worker. But a union member discovered
on an internal company Web site that production was going to
Rawsonville instead.
Wilson and the negotiating
committee submitted the contract to a vote in order to avoid
an automatic lockout--and stayed neutral on the deal. But workers
have seen companies like General Electric and RCA close plants
in the area and move production even after unions agreed to take
wage cuts. So they voted down the proposed contract on May 29.
By pitting Bedford against
Rawsonville, Visteon is using the auto industry tactic of "whipsawing"--pitting
one plant against another in order to extract concessions. As
long as the Bedford strike is on, Local 898 has refused to accept
equipment from Bedford. So the gear was sent to a nonunion company
in Ohio--Toledo Mold and Die. But by provoking a strike at a
strategic plant--the Bedford workers produce complex fuel delivery
systems used in most Ford vehicles--Visteon is taking aim at
both unions.
In the 2003 national contract
with Visteon and Delphi Corp.--the parts company formerly owned
by General Motors--the UAW to agreed to allow the companies to
hire new workers at $14 per hour, down from $24 at current plants,
with a top pay of about $18. Now, both Delphi and Visteon want
to get rid of higher-paid UAW workers by allowing them to "flow
back" to GM and Ford.
Meanwhile, Visteon is putting
the squeeze on another IUE-CWA local at a parts plant about 120
miles away from Bedford--in Connersville, Ind., where workers
are represented by Local 84919. By taking a stand in Bedford--and
Connersville--the IUE-CWA could draw a line against the auto
parts industry's race to the bottom.
With management determined
to break the strike, however, the union will need financial support
and all the solidarity it can get on the picket line. Some strikers
said that they needed more meetings and information to discuss
next steps.
There are other issues as well.
Management has hired a nearly all-Black security force and scabs
to replace a mostly white workforce, and handful of workers responded
by bringing a racist symbol--a large Confederate flag--to the
picket line. But the potential to build solidarity is there--as
seen by the show of force June 2 when supporters blocked the
gates with the flipped cars.
Already, members of UAW Local
400, which represents workers at a nearby plant, and CWA members
from the phone company SBC, have walked picket lines. "The
rank and file are standing up," said Billy Robinson, former
president of UAW Local 2036, who visited the picket line himself
June 6.
He told workers about his experience
taking on the union busters at the auto parts maker Accuride,
where a five-year strike and lockout ended when the UAW abandoned
the local. "Everyone on the picket line talks about trying
to protect the retirees in their health benefits and their money,
and also try to protect jobs and their children when they are
coming up," Robinson said. "This is what unionism is
all about."
Solidarity
can stop the scabs
THE BRUTAL attacks by security
guards and police on strikers at Visteon is only the latest example
of Corporate America's use of force against workers. Management
used the same heavy-handed tactics in similar struggles in the
1990s at companies like A.E. Staley Manufacturing, Bridgestone-Firestone,
Caterpillar and the Detroit News and Free Press--organizing scabbing
operations that ultimately inflicted terrible defeats on the
unions.
And earlier this year, workers
at a Tyson Foods meatpacking plant in Wisconsin were defeated
in an 11-month strike when the company threatened to allow scabs
to vote to decertify their union.
That's why the efforts to stop
the scabs in Bedford are so important. These union-busters will
keep going until labor can shut their operations down. Bedford
Visteon strikers need to call on the unions in the area--and
beyond--to build the solidarity that's needed to take on this
corporate giant and win.
Lee Sustar is labor editor for Socialist
Worker newspaper. He can be reached at: lsustar@ameritech.net
Weekend Edition
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