It
has been three decades since Ronald Reagan broke the 11,500-member
Professional Air Traffic Controllers Organization (PATCO),
and the relationship between capital and labor in America,
always a nervous circling of adversaries at best, has never
been the same.
In
firing the controllers, jailing its leaders, and blacklisting
every member from ever working for the federal government
again, Reagan opened the floodgates for a renewed assault
on unionized workers and their unions that had not been
seen since corporations hired gun thugs and “detective”
agencies that were little more than private armies that
paid little attention to the laws of the land.
PATCO
and its leadership could be faulted for many things, but
they could not be faulted for taking the action that American
workers had taken for generations: when working conditions
became intolerable and negotiations seemed to be at a dead
end, they went on strike. It’s just that they were little
prepared for a strike, either internally, or in terms of
their relationships with the rest of organized labor. They
just didn’t know how the other union would respond to their
strike. There was little or no preparation, because they
believed that the other unions would honor their picket
lines and the shutdown of airports across the nation would
bring the administration back to the bargaining table.
They
could not have been more wrong. There already were decades
of legal and tactical efforts by Corporate America that
kept unions from exercising solidarity with one another,
therefore, there were few other unions that respected the
PATCO picket lines, at least at the outset. Later in the
strike, other unions traveled from the West Coast across
the continent through Canada
on that country’s airlines, for example, to go by train
from Montreal to Washington,
D.C., to attend the organized labor’s Solidarity Day in September,
1981. Hundreds of thousands of trade unionists and their
supporters from across the country attended the speeches
and rally on the National Mall and PATCO was assured a place
on the program.
The
Right Wing and Corporate America tried to make the controllers’
issue one of wages and benefits, but one of the most important
issues was the safety of the flying public and the controllers,
themselves. The
stress in the airport towers was taking its toll, since
there were more airplanes than there should have been at
any given time and the controllers had to sort out all of
that and make sure the planes and their passengers landed
safely.
PATCO
was one of only three unions that had endorsed Ronald Reagan
for president. The other was the International Brotherhood
of Teamsters, at the time, the nation’s largest union. The
controllers endorsed Reagan and supported him and had the
assurance that he would take seriously the safety problems
that plagued both the workers and airline safety, in general.
Candidate
Reagan in October, 1980, wrote to Robert Poli, PATCO president,
during the presidential campaign of his concern about the
safety of the flying public: “You can rest assured that,
if I am elected president, I will take whatever steps are
necessary to provide our air traffic controllers with the
most modern equipment available and to adjust staff levels
and work days so that they are commensurate with achieving
a maximum degree of public safety.” With an assurance like
that, the union’s leadership thought he would be receptive
to their requests after he won the election and was in the
White House.
Again,
they were wrong. They could not get a hearing. The stress
in the towers mounted, the danger mounted, and the controllers
took the step that resulted in the demise of their union
and the end of their work in the towers. In the early stages
of the strike, the image that was imprinted on the minds
of workers was that of Poli in chains, being taken to jail.
It was an image out of some authoritarian regime, not the
U.S.A. But, it was Reagan’s America, where a
union leader was not only jailed, but the members were blacklisted
from ever working for the federal government again. That
meant some long-time controllers who were close to retirement
never would be able to finish their remaining year or two,
to get their full pension.
Reagan
was showing his Right Wing base how tough he was. He fulfilled
the decades-long dream of the rulers of the economic universe:
the U.S. Chamber of Commerce, the National Association of
Manufacturers, the Business Roundtable, and others. They
fought for years to curb the potential strength of American
workers through the forming of unions and bargaining for
their share of the nation’s benefits.
The
new president had discovered a way to break the power of
the workers by rendering their strikes a weakness, rather
than strength through unity. For decades, since the era
of Franklin D. Roosevelt, the strike that could bring the
wheels of commerce to a halt was something that the captains
of industry feared, even though they were the most powerful
force in the political and economic realm. But the law said
that workers could strike without the fear of being fired,
especially if they struck over an unfair labor practice
or a health or safety issue.
But,
Reagan fired them and permanently replaced them with a workforce
that eventually formed a union, the National Air Traffic
Controllers Association (NATCA). The new union did not have
to be told that they were not allowed to strike, since their
own constitution contained a no-strike clause. The controllers
were tamed.
It
took no time at all for corporations all over the U.S.
to emulate Reagan. When there wasn’t a strike, they would
provoke one, and then “permanently replace” the strikers.
Since
they weren’t “fired,” it was deemed to be legal, though
it was a distinction without a difference. The permanently
replaced workers were still without jobs and a means of
support, as good as being fired. An entire “industry” was
built on corporations creating a “union-free environment,”
nearly as soon as it became clear that PATCO would not be
able to get the jobs back for its members.
Law
firms that specialized in “union prevention” in non-union
shops, or in breaking unions where they existed, sprang
up in virtually every city. Companies were willing to spend
millions to buy union-busting consultants, rather than spend
a few hundred thousand dollars to negotiate a contract with
workers, who would spend that money in short order, right
in their own communities. It was a waste and engendered
animosities between labor and capital that continue to this
day, and it was all to show the workers who was the boss
and who had the power.
A
majority of the American people, most of whom were, and
are workers, backed Reagan’s tough strut against the unions.
According to a Gallup poll of the time (1981), 59 percent of Americans polled agreed
with Reagan’s handling of the strike, while 30 percent disapproved
and 11 percent had no opinion. It was a rollback of the
raising of the living standard that American workers had
achieved during the 35 years since World War II. And, it
was the beginning of a downward slide, not only for workers
in general, but also for all of the American people and
the nation’s economy.
The
Reagan-led attack against workers should have been a warning
to the workers of the next few generations, but we have
reached 2012 and the attacks against wageworkers and their
families continue relentlessly. It
is no accident of fate that Republican governors and a few
Democrats in several states have attacked the contracts,
the pay, and the benefits of public workers, thus the living
standards, of millions of families, under the guise of “closing
state budget gaps.”
One
indicator of the strength of unions, especially in the private
sector, is the number of strikes, and strikes have dwindled
to just a few each year. In just the past decade, and especially
in the past few years, the attack on public workers has
played out in states like Wisconsin,
where Governor Scott Walker has tried to kill off government
workers’ unions by trying to take away their collective
bargaining rights. He and those who have presided over the
demise of the U.S.
economy want American workers back to collective begging.
Wisconsinites are fighting back and the Walker
recall petition is expected to result in a recall election
sometime this year.
The
great American electorate seems to be waking up, but it’s
a slow process. That’s why the Occupy Wall Street movement
has had such wide support. It is because the fight is being
taken to the right place. It isn’t Washington
and Congress, the judiciary, and the White House that hold
the key to evening out the economy. It’s Wall Street, the
people who call the shots in both the economy and in the
political system.
The
lessons of PATCO and Reagan went unheeded, and that’s what
brought us to the condition we are in today. What was needed
31 years ago was solidarity among all American unions. There
is validity in the assertion that “we are the 99 percent.”
The “1 percent” has grown fat at the expense of working
people, the young, the old, and the sick. Perhaps, the unions
and their leaders have learned the lesson of PATCO, but
their support of the Occupy movement has been tepid, at
best.
They
have said that the youth have to step up to ensure that
all of the people make progress. Every leader in every sector,
in every kind of organization has said that the participation
of the young is vital to going forward. At a time when black
unemployment is twice that of the whole country; and unemployment
among other groups, such as among Native Americans, is three
or four times that; at a time when people are not getting
the medical care they need; when the children are not being
educated well (except the progeny of the 1 percent); when
people are not being housed decently; and when control of
our food is concentrated among very few giant corporations,
we need the unity of the 99 percent, and we need the young
men and women in politics, the economy, and in all cultural
work.
In
short, the American people need the solidarity that we learned
we needed all those years ago, when Ronald Reagan broke
a union, sent its members to the street with no means of
supporting their families, and opened the floodgates of
an assault on all workers.
Three
decades ago, we were tested and we came up short. That should
not be allowed to happen again.
BlackCommentator.com
Columnist, John Funiciello, is a labor organizer and former
union organizer. His union work started when he became a
local president of The Newspaper Guild in the early 1970s.
He was a reporter for 14 years for newspapers in New York State. In
addition to labor work, he is organizing family farmers
as they struggle to stay on the land under enormous pressure
from factory food producers and land developers. Click here
to contact Mr. Funiciello.
|