EVERY CRISIS IS AN OPPORTUNITY
Peter Rachleff
St. Paul, Minnesota
August 10, 2009

This year's Postal Press Association Editors Conference
was abuzz with discussion of the Postal Service's
threats to close hundreds of' stations.  Virtually every
editor present knew of one or more stations at risk in
her or his own jurisdiction.  The wolf which has loomed
at the APWU's door for years - plant closings, job
losses, disruptive excessing, economic insecurity, to be
followed by the wage and benefit cuts and attacks on
retirees' benefits which workers in other industries
have experienced - is now huffing and puffing for real.
In my workshop, "Learning From the Past to Conquer the
Challenges of Today," we discussed ways to turn this
crisis into an opportunity to revitalize the union, to
secure its role not only in the workplace and at the
bargaining table but also in the community, and to lead
the fight to preserve - if not expand - public service.

Our workshop revolved around three historical moments:
(1) the revitalization of unions in the Great Depression
era of the 1930s, using the Minneapolis teamsters as an
example; (2) the incorporation and weakening of unions
in World War II, the late 1940s, and 1950s; and (3) the
attack on unions and their members by business' and
government's turn to economic "neoliberalism" in the
1980s.  We then discussed what we can learn from these
historical moments that we can use in this crisis that
we face now, so that we can turn it into an opportunity
to rebuild the labor movement and redirect society as a
whole.

The architects of the Minneapolis teamsters' struggles
picked the right context in which to act.  They could
feel the energy and hope of working people who had
organized the summer 1932 Bonus Army protest in
Washington, had elected Franklin Delano Roosevelt
president in November 1932, and had begun a militant
unemployed movement in city upon city, demanding an end
to mortgage foreclosures and evictions and an expansion
of relief.   In February of 1934, at the depths of a
Minnesota winter, they realized that coal delivery
workers could hold an upper hand over their employer.
Their victory in a three day strike sent a message to
all Minneapolis workers - that with the right strategy
and tactics, workers could defeat anti-union employers.

Having decided that the time was right to act, the
activists who built Local 574 from one hundred members
in February of 1934 to 15,000 by August, paid particular
attention to the roles of rank-and-file members, to the
union's relationship with other unions and the
community, and to its relationship to the government.
The union asked each rank-and-file member to function as
an organizer.  Unionized drivers and helpers refused to
allow their trucks to be loaded or unloaded at non-union
warehouses, while unionized warehouse workers refused to
load or unload non-union trucks. The union also reached
out to other unions, offering them solidarity and
receiving support in return.  The Minneapolis teamsters
became known for their refusal to cross picket lines,
and they helped unions like the International Ladies
Garment Workers win their own strikes.  The union also
reached out to the community, helping the unemployed
organize in order to receive relief, participating in
protests against foreclosures and evictions, and
supporting farmers in establishing farmers' markets in
the city.  The union also pressed the government, at the
local, state, and federal levels, to create jobs, to
raise minimum wages, and to protect workers' rights to
organize.  Teamsters Local 574 experienced phenomenal
growth not only in numbers but also in power and
respect, based on the involvement of their own members,
their supportive relationships with other unions and in
the wider community, and their demands upon the
government.  Their experience typified much of what
happened to American unions in the 1930s, as they grew
from about two million members to fourteen million.

This kind of organization and culture were eaten away in
the 1940s, 1950s, and 1960s, as unions became integrated
into a social contract with employers and the
government.  The latter, rather than opposing unions
outright (since they really couldn't), developed rules,
regulations, and institutions which limited union power.
The dues check-off removed considerable day-to-day
contact between stewards and workers.  The great strike
wave of 1945-1946 ended by allowing corporations to
raise prices despite unions' initial demands that wage
increases not be passed along to consumers.  The
Taft-Hartley Act of 1947 outlawed the two most important
expressions of solidarity, the sympathy strike and the
secondary boycott.  Unions began to practice
"productivity bargaining" in which they granted
management authority to control the shopfloor and the
introduction of new technologies, as long as workers got
raises.  By the merger of the AFL and the CIO in 1955,
the labor movement had ceased growing and individual
unions were adopting a business model in which a gap
grew between officers and staff, on the one hand, and
rank-and-file members, on the other.

When corporations and their political allies turned to
economic neoliberalism in the late 1970s -
globalization, free trade, deregulation, privatization,
the cutting of taxes on the rich, the cutting of
services to the poor - they launched an attack on
unions. Most unions, unfortunately, had neither the
internal strength nor the community support to withstand
such an attack. Beginning with President Reagan's firing
of the air traffic controllers in 1981, employers and
the government attacked one union after another.  And
one union after another fell.

But now this system itself is in crisis, from Wall
Street to Main Street.  In big cities and small towns,
we know how serious this crisis is.  Workers, middle
class women and men, people of color and white folks,
put their shoulders to the wheel to elect Barack Obama
in 2008.  But as the congressional struggles over
executive salaries, bank and stock market regulation,
the uses of the stimulus packages, health care reform,
and the Employee Free Choice Act reveal, President Obama
cannot save us - our jobs, our futures, our unions, our
way of life - by himself.  We must learn the lessons of
the 1934 Minneapolis teamsters - to make every member an
organizer, to build support with other unions, to seek
support in the community, and to make clear demands
together upon the government.  If we want the Postal
Service to survive this crisis, if we want our union to
survive this crisis, if we want our jobs to survive this
crisis, we must turn it into an opportunity to rebuild
and revitalize our union.  We must once again make the
expressions "organized" labor and labor "movement" ring
true.

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