-------------------------
Via Workers World News Service
Reprinted from the April 26, 2001
issue of Workers World newspaper
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NO BORDERS IN THE WORKERS' STRUGGLE

By Milt Neidenberg

Free trade is just a bankers' and politicians' term for 
freedom to exploit across any border.

The bankers behind the plan for a Free Trade Area of the 
Americas being presented at the Summit of the Americas in 
Quebec City are based on Wall Street. Their enforcers are in 
Washington--both the politicians and the bankers' political 
fronts, the International Monetary Fund and the World Bank

Like generals preparing for battle, the bankers have lined 
up their forces in an attempt to crush any opposition to 
their plan.

They have failed to stop the opposition, however, which is 
growing stronger and louder with each day. Just as the 
bankers want to be "free" to cross any border they want, the 
workers of the Americas are demonstrating that there are no 
borders in workers' struggles or solidarity.

The public is barred from the summit talks on the FTAA, to 
which 34 governments from the Western Hemisphere--all but 
Cuba--have been invited. The secret deal being worked out is 
reportedly based on the North American Free Trade Agreement, 
which has been devastating, especially for the workers of 
Mexico.

Over 2 million workers were displaced in Mexico in the first 
two years of NAFTA, according to a study on its impact by 
Molly Scott at the University of Washington. Displaced means 
that workers with good full-time jobs lost them. Most ended 
up with part time or day-labor-type jobs paying below the 
minimum wage.

In Canada, during the first year of NAFTA, 250,000 jobs were 
lost completely.

In the U.S., about half a million jobs have been lost 
because of NAFTA, according to the Economic Policy 
Institute. The impact was much wider though. During the 
first three years of NAFTA, some 8.6 million workers were 
displaced because of plant closings, that is, they lost good 
full-time jobs and were forced into unemployment or lesser 
jobs. Half of the displaced workers were in the apparel and 
textile trades. Many of these displacements were because of 
NAFTA. Many of the apparel and textile plants moved to 
Mexico, where the mass of unemployed workers were offered 
jobs at a pay rate one-eighth or less what was being paid by 
the same companies in the U.S., according to Scott.

The FTAA is NAFTA, and worse.

NAFTA's harsh effects on the Indigenous peoples in the 
Chiapas region sparked the Zapatista rebellion in Mexico.

NAFTA's conditions have sparked many labor struggles. One 
was led by Juan Tovar Santos, an assembly line worker from 
an Alcoa plant in Mexico. Tovar went to Pittsburgh in 1996 
to Alcoa's annual shareholders' meeting and confronted the 
chief executive about working conditions in Alcoa factories 
in Mexico

Alcoa's chief executive at that time, Paul O'Neill, is now 
George W. Bush's secretary of the treasury.

The Alcoa factory is in Acuna, one of many towns that have 
boomed up on the U.S.-Mexico border since NAFTA. As in the 
other border towns, all the companies are U.S. owned. They 
pay little or no taxes so the schools are falling apart, the 
hospital can barely stay open, the sewage system has 
collapsed and many people live in cardboard "houses."

Tovar described the workers' conditions. A toxic gas leak 
left a hundred workers hospitalized. Managers were stationed 
to watch workers in the bathroom to make sure they didn't 
use more than three pieces of tissue.

Last spring, some 60 workers from the same factory where 
Tovar works confronted another Alcoa official. It was a rare 
appearance by one of the company bosses from the U.S. The 
workers asked why O'Neill got a $33-million Christmas bonus, 
when they were each paid only a $40 bonus. The anxious 
official promised an "investigation" and quickly ran away 
across the border.

While NAFTA means no borders for the bosses, it does not 
mean that workers can follow their bosses across the border.

After five months of waiting with no answer from the U.S. 
bosses, hundreds of Alcoa workers walked out of two 
factories. The police attacked the workers and the company 
fired them. The strike began to spread until finally the 
company agreed to negotiate. Some of the fired workers were 
rehired and the company undertook a "study" of conditions. 
In November, after declaring the study was completed, Alcoa 
gave the Mexican workers their first raise in nine years.

The labor struggles along the U.S.-Mexico border are 
spreading. This is the front line of the battle against 
globalization. It is a class struggle that goes beyond the 
borders. And it lays the basis for potential unity between 
the oppressed workers of this hemisphere and the tens of 
thousands of anti-globalization protesters who will take to 
the streets to march on the bankers' closed-door meeting in 
Quebec City.

The 2.3 million-member Canadian Labor Congress will be one 
of the leading voices in Quebec City. Labor will be 
welcoming the protesters.

Labor in the United States is also speaking out against the 
FTAA. The Longshore and Warehouse Union, well known for its 
progressive history and militant stands, has denounced the 
FTAA and is supporting the protests.

The AFL-CIO Executive Council passed a resolution at a 
recent meeting in Los Angeles that in part called "on our 
members to make their voices heard in Quebec City as part of 
the international actions, and join in partnership with Jobs 
With Justice and other allies in communities across the 
country." Teamsters, steelworkers and other labor unionists 
have also passed resolutions and are planning to join the 
protests.

Truly, a new phase of the global class struggle is 
unfolding.

- END -

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