Can unions pull together for summit?

 

 

Charles Molele & Mmanaledi Mataboge, Mail and Guardian, Johannesburg, 30
August 2013

 

Union federation COSATU goes into this weekend's tripartite alliance
economic summit with the ANC and the South African Communist Party (SACP)
perhaps the most divided it's ever been in its nearly 28 years of existence.

 

The aim of the summit, which takes place in Centurion outside Pretoria, is
for leaders to thrash out differences over economic policy.

 

Those supportive of suspended COSATU general secretary Zwelinzima Vavi are
pushing for a hardline approach to the National Development Plan - the
government's long-term strategy to eliminate poverty and reduce inequality
by 2030 - whereas those aligned to federation president Sdumo Dlamini prefer
a softer and more inclusive approach.

 

This summit could also signal whether COSATU will be supporting the ANC in
next year's general elections as a united or a fractured force.

 

The Food and Allied Workers Union, the National Union of Metalworkers of
South Africa and the South African Municipal Workers Union (SAMWU), COSATU
affiliate unions which support Vavi, say the development plan was at odds
with the alliance's perspective on the need for a radical economic shift.

 

Unions calling for a more centrist approach on the plan include the National
Union of Mineworkers, teachers' union SADTU, transport union SATAWU, and
public service union NEHAWU.

 

Bureaucracy

 

The Food and Allied Workers Union general secretary Katishi Masemola blasted
the plan as a "product of bureaucracy in government" and said it was drawn
up by an unelected committee of "20 hand-picked individuals constituting the
national planning commission".

 

"A unilateral government implementation on such a significant blue-print
that will affect children's futures and the coming generation cannot be left
to the wisdom of a few people to determine," said Masemola, quoting his
union's national executive committee resolution on the plan.

 

"Even more critical, the ANC cannot be unilateral in adopting ... the
National Development Plan and imposing it on society without taking
strategic allies, and certainly COSATU, into confidence."

 

Following its central executive committee, which rejected Vavi's suspension
and called for a special congress to resolve COSATU's internal issues, SAMWU
called for the redrafting and fundamental overhaul of the economic chapter
of the plan, as well as other aspects they say are in conflict with alliance
policies and the Freedom Charter.

 

COSATU's acting general secretary, Bheki Ntshalintshali, acknowledged that
the federation was deeply divided but denied the suspension of Vavi would
have an adverse effect on the negotiations at the summit.

 

"I don't believe that the 'GS' would be speaking in his own voice if he was
still here," said Ntshalintshali.

 

Many voices

 

"There will be many voices at the summit [representing COSATU]. To be heard
you need many voices. No individual can win the debates in the alliance."

 

However, senior alliance leaders told the Mail & Guardian that partners
whose aim was to "smash" the National Development Plan were likely to face
hostility from supporters of the plan at the ANC-led summit, which starts on
August 30.

 

Although the majority of unions affiliated to federation COSATU are divided
about the National Development Plan, the ANC and the SACP appear to be
committed to the policy.

 

The SACP has raised concerns about the plan but it called for discussions
that would put alliance partners on the same page.

 

The summit was postponed last month amid reports that a dispute over the
plan led to the collapse of the meeting. All partners denied the reports at
the time.

 

This week, however, an SACP leader told the M&G that demands similar to the
ones that were being made by some COSATU leaders on the development plan
last month were the cause of the summit's failure.

 

Demands

 

"It doesn't help to approach the ANC with that attitude of demands," said
the SACP leader.

 

"The party can get very hardened by such approaches. The last time the
summit got sidetracked COSATU made the same mistakes."

 

But the SACP leader said things are expected to be calmer this time around.
Despite expectations that COSATU affiliates that support Vavi will take over
where he left off, opposing the National Development Plan, alliance sources
said this summit would be managed better.

 

"There will maybe be a two-hour debate on the plan. Then there will be a
committee that drafts a joint statement saying parties recognise their
differences and agree to work together," said the SACP leader.

 

In its discussion document on the plan the SACP said the hardline position
taken by both the plan's supporters and opponents "risks exactly the
opposite of what the development plan was intended to achieve".

 

The SACP said it was "deeply concerned that the plan is being turned into a
divisive political football".

 

Weaknesses

 

SACP spokesperson Malesela Maleka said: "Our approach is that we don't throw
away the idea of long-term planning. We should rather work on the
weaknesses, tighten them and embrace the strengths."

 

SATAWU wants its fellow affiliates to have constructive discussions, said
spokesperson Vincent Masoga.

 

"The plan is a living document," he said. "It must be engaged instead of
being rejected and the engagement must be constructive and not about proving
a point."

 

SADTU's general secretary, Mugwena Maluleke, said his union rejected some
aspects of the plan but hoped to engage the ANC in an attempt to agree with
the federation on their reservations.

 

"We are going to the summit with the hope of engaging [the ANC], our
alliance partners, on our problems with the plan and possibly reach an
agreement. There are areas that we don't agree with, especially its target
of creating 11-million jobs by 2030.

 

"We believe this is too low and it won't address the totality of
unemployment in our country," said Maluleke.

 

In June, COSATU's central executive committee resolved that the plan had
fundamental flaws that placed it at odds with the alliance's perspective on
the need for a radical economic shift. COSATU's senior leaders said it would
be a "fundamental error" to push ahead with the plan's implementation when
such flaws had been exposed.

 

 

From:
http://mg.co.za/article/2013-08-30-00-can-unions-pull-together-for-summit

 

 

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