Occupy Oakland: The Port Shutdown and Beyond–All Eyes on
Longview!<http://insurgentnotes.com/2012/01/occupy-oakland-the-port-shutdown-and-beyond/>
Jan 2, ’12 9:11 PM

*GUEST ARTICLE (to appear in Issue #5 of Insurgent
Noteshttp://insurgentnotes.com/
*

Occupy Oakland: The Port Shutdown and Beyond–All Eyes on Longview!

By Jack Gerson

On Monday December 12, the Occupy movement shut down the major west coast
ports of Oakland, Portland, Longview (Washington), and Seattle. There were
partial shutdowns or support actions at the ports of San Diego, Vancouver,
and Long Beach, as well as in Hawaii and Japan. Wal-Mart distribution
centers were blockaded in Denver, Salt Lake City, and Albuquerque. Other
actions occurred in New York, Houston, Tacoma, and Anchorage. The Seattle,
Long Beach, San Diego, and Houston protests were met with police violence.

These coordinated actions showed that the Occupy movement is still very
much alive, the various rants to the contrary by the bosses, the mass
media, and assorted leftists notwithstanding. This is certainly true in
Oakland, where I live. The nearly 10,000 protesters who shut down the port
showed that Occupy Oakland’s November 2 Strike and Day of Action was no
fluke. The December 12 actions rattled the entire Oakland establishment –
corporate Oakland and the liberal politicians and labor bureaucrats who for
years have carried their water while cultivating a “progressive” image. And
the port shutdowns up and down the coast have delivered a strong message to
the world maritime conglomerates: the Occupy movement will rally mass
support to defend the longshoremen in Longview WA against a vicious
union-busting attack from a multinational conglomerate.

NEXT UP: MASS CONVERGENCE ON LONGVIEW

The Longview longshoremen, ILWU Local 21, are locked in a life-and-death
struggle with the Export Grain Terminal corporation (EGT). EGT is a joint
venture between three conglomerates: U.S.-based Bunge North America,
Japan-based Tochu Corporation, and South Korean-based STX Pan Ocean. EGT
just spent $200 million to construct a highly automated grain elevator at
the Port of Longview. Although EGT signed a lease agreement with the Port
promising that all cargo work would be done with ILWU labor, it won’t honor
that agreement. EGT tried to hire non-union labor and, when that failed,
contracted with another union, Operating Engineers Local 701, that is
willing to raid ILWU 21 and to cross their picket lines.

EGT is using tactics straight out of the coal field labor wars of the
1920s. They hired private “security” (Pinkerton-like goons). They’ve
enlisted the local cops to stalk, harass, and assault ILWU members –
tailing them around town and even dragging them out of their homes in the
middle of the night.

Local 21 has fought back. In the course of the battle in Longview, ILWU
members and their supporters have blocked trains from bringing grain to the
terminal and organized mass pickets to disrupt its operations. 220 of the
local’s 226 members have been arrested. Both the Washington and Oregon
state labor federations have passed resolutions supporting the Longview
ILWU and condemning the Operating Engineers for raiding and for crossing
ILWU 21′s picket lines.

This ought to be a central priority for the AFL-CIO, because if EGT
succeeds in locking out ILWU 21, it will set a precedent for union-busting
up and down the coast. The AFL-CIO ought to provide material support to
ILWU 21. It ought to tell the Operating Engineers to either end their raid
or face censure and expulsion. And it ought to build towards a general
strike against the union-busting. But none of this will happen. AFL-CIO
president Rich Trumka won’t take sides and he won’t act. Trumka calls it a
“jurisdictional dispute”. Indeed, the AFL-CIO leadership – and not just the
top leaders, but most local officials and staffers as well – have for
decades bought into the “team concept” of collaboration with management.
Fundamentally, they believe that there is no alternative to capitalism.
Thus, when the system is in crisis, they try to coerce workers to passively
accept austerity (cuts to jobs, compensation, pensions and social security,
and public services). So instead of leading mass organizing drives, they
raid each other’s unions as union membership dwindles to barely one in ten
workers.

A confrontation is imminent. EGT plans to bring in its first ship in
mid-January. So with Trumka and the AFL-CIO sitting on their hands, what
can be done? Here is where the Occupy movement can play a role. On December
17, Occupy Longview, which has close ties to ILWU 21, called for a mass
convergence on Longview in January to block the loading of the EGT ship. On
December 21, Occupy Oakland voted overwhelmingly (123 – 2) to respond to
Occupy Longview’s call by organizing a caravan to Longview. Occupy
organizers are projecting well over 10,000 – perhaps as many as 25,000 –
occupiers descending on Longview from around the West. And unlike ILWU
International President McEllrath (who opposed the December 12 port
shutdown by an “outside group trying to advance a broader agenda”), ILWU
Local 21 President Dan Coffman welcomes support from the Occupy movement.
This from Coffman: “On behalf of Local 21, we want to thank the Occupy
movement for shedding light on the practices of EGT and for the inspiration
of our members”.

In addition to the convergence on Longview, Occupy can support and help
propagate the call from ILWU rank and file militants who are urging the
International to strike the entire West Coast when the EGT ship arrives –
and, if McEllrath won’t issue the call, then the locals and the rank and
file need to organize a coast-wide wildcat. Let’s recall that in
significant – although admittedly infrequent – cases, ILWU locals (and, in
still rarer instances, the entire West Coast ILWU) have acted in defiance
of the contract and the law to shut down the ports, even without the spur
of community (“outside”) picketers. (To name such instances: the 11-day
boycott of South African cargo famously saluted by Nelson Mandela; a
one-shift West Coast shutdown to support Mumia; a one-day strike against
the war; a shutdown in Los Angeles in solidarity with Australian
longshoremen; and a Puget Sound ferry strike in defiance of injunctions.)
Shutting down the big ports of Oakland, Portland, and Seattle got the
attention of the world maritime industry. Shutting down the twin megaport
of Long Beach / Los Angeles would deliver a heavy blow: Long Beach / Los
Angeles handles 40% of this country’s shipping, nearly ten times as much as
the Port of Oakland.

So we believe that the ILWU can win this immediate battle. But it will take
far more to win the long-term war. First of all, it will take identifying
the true nature of that war. Today longshore is highly automated and
longshoremen are the highest paid but one of the numerically smallest group
of workers at the port. Meanwhile, the most numerous workers at the port –
the port truckers – are by far the lowest paid, the most exploited, and are
completely unorganized (forced to work as independent contractors). There
cannot be a long-term victory for labor on the longshore without organizing
the unorganized port truckers. But more than forty years ago, the ILWU
agreed to deals around containerization / automation that guaranteed high
pay, benefits, and job security in exchange for allowing gross attrition of
jobs as workers retired. The ILWU has been far too content to rely on this
arrangement, rather than reaching out aggressively to support and help
organize the port truckers. So although Longview Local 21 is fighting
militantly against EGT and is reaching out to Occupy for support, the ILWU
International shows zero interest in organizing or otherwise fighting for
the truckers. Such organizing remains essential. We ought not to look to
the ILWU International to do it.

Our enemies try to play on this weakness to exacerbate the divisions. Thus,
from Oakland Mayor Jean Quan:

The people who are planning to stay at the port—do they have families who
have trucks that because of the shutdown in the economy may lose those
trucks? A day’s pay – $600, $700—could be the difference as to whether they
can keep that truck or not.

Quan is disingenuous: most truckers clear less than $100 / day for a long
day’s haul – often as little as $50. But she is poking at a weakness, and
it’s one that we can ill afford to ignore.

Let’s be clear. Occupy has not ignored the port workers. Indeed, port
truckers in Los Angeles’s Latino community were the first to call for a
December 12 port action, when they voted to withhold their labor on this
day, which is a cultural holiday in the Latino community. In solidarity
with them, Occupy LA voted to blockade ports servicing the SSA shipping
company, partly owned by Goldman Sachs. Occupy Oakland then joined their
call and broadened it, calling for a west coast port shutdown in solidarity
with the truckers and with the locked-out longshoremen of ILWU Local 21 in
Longview, and to disrupt the profit chain of Goldman Sachs and “Wall Street
on the Water”.

In the event, the LA port truckers were unable to repeat their successful
wildcat of May 1, 2006, when they effectively organized a significant
number of the more than 15,000 southern California port truckers to shut
down LA / Long Beach longshore operations. Nevertheless, the successful
port shutdowns in Oakland and the Washington and Oregon ports have fully
focused attention on the desperate struggle in Longview.

But organized labor has ignored the port workers. And the Occupy movement
itself has steered clear of direct labor organizing. It does not educate
about the need to organize the unorganized, and Occupy leaders have
discouraged efforts to educate internally and organize externally around a
set of concrete demands that could speak to the needs of the unorganized
and ensure that organized jobs are decent jobs. This leaves such organizing
at the mercy of the labor bureaucracy. Can Occupy sustain and deepen a mass
movement on this basis? Without at least discussing this question and
developing strategy, the Occupy movement is bound to act as a large
“solidarity” movement: engaging in episodic disruptive mass actions
followed by weeks of lull where organizing slows to a crawl while waiting
for new struggles to support and/or new occasions for disruptive direct
action; supporting others’ struggles and demands from the outside. This
leaves Occupy vulnerable to the nature of those struggles and the content
of those demands. To be clear: I am not proposing that the Occupy movement
as a whole adopt a set of detailed demands and set out to organize the
unorganized. (I think that Occupy derives much strength by remaining
essentially a broad united front under the general umbrella sentiment of
economic justice and anti-capitalism.) But I do believe that groupings
inside of the Occupy movement should do so – and that this should be a
priority for Occupy labor outreach groups.

Lesson to the Left: Occupy Oakland Has Not Capitulated to the Democrats

The Occupy movement – and especially Occupy Oakland – has demonstrated
remarkable resilience and an almost unprecedented ability to repeatedly
mobilize mass actions against economic injustice and police brutality. Many
of us have underestimated this movement. Leftist blogs are filled with
statements like “Occupy Oakland is dead” and warnings that Occupy is
capitulating to the liberals, capitulating to the Democrats, capitulating
to the labor bureaucracy — and that unless this or that formula is followed
failure is certain. If we are to be taken seriously by this movement – and,
perhaps more to the point, if we are to understand it and help it to move
forward – we need to first acknowledge that the movement hasn’t
corresponded to the preconceived notions of veteran socialists. Moreover,
it has far exceeded our expectations. And, despite problems, it continues
to act independently of the Democrats and the bureaucrats. Indeed, its
deep-seated, if inchoate, anti-capitalist message and its remarkable
ability to mobilize mass disruptive protests have left the Oakland
establishment dazed and disoriented.

In the weeks preceding the west coast port shutdown, the Oakland
establishment engaged in perhaps the most concerted effort to defeat labor
solidarity since the campaign to bust the Professional Air Controllers
union in 1981. Perhaps the clearest signal of the importance of the port
shutdown to world maritime interests was the decision of the Port of
Oakland to place an ad in the New York Times (3000 miles away, but the home
of Wall Street). The ex-radical, left-liberal politicians who run Oakland
city government and their long-time friends and political allies in the
local union bureaucracy rallied to the defense of the shipping and
financial corporations. Recriminations were hurled by ex-Maoist Mayor Jean
Quan (who ranted about “economic violence … a small group of people are
going to hold this port, this city, this economy hostage”). Port
Commissioner and prominent local labor official Victor Uno, together with
his wife Josie Camacho (secretary-treasurer of the local central labor
council), argued that a port shutdown would inflict hardship on
longshoremen, port truckers, and other workers. ILWU International
President Bob McEllrath, under a not-so-veiled threat of a lawsuit by
Goldman Sachs (part-owner of shipping conglomerate SSA and a target of the
Occupy movement), sent a letter to ILWU members warning, “Support is one
thing. Outside groups trying to advance a broader agenda is quite another
and one that is destructive to our democratic process.”

But their campaign failed, and its failure took them by surprise. The cops
had estimated that at most 300 protesters would try to shut down the port.
But more than 1,000 picketers showed up at the Port of Oakland to shut down
the morning shift, and nearly 10,000 shut down the afternoon shift. Now,
Occupy Oakland has organized the largest mass militant demonstrations in at
least forty years, targeting corporate Oakland and suspending business as
usual. And it has done it on multiple occasions.

This has dragged into the open the true role of the ex-radical politicians
who run Oakland city government and their long-time friends and allies in
the local union bureaucracy. All of these “progressives” operate on the
assumption that Oakland’s well-being depends upon the well-being of Oakland
business – especially the port, the developers, and the banks. So to them,
anything that gets in the way of business hurts the people of Oakland.
Thus, Quan argues that shutting down the port is “economic violence” that
“holds the city hostage”, and City Council members echo the same refrain.
Of course, in the context of the current, deepening global economic crisis,
there will be no end to corporate demands for cuts, layoffs, and handouts
from the city. The Occupy movement has challenged this assumption, and the
politicians are ducking for cover. Their election has been based on their
“left” image, but for years they have been pawns of the corporate bosses.
Occupy is forcing them to choose: which side are you on? The labor
bureaucrats, who have for decades embraced the “team concept” of
collaboration with management, are caught in the same bind.

Consequently, cracks are developing in the “progressive” cabal, as
long-time Quan allies hedge their bets. Thus, Quan’s long-time comrade Dan
Siegel resigned as her legal adviser to distance himself from her
authorization of cop violence in October. Oakland Education Association
President Betty Olson-Jones, another ally and personal friend, supported
the port shutdown (OEA was the only union to support the December 12
action). The local labor council condemned Quan’s authorization of cop
violence against Occupy and declared that she is “on the wrong side of
history”. Sharon Cornu, a mover and shaker in the local Democratic Party
and the former head of the local labor council, resigned as Deputy Mayor.
To be sure, they continue to hedge their bets: thus, within days of the
port shutdown Olson-Jones was a featured speaker at a mass meeting
organized to try to salvage Quan’s career; a few days later the local labor
council leadership held a press conference to urge workers to “give the
Mayor a chance” so that “she can bring jobs to Oakland”; Cornu continues to
praise Quan’s handling of Occupy Oakland.

So Occupy has not capitulated to the liberal politicians. But neither does
it pose a political alternative to this leadership. Occupy remains a
powerful force, but its power lies exclusively in its ability to mobilize
massive but episodic direct actions. It consciously eschews political
action. Left unchanged, this will cede political leadership to one set or
another of representatives of the bosses. Whether or not the Occupy
movement as a whole adopts a specific course of political action, it is
important that the movement at least understands the importance of
combining mass political action with mass direct action, and creates space
and opportunity for its participants to pursue this.

Lesson to the Left: Occupy Oakland Has Not Capitulated to the Bureaucrats

Just as Occupy has not capitulated to the liberal politicians, neither has
it capitulated to the labor bureaucracy. It is, however, a fact that much
of Occupy Oakland’s labor outreach committee consists of the old “labor
left”, including several who have made a career of carrying water for and
currying favor with the local labor bureaucrats and the “progressive”
politicians. This is one of the factors that have caused many, myself
included, to conclude, mistakenly, that the “progressives” had taken charge
– or, at a minimum, that capitulation to them was well under way. To be
sure, there are problems here – most importantly, perhaps, has been the
tendency to overly orient to the labor bureaucrats. This came out most
sharply when the Occupy Oakland leaders insisted on treating the local
bureaucrats as equal partners in organizing an “Occupy / Labor” rally and
march on November 19. They used the terms “labor”, “organized labor”, and
“labor leadership” synonymously, and did not seem aware that except in rare
instances the bureaucrats can’t or won’t mobilize their members. Thus,
although a few thousand marched on November 19 – and although several labor
officials spoke at the rally, it was not a “labor march” at all – there
were only two or three labor contingents on the march, each of fewer than
10 people. This helped local labor officials strengthen the image they
present to their rank and file, without mobilizing the rank and file and
without in any way changing their long-term collaboration with management.

Nevertheless, Occupy has not capitulated to the labor bureaucracy. If one
does not appreciate this, one cannot really understand the December 12 port
shutdowns, when only one union (OEA) supported the action and the full
power of corporate Oakland and much of the labor bureaucracy was arrayed
against Occupy. Instead, the direction of Occupy Oakland’s labor work
continues to be largely determined by the “insurrectionist anarchist” core
that has been the power behind the scenes for all of Occupy Oakland since
its inception in early October. That direction remains to organize mass
disruptive direct action protests, and there is little evidence that they
have altered their approach to accommodate labor officials or politicians.
The insurrectionists are not about to capitulate to the progressives – at
least not in the near future.

But while there has not been a capitulation to the labor bureaucracy, much
of Occupy’s labor orientation has been to attempt to engage unions through
the union leadership. The interests and actions of workers are not
synonymous with the elected leadership of their unions, particularly at the
International level. The Internationals, and many locals, are integrated
into the Democratic Party machine and act as agents for labor-management
collaboration, government ideology and policy in administering concessions
and opposing militant action. Thus, as we discussed earlier, the labor
movement cannot move forward without an aggressive campaign to organize the
unorganized and to provide jobs with adequate pay and decent working
conditions. This simply will not happen at the initiative of the labor
bureaucracy – indeed, they will squash it and / or try to channel it into a
campaign to organize some of the unorganized into rotten sweetheart
contracts. It is very important to be clear about this, because without
such clarity Occupy will inevitably “leave to Caesar what is Caesar’s” –
i.e., to treat the elected labor leadership as though it represents the
interests of the organized workers, rather than those of the Democrats, the
state, and – at bottom – the bosses.

http://insurgentnotes.com/


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