This has a bit of "rose-colored" glasses in it but it gives a pretty good
summary of the role of organized labor --- the "mis-leading" of the
leadership as it supported the Cold War --- and the growing opposition to
that leadership on US foreign policy from within the Labor Movement --- I
also like the reference to a number of iconic songs ---

ALl in all, a useful read ---- despite some reservations ....

[warning -- it's a LONG read ....]

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From: Portside <[email protected]>
Date: Thu, Apr 25, 2024 at 9:18 PM
Subject: From World War II to Gaza:
To: <[email protected]>


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>From World War II to Gaza:
<https://portside.org/2024-04-25/world-war-ii-gaza?utm_source=portside-general&utm_medium=email>


Kurt Stand
April 25, 2024
The Bullet
<https://socialistproject.ca/2024/04/from-wwii-to-gaza-us-labour-opposition-war-fascism/?utm_source=pocket_saves>

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* U.S. Labour Opposition to War and Fascism *

, UE



At a labor press conference/rally on December 14 in front of the White
House, Brandon Mancilla – child of Guatemalan immigrants and director of
United Auto Workers (UAW) District 9 – announced the union’s call for a
cease-fire in Gaza noting: “We opposed fascism in World War II, we opposed
the Vietnam War, we opposed apartheid South Africa and we mobilized union
resources in that fight.”

This was amplified in a subsequent UAW statement that added opposing the
Contra War to the precedents behind the union’s demand for a ceasefire.
That history is a reminder that when unionists call for a ceasefire and
justice for Palestinians, they are acting within a tradition of
international solidarity that links domestic struggles against corporate
greed with international struggles against war, racism, and injustice.

To understand the growing support within union ranks for an end to
unconditional US military and financial support for Israel in its conduct
of a brutal war, it is important to look back at the legacy to which the
UAW statements refer.

World War II

For unionists in the United States and throughout the world, the Second
World War was a war against fascism, a war against the brutal destruction
of labor organization; it was a war against anti-Semitism, against racism
in its every manifestation – and it was a war to make military aggression a
crime.

While disagreements existed within union ranks about how best to contribute
to the defeat of fascism while upholding worker rights domestically, there
was overwhelming agreement around the need to do both. For many
anti-fascists inside and outside the labor movement, victory in a war
forced upon humanity by Nazi Germany, Fascist Italy, and Imperial Japan
meant overcoming greed and hunger, unemployment and hopelessness,
insecurity and fear, all breeding grounds of hatred. This hope was embodied
in the language of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights, which
proclaimed the interdependent needs for economic, social, and political
rights if peace were to prevail in years to come. The creation of the
United Nations was an attempt to give meaning to that promise.

These initiatives came to nought. The effort by European colonial powers –
Britain, France, the Netherlands, and Belgium – to hold onto their colonial
empires and deny millions the rights to self-determination was an early
sign that the promises made during World War II would not be kept without a
struggle; so too, visions of US corporate/political global dominance made
clear that war and militarism, not peace and justice, would dominate world
politics. With the onset of the Cold War, economic, social, and political
rights were torn asunder, becoming a source of working-class division. And
far from abolishing war, a harbinger of what lay ahead took place on August
6 and August 9, 1945, when the United States dropped atomic bombs over
Hiroshima and Nagasaki. Victory on the battlefield can be its own curse if
what follows is the illusion that destructive violence can be the basis of
creative freedom and universal justice.

Yet an alternative vision of a world of peace, of the need for a determined
struggle to make peace a reality, remained. The need for a different path
was expressed by Turkish poet Nazim Hikmet
<https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QZiJawikz20> (imprisoned throughout the
war and thereafter) in verses written in 1956 in the imagined voice of a
girl killed in Hiroshima; a poem later put to music by Pete Seeger
<https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3CPDE6zl7Lg>:








*I need no fruit, I need no rice I need no sweets nor even bread I ask for
nothing for myself For I am dead, for I am dead All that I ask is that for
peace You fight today, you fight today So that the children of this world
May live and grow and laugh and play.      *

Peace or war, justice or oppression, were and remain dividing lines
domestically as New Deal ideals gave way to Cold War realities.
Normalization of a permanent war economy served as a substitute for an
alternative economic model based on democratic input. That necessitated a
lessening of internal union democracy, coincident with the weakening of
civil liberties within society.

Yet notwithstanding the path of subsequent developments, the anti-fascist
posture of organized labor during World War II, the democratic ethos it
embodied, the international solidarity at its heart, remained a touchstone
of union social justice activism and global solidarity in the years ahead.

Vietnam

Post-World War II contradictions came to a head during the war in Vietnam,
costing the lives of nearly two million Vietnamese and tens of thousands of
American soldiers, with countless more wounded in both countries, in
addition to millions of victims in Laos and Cambodia/Kampuchea. Throughout
this time (1960s to mid-70s), the AFL-CIO and most national unions strongly
supported the bombing campaign, the draft, the commitment to troops on the
ground, and every call to expand the scope of our military engagement. A
significant section – likely a majority – of union members and the broader
working-class similarly supported the war at first, but unlike the dominant
leadership of the AFL-CIO, opposition in labor’s ranks, opposition among
working people overall, grew as the reality of the cost of fighting mounted.

Part of the growing cynicism about the value of killing and dying in
Vietnam was due to mounting evidence of the lies upon which the war was
based. Soldiers were being sent into combat not to defend our way of life
(as was said at the time), not to defend the Vietnamese people or a
mythical South Vietnamese democracy, but in defense of our corporate power,
our military establishment, our imperial project. The dishonesty was put
simply in a Tom Paxton song <https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mawfdhLyPcg>
popular at the time:






*Lyndon Johnson Told the Nation Have No Fear of Escalation I Am Trying
Everyone to Please And though it isn’t really War We’re sending 50,000 More
To Help Save Vietnam from Vietnamese.*

Lingering realities of McCarthyism initially made it difficult to find
space – literally and metaphorically – to build an anti-war movement;
something even more difficult within organized labor where criticism of the
war was deemed “anti-labor”. Some unions in the building trades and East
Coast waterfront advocated and engaged in physical attacks on anti-war
demonstrators – with sympathetic winks and nods from then AFL-CIO President
George Meany.

Walls of repression can only hold for so long. Labor statements in
opposition to the war were initially issued by left-wing unions like the
United Electrical Workers and the International Longshore and Warehouse
Union. Leon Davis, president of Local 1199 hospital workers, publicly
condemned the war as early as 1964. District 65’s (Distributive Workers
Union) leadership of Cleveland Robinson, Al Evanoff, and David Livingstone
all took part in anti-war events, The Packinghouse Workers issued one of
the strongest denunciations of the war by a union in 1966. Dolores Huerta
of the United Farm Workers also publicly denounced the war in 1966 – the
UFW officially announcing its opposition a few years later. Each year that
list grew – eventually, the Amalgamated Clothing Workers; the Amalgamated
Meat Cutters and Butchers Workers; the American Federation of State County
and Municipal Employees; the International Chemical Workers; the
International Union of Electrical Workers’ the Oil, Chemical and Atomic
Workers; and the UAW called for an end to the bombing, negotiations and
withdrawal of US troops from Vietnam.

Opposition to the war was rooted in local and regional unions including the
St. Louis Joint Council of the Teamsters (led by Harold Gibbons) along with
many locals from unions supporting or silent on the war including the
Bakery and Confectionary Workers, Furniture Workers, Hotel and Restaurant
Workers, Retail Workers, and Steel Workers (including old Mine Mill and
Smelter units which had merged into the USW in 1965) to name but a few.
Many UAW leaders and locals took a stand against the war well before the
national union. Amongst the most vocal was Sam Meyer from UAW Local 259 –
part of Region 9A and so part of Mancilla’s heritage. Rank-and-file
groupings formed in unions where any dissent on the war was subject to
sanctions, including within building trades unions, and the aggressively
anti-Communist International Longshoremen’s Association. It was this that
made anti-war activism more than statements at a press conference or buried
resolutions; rather, they became the source of discussion and mobilization.
In virtually all unions, opposition to the war met resistance from sections
of the membership, just as unions supporting the war faced membership
pushback. Inner-union debate, largely suppressed for many years, could no
longer be prevented.

In other words, the rising tide of labor anti-war sentiment served as an
assertion of the need for greater democracy within the trade union
movement. This reflected a change in mood within the working-class more
widely – the vociferous support with which many working people initially
greeted the war began to lose steam as the faces of returning veterans
became visible, as the economic cost by way of inflation and economic
stasis mounted. The sense of society coming apart could not be separated
from the senselessness of a war without meaning or endpoint. Coextensive
with the growth of peace sentiment in union ranks – though not directly
linked – were outbursts of rank-and-file militancy expressed in a growing
number of authorized and wildcat strikes.

Although support by many rank-and-file union members for the war continued,
it had lessened and became “quieter” – vigilante attacks on student
anti-war protesters, by and large, ended after 1970. Critical to growing
dissension within union ranks with “business as usual leadership,” was how
unrestrained spending on the machinery of destruction reinforced economic
hardship; the “war on poverty” – notwithstanding genuine accomplishments –
was never funded on a scale remotely comparable to the war waged on
Vietnam. Eventually, that “war” against hunger and want, against racial
inequality, was largely abandoned.

With the formation of a trade union division within the peace organization
SANE in 1966, unionists became part of the wider anti-war movement. Broad
labor participation in the 1969 Vietnam Moratorium deepened those
connections which were formalized in 1972 with the establishment of Labor
for Peace.

Yet, there was no change in the top leadership of the AFL-CIO, which
remained committed to the war. If anything, the divide over the war – and
over the growing restiveness of working people, which was perceived as
threatening to labor’s existing bargaining and political “power” –
sharpened. This revealed itself during the 1972 presidential elections when
the Federation and most affiliates refused to endorse Democratic candidate
Senator George McGovern because of his support for withdrawal from Vietnam,
which amounted to a de facto endorsement of Nixon. Top AFL-CIO leaders
continued to oppose any steps toward peace, continued to denounce efforts
by people abroad to lay claim to their own natural resources, and remained
war supporters until the final troop withdrawal.

That, however, is only part of the story. The peace movement in union ranks
marked the beginnings of a new more genuine unity below the surface, the
revival of the too-long buried outlook that had previously united labor in
the fight against fascism by making a connection between civil liberties
and civil rights and political and economic democracy. Just as during the
Second World War, there were disagreements over how best to organize for
social justice here and overseas, but the recognition that these were
linked and that labor rights required democratic unions, commitment to
equality and peace was rising again to the surface.

South Africa

One of the hopes following the Second World War was that – unlike after the
First World War – the commitment to self-determination would apply to
countries in Asia and Africa still under colonial rule. Not willing to rely
on hope alone, popular movements grew and demands for freedom became
unstoppable. The Vietnam War, lest we forget, began in 1946 as resistance
against the attempts by France to reimpose colonialism. So too, throughout
Africa, from Ghana and Kenya to Guinea and Algeria to the “Belgian” Congo,
demands for independence gained greater strength than ever before. By
1961/62, most of the countries on the continent had gained their freedom.
However, the limitations of the freedom soon became evident with the murder
of the newly independent Congo’s President Patrice Lumumba.

Nonetheless, the gains made throughout Africa during the 1960s were
profound. Not everywhere, however, as Portugal held on to its colonies
while white settler rule remained in South Africa and Rhodesia (present day
Zimbabwe). Those two countries had declared “independence” from Great
Britain while retaining the structure of colonial rule that necessarily
relied on an unvarnished racism. In South Africa this took shape as
apartheid; a system which bore striking similarities with Jim Crow
segregationist South. Nelson Mandela recounted in his autobiography a visit
by a Southern congressman in the early 1960s to the Robben Island prison
where he was being held. That congressman saw nothing wrong with the
treatment of the prisoners there, hardly surprising as it was much the same
as could have been found in Alabama or Georgia or Mississippi. That
similarity reinforced popular understanding that the struggle against
apartheid and against racism in the United States were linked.

Recognizing this, solidarity movements grew within the black community and
within sections of the labor movement from the early 1960’s on. Notably the
ILWU boycotted South African ships in 1962 and again in 1977 and 1984.
Other unions that had been early opponents of the Vietnam War, such as the
Distributive Workers under Cleveland Robinson’s leadership, added their
voices in opposition to South African apartheid especially after the 1960
Sharpeville Massacre when 69 people were killed by South African police
during a peaceful protest, Labor activism was, however, initially limited,
for the dominant leadership of the AFL-CIO viewed with suspicion the
African National Congress and the emerging broad-based independent South
African labor movement (which in 1985 took shape as COSATU: the Congress of
South African Trade Unions). This was partly due to the Federation’s rigid
Cold War mentality, which objected to Communist participation/leadership in
the South African freedom movement, partly due to the (related) support for
US corporate global expansion, perceived as being in the interests of US
trade union members. In consequence, the AFL-CIO took the position that
unions had to be “apolitical,” concerned only with bread-and-butter issues.

This logic led the AFL-CIO to criticize South African unions fighting
apartheid as a system (for that was “political”), and instead, the
Federation supported – with funds and advisors – “approved” segregated
unions. But organized labor could not close itself off from what was
happening outside its confines – the growing militancy of the African
American community in response to the faltering civil rights movement
contributed to greater solidarity with movements for liberation on the
African continent.

This solidarity became more insistent and reached wider numbers in 1976
after South African police massacred school children in Soweto who were
protesting a law to make Afrikaans the language of instruction. Hugh
Masakela’s “Soweto Blues <https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7kHtWuVwZSs>,”
popularized by Miriam Makeba (both exiled during the years of apartheid)
brought the suffering to the wider world:










*Soweto blues – abu yethu a mama Soweto blues – they are killing all the
children Soweto blues – without any publicity Soweto blues – oh, they are
finishing the nation Soweto blues – while calling it black on black Soweto
blues – but everybody knows they are behind it Soweto Blues – without any
publicity Soweto blues – they are finishing the nation Soweto blues – god,
somebody, help! Soweto blues – (abu yethu a mama)*

Accusations that violence was “black on black,” that police violence was
designed to be “without any publicity,” spoke to the ways the apartheid
government sought to hide and isolate opposition to their rule. The myth of
South Africa as the continent’s “only democracy,” where black Africans
lived better than where they gained self-rule could no longer stand
scrutiny. South Africans, in response to violent repression, looked to
global solidarity launching a “divestment, sanctions, boycott campaign.”

After the Soweto uprising, and following the 1977 murder, while in custody,
of Black Consciousness leader Steve Biko, the AFL-CIO changed its position
and began to sharply criticize the South African government and support
release of Nelson Mandela and other political prisoners. The Federation,
however, opposed the boycott campaign, instead advocating for “constructive
engagement” with the apartheid government and corporations, like General
Motors, which operated factories there. The Federation’s support of efforts
to reform the system, rather than challenge its framework, however, gained
little traction, and was rejected by unions in South Africa and
increasingly rejected by unionists within the United States.

Reflecting the upsurge in workplace militancy and the growing working-class
radicalism of the Black Freedom movement, support for solidarity with South
African unionists grew. In the late 1960s and early 70s, an emerging
rank-and-file movement took shape in the formation of factory-based black
caucuses in the Auto Workers, Steel Workers, and numerous other industrial,
craft, and public-sector unions, making the connection between the shared
need to undo systemic structures of racism domestically and globally with
calls for solidarity with South African labor. During those years, there
were relatively few unions with African Americans in national leadership or
in key staff positions;in fact, there were unions that ran hiring halls
that in practice excluded or segregated black workers. Therefore, demands
for greater black representation in local and national union leadership and
support for affirmative action hiring practices were core issues for
African American workers.

In contrast to the Federation leadership’s attempt to separate economic and
“political” demands, those caucuses, as well as left-led multi-racial
rank-and-file caucuses and progressive local and national union leaderships
tended to link demands against corporate racism, the tolerance of racist
practices in organized labor, with community demands opposing racist
practices in housing, healthcare, education, and policing. This paralleled
how issues were framed with the political unionism of South Africa, which
was rooted in solidarity with all working for freedom on the job and beyond
the workplace.

These strands of opposition to domestic racism, opposition to the racism of
US foreign policy, and calls for a more militant labor movement came
together in 1972 when over 1,000 unionists founded the Coalition of Black
Trade Unionists (CBTU). Bill Lucy, AFSCME Secretary-Treasurer and a leader
of the 1968 sanitation workers strike in Memphis (where King was
assassinated) was elected its founding president. Other key figures were
Charles Hayes (later elected to Congress) and Rev. Addie Wyatt (a founding
member of the Coalition of Labor Union Women in 1974), both from the
Meatcutters Union; William Simon of the Washington [DC] Teachers Union, who
was also a leader of the Black Caucus in the American Federation of
Teachers and later an AFT vice president; Ola Kennedy, a steel worker, a
member of the first women’s caucuses in the USW and later a supporter of Ed
Sadlowski’s reform movement; Nelson “Jack” Edwards, an auto worker and
first African American to serve as a UAW Vice President; Dennis Serrette
who as a rank-and-file CWA member had led a successful wildcat strike in
New York; and the ever-present Cleveland Robinson. Noting those names is to
recognize how deeply rooted CBTU was within a range of labor and community
struggles.

So, it was natural that, alongside opposition to the Vietnam War, support
for ending South African apartheid was central to its program from the
beginning. Subsequently, CBTU became the first US labor organization to
call for an economic boycott of South Africa, a call that was taken up by
local unionists who formed city-wide and union-wide action committees. By
1975, the boycott campaign had spread far beyond the ranks of labor,
especially through the work of TransAfrica. Daily sit-ins in front of the
South African Embassy were organized, the arrests that followed keeping the
anti-apartheid struggle in the public eye, laying the basis for the
formation of the “Free South Africa” movement in 1985.

And this was transformative within organized labor. By the 1980s, the UAW
and the United Mine Workers were playing leading roles in South African
labor solidarity, and the AFL-CIO itself would completely reverse course
and fully support the ANC-led anti-apartheid struggle and publicly support
COSATU.

Contra War: Nicaragua (and Guatemala/El Salvador)

In 1979, after an 18-year armed struggle against the dynastic
military-backed Somoza dictatorship, the Sandinistas came to power in
Nicaragua and immediately commenced a land reform and literacy program
alongside other sweeping social reforms. Their aim to improve the life of
people in one of the Central America’s poorest countries was deemed
threatening to the elite in Washington DC. US opposition began immediately
after Anastasio Somoza fled the country, intensifying after Ronald Reagan
was elected president in 1980.

The US established military bases in Honduras, then financed and helped
unify paramilitary organizations to form the Contras who launched a war of
terror designed to make Nicaraguans pay for the revolution’s victory. The
Contras targeted beneficiaries of land reform programs, literacy teachers,
healthcare workers, and unionists. This intervention was done in the guise
of anti-Communism, a category that enabled policy makers to label any
attempt to redistribute wealth in favor of the dispossessed, any attempt to
assert national control over foreign investment, as a direct threat to
national security. The contempt for international law this entailed was
unambiguously reaffirmed when the Reagan Administration defied a World
Court ruling that the US naval blockade of Nicaragua’s ports was illegal.

This assault on the revolutionary process in Nicaragua met with opposition
from anti-war and solidarity movements; the Nicaragua Network was formed
out of numerous faith-based, community, and local union groupings to
coordinate these initiatives. Although support for US militarism and
overseas corporate investment by AFL-CIO leadership was still in full
swing, the movement in union ranks for an alternative foreign policy had
gained considerable strength, building upon the prior movement against the
Vietnam War and the still on-going anti-apartheid movement. Opposition also
grew within working-class circles that had not been part of earlier social
protests. Although Reagan’s war policies had supporters, the experience of
Vietnam considerably widened the numbers of people skeptical of official
claims that we were engaged in a struggle for freedom and democracy.
Frequently, local union initiatives against the Contra War found support
amongst veterans who had paid the cost of the illusions in government
proclamations not too many years earlier and did not want their children to
suffer the same fate.

Critical to this was a recognition that, with the Reagan Administration,
tolerance for unionism that had been a legacy of the post-World War II
social contract had come to an end. The resulting wave of union-busting and
demands for concessions by management executives meant that the rules of
the game had changed. Even Lane Kirkland (having replaced George Meany upon
his retirement in 1979) was forced, rhetorically, even if not
substantively, to respond to this change as union membership began to
precipitously drop.

Yet changes in AFL-CIO policy were limited in conception and practice.
Moreover, they were fatally flawed by the Federation leadership’s
continuing support of aggressive, militaristic foreign policy in alliance
with anti-union government and corporate leaders – as if assaults on human
and labor rights at home did not spring from the same source as assaults on
such rights abroad.

This was put into sharp relief by AFL-CIO leadership’s backing of US
intervention in the simultaneous civil wars being fought in Guatemala (1960
– 1996) and in El Salvador (1980 – 1992). Even when the Maryknoll sisters –
American citizens – were assassinated, even when death squads murdered two
US agricultural advisors working on behalf of an AFL-CIO reform program in
El Salvador, Federation leadership was unwilling to reconsider its
uncritical support of White House and State Department policy. If the lives
of American citizens could be taken without consequence, the murder and
torture of El Salvadoran unionists, peasant leaders, priests, and the rape
and brutalization of nuns did not lead to any change in policy. Similarly
in Guatemala, in which repression reached virtually genocidal proportions
when directed at that country’s indigenous population, a deafening silence
was the response in Washington to reports of terror. Although the United
States (like Great Britain in the years of empire) often justifies imperial
adventure by “defense of women,” violence against women was central to the
terror of the military we financed in Central America. In all three
countries, beneficiaries of US government policies were US-based corporate
investors and local business/landholding elites; the victims were working
people in the fields and factories.

As the wars continued, refugees fled to the United States where they became
sources of exploitable labor. Immigrant communities also became centers of
resistance, grounding opposition to US intervention. CISPES (Committee in
Solidarity with the People of EL Salvador) and NISGUA (Network in
Solidarity with Guatemala) alongside the Nicaragua Network, worked closely
with union-based anti-intervention activists such as the National Labor
Committee in Support of Democracy and Human Rights in El Salvador and the
Guatemala Labor Education Project. City-wide anti-intervention committees
of local unions and rank-and-file committees within national unions formed
to organize against US intervention. North American union delegations
traveled to Central America, meeting counterpart unions of all political
persuasions, seeking to coordinate demands for an end to US support and
weapons supplies to those aimed at destroying economic justice and
political rights.

Ultimately, the anti-intervention movement was strong enough to force
Congress to cut off funding for the Contra War. The Reagan Administration,
however, decided to add violation of US law to violation of international
law; using the combination of drug-running and arms smuggling (while
cutting a deal with our “enemy” Iran) to surreptitiously supply weapons to
the Contras. The resulting “Contragate” scandal – little more than a decade
after Watergate –marked the increased presidential contempt for democratic
institutions. The cynicism at work was striking as the “War on Drugs” was
starting to replace anti-Communism as the excuse for military engagement
abroad (and mass incarceration at home).

Simultaneously, the internal struggle within the AFL-CIO intensified for –
unlike in the case of South Africa – the Federation refused to change its
position, continued to support the whole framework of Reagan’s foreign
policy while engaging in red-baiting to attack those trying to develop an
alternative foreign policy for labor, independent of the government and
corporations. This came to a head at the AFL-CIO’s 1985 Convention when
American Federation of Government Employees President Kenneth Blaylock
challenged Kirkland’s pro-Contra, pro-US intervention policies from the
Convention floor.

Blaylock did not stand alone – William Wipisinger, president of the
International Association of Machinists, and Jack Sheinkman, president of
the Amalgamated Clothing and Textile Workers, similarly challenged Reagan’s
(and Kirkland’s) policies. Altogether, about 1/3 of AFL-CIO affiliates
stood in open opposition to its leadership’s pro-militarism stance as was
visible in the labor presence at mass rallies held in Washington DC and San
Francisco in 1989, protesting US Central America policies.

That labor presence highlighted the connection between domestic and global
struggles, coincident with the recognition of the importance of immigrant
workers to the labor movement. It is no accident that the Service Employees
– whose locals played an especially critical role in building the
anti-intervention movement – was the union that embraced organizing drives
amongst those workers driven from their homes by US backed wars, initially
through the Justice for Janitors campaign. Similarly, the organizing and
strike activity carried out by the Hotel Workers (now UNITE-HERE) in Nevada
and elsewhere, the willingness of the Laborers and some of the other
building trades unions to reach out to Spanish-speaking workers, and the
successful campaigns launched by the Farm Laborers Organizing Committee in
Florida reflected a reorientation taking place within many unions. This was
the backdrop to the successful challenge to AFL-CIO leadership a decade
later that led to John Sweeney’s election as Federation president.

Those changes in labor were real and should not be minimized. Yet they were
limited as neoliberal globalization, combined with union-busting, decimated
labor’s size, strength, and sense of power in the 1990s. An analogous
development took place in Central America. By the early 1990s, the civil
wars in Nicaragua, El Salvador, and Guatemala had ended – with conservative
and right-wing forces holding the upper hand. Yet those wars ended in
negotiation, not annihilation, and the struggle has gone on since then
throughout the region, largely on a political basis, with setbacks and
advances, and a legacy of possibility that, however frayed, remains alive.

Although those aspirations failed to be realized, not all was lost. In both
North America and Central America, the dreams that inspired movements of
resistance and affirmation of popular power remain stronger than the
nightmares of repression. The Highwomen, a song by the group of the same
name, The Highwomen <https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=edQyuO13DlU>, (country
singers Brandi Carlile, Natalie Hemby, Maren Morris, Amanda Shires), (first
performed in 2019, decades after those civil wars) connects the dots
between sacrifice and rebirth, reminding us that defeat is never final:







*I was a Highwoman And a mother from my youth For my children, I did what I
had to do My family left Honduras when they killed the Sandinistas We
followed a coyote through the dust of Mexico Every one of them except for
me survived And I am still alive.*

Cease Fire: Gaza

Labor demands for a ceasefire today build upon the legacy of unionists
whose sense of solidarity crossed borders, as Mancilla noted in his
December 9 press conference. Until recently, however, criticism of United
States complicity in Israeli violations of international law and human
rights has been muted. Nothing comparable to the movement in opposition to
South African apartheid or US funding of the Contras has emerged even
though Israel was an ally of the apartheid government and a major conduit
for arms for the Contras and the El Salvadoran and Guatemalan militaries.
Israel’s establishment out of the ruins of World War II and the horrors of
the death camps, alongside a largely unexamined racism toward Palestinians
and Arab communities overall, contributed to the silence of too many for
too many years.

The depth of the current unrelenting assault on Gaza has helped bring about
a change, exposing the cynical use of the Holocaust to justify oppression
of others, exposing the lies and half-truths rationalizing United States
military and financial support of Israel. Significantly,
Palestinian-Americans have become more visible in social justice movements,
thereby amplifying their collective voice calling for justice for
Palestinians living in Palestine.

Labor’s cease fire demands build upon opposition to the 2003 Iraq War. The
US invasion of that country was “justified” by the attacks on the World
Trade Center (the “War on Terror” now overtaking the “War on Drugs” as the
main excuse for killing people overseas), while opponents of the war were
accused of being supporters of Sadam Hussein’s authoritarianism. But
labor’s anti-war movement was not defending the attacks on the Trade
Center, nor defending Hussein; rather, it was defending working people
victimized by our guns and bombs. US Labor Against the War, organized by
local unionists, won approval for an anti-war resolution at the 2005
AFL-CIO Convention – something unthinkable in prior years.

We are seeing something similar today. The criminal assault by Hamas on
October 7 revealed the powder keg underneath accumulated injustices; the
irrationality and cruelty of that day’s attack revealed the lack of
pathways out of the oppression of occupation. Hamas’ action was preceded
and followed by brutal policies by Israeli governments designed to control
the fabric of everyday life in Gaza with any and every pathway to
self-determination closed. The war now underway has made every resident a
target; the predominance of children, caregivers, the elderly amongst its
victims, exposes its nature as a war against a whole population.

As in the past, free speech by anti-war opponents in our country is also
under attack – university professors and students, high school teachers,
and others have been subject to sanctions for support of Palestinian
freedom, for denouncing Israeli policy. That this takes the form of the
false equation of being “anti-Israel” with “anti-Semitic,” erases the fact
of systemic and individualized bigotry and violence directed at all Arabs,
at all Muslims. So too it ignores past usage of “anti-Americanism,” to shut
down dissent. Such attacks today cannot be separated from a broader
atmosphere of repression as seen by book banning in schools and public
libraries.

In a time when the danger of a Trump re-election has heightened awareness
of the fragility of Constitutional rights, of labor rights it has also
intensified awareness of the need to confront all forms of racism – be it
directed at African Americans, Spanish-speaking immigrants, Asian
Americans, Jews, or Muslims. All this has contributed to the rapid growth
of the ceasefire movement.

When the independent United Electrical Workers helped initiate a Labor for
Cease Fire movement, it was alone amongst national unions, joined initially
only by UFCW Local 3000. When American Postal Workers Union President Mark
Dimonstein argued on behalf of a ceasefire at the AFL-CIO Executive Council
last November, his was a lone voice. The National Writers Union, the
International Union of Painters and Allied Trades, other union locals, and
individual union members added their voices but none of the large unions.
Various state labor federations began to call for a ceasefire on their own
– and were quickly informed by the AFL-CIO that this was contrary to
Federation policy and ordered to cease doing so.

As the carnage in Gaza has continued, along with the flow of weapons from
the Pentagon, voices calling for peace and justice have grown louder. By
the beginning of March, ten national unions – including SEIU, the National
Nurses Union, the National Education Association, the American Federation
of Teachers, American Association of University Professors, along with
APWU, UE, Painters, NWU, and UAW – representing the majority of all union
members – have called for a ceasefire. The strength of that demand has led
the AFL-CIO itself to support that call, a change that enabled state and
city labor federations to issue their own statements.

On February 16, seven national unions and over 200 local unions formed the
National Labor Network for Ceasefire (NLNC). Although ceasefire calls have
reflected a range of views, the core positions are reflected in the
Network’s central demands:

   - An immediate ceasefire in Gaza between Israel and Hamas,
   - Restoration of basic human rights,
   - Immediate release of hostages taken by Hamas,
   - Unimpeded full access for humanitarian aid,
   - Our president calling for a permanent ceasefire.

We can call that solidarity, we can call that empathy, we can call that
putting human values about the values of wealth, power, possession –
whatever the term, it means recognizing ourselves in people whose suffering
is greatest, sentiments expressed by a song Phil Ochs wrote during the
Vietnam War:




*Show me the country where the bombs had to fall Show me the ruins of the
buildings once so tall And I’ll show you a young land with so many reasons
why There but for fortune go you or I.*

Today those bombs are falling on Gaza, ruins of buildings once so tall
commonplace as are loss of life, loss of home, loss of place. Arming and
supporting those dropping the bombs poses a danger for the Palestinian
victims of war, for Israeli where right-wing leadership is an inevitable
consequence of being an occupier, and for US society, inhibiting our
ability to defeat the fascist danger knocking at our door.

Lurking Fascism

That fascist threat grows larger every day, just as our war machine rolls
on, becoming ever larger. United States financial and military support for
Israel doesn’t stem from any putative support for “democratic values,” no
more than did US support for Diem and later Thieu in South Vietnam, for
apartheid South Africa, for Somoza in Nicaragua nor, for that matter, our
support for the Saudi and Egyptian governments. Rather, it reflects a
policy concretized after World War II that seeks to sustain US global
dominance through direct intervention in the affairs of other nations and
through alliances with countries that share strategic goals irrespective of
their political system. Israel, in that sense, carries out on a small scale
policies we carry out through military bases, arms sales, and economic
power throughout the world. This is the reason the US government has
consistently rejected UN General Assembly/Security Council votes condemning
Israeli violations of international law, just as, in reverse, the US
consistently ignores UN General Assembly votes condemning as illegal our
blockade of Cuba.

Today, we are paying a price, domestically and globally, for failing to end
the dependence of the US economy on weapons and war – a dependence that is
at the root of our inability to address climate change, unhinged
inequality, and the erosion of democratic rights. The war economy has
contributed to a culture of violence and insecurity in everyday life, and
crucially has contributed to undermining labor strength. The war in Gaza,
while it has its roots in Palestinian dispossession, reflects the current
rise of right-wing nationalism as the means to impose the stability of
oppression. Global neoliberalism and its perpetual wars reflect the defeat
of the hopes of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights, creating the
framework for the global re-emergence of authoritarian governments and
popular support for neo-fascism. And we are not immune in the United States.

The reactionary, “anti-globalist,” anti-immigrant, xenophobic, and openly
authoritarian politics of Trump/MAGA have gained a powerful base of support
within a significant section of capital and amongst a wide swathe of
working people in response to a pervasive sense of precariousness and
instability building since the 2008 financial collapse and intensified by
the COVID pandemic. For too many these events have been connected to the
loss of power symbolized by our perpetual wars and inglorious retreats.
Trump’s demagoguery posits simple “answers,” including unilateral US
assertions of power without moral or ideological pretentions. Israel’s
slaughter of Palestinians fits neatly in that picture, as does building the
border wall. His opposition to NATO and global alliances enables him to
project a rhetoric of “peace,” that hides the danger of greater war, just
as his “pro-worker” rhetoric hides an anti-labor agenda.

When the Biden Administration attempts to counter that by its own assertion
of the critical need to ramp up arms spending, and to maintain NATO and the
whole panoply of Cold War and international financial institutions created
to sustain US global hegemony, he both fails to counter Trump and
undermines the social reform programs that are the only pathway to overcome
the crisis in society. LBJ’s decision to prioritize war abroad over
domestic reform laid the basis for Nixon, and later Reagan. Today we can
see how support for Israel’s war undermines the Biden Administration’s goal
of overcoming the challenge posed by the “MAGA” movement.

The images of dead bodies in Gaza bring to mind images of warplanes
dropping napalm on Vietnam, reports of school children being shot in
Soweto, of the mounting deaths strangling hope in Central America. We can
only respond by remembering that the concentration camps; the destruction
of unions, of socialist and communist parties, and dissenting churches, as
well as the mass slaughter during World War II were overcome. As Len
Chandler <https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FYxaRS558aU> in a song from the
era of the Civil Rights movement reminds us:





*The seas are gettin’ stormy and the hour’s gettin’ late If that ship
starts seepin’ water you know how to bail You can’t change the weather but
you sure can change the sail And our harbor looks much better when you’ve
made it through a gale So I guess I’ve gotta keep on keepin’ on.*

Labor’s statements for a ceasefire points our ship of state in a direction
we need to travel. It is critically important to push harder, turn words
into action. We must connect that need to end war to a broader program of
structural reform to control capital investment and recenter economic
policy on public ownership rooted in community and workplace power. We must
set a course to finally end systemic inequalities and address looming
climate catastrophe.

For this to happen peace is paramount. Current realities dictate that
unions need to and will support Biden over Trump, but labor needs to do so
around its own course that challenges Biden’s limitations. Organizing to
end US support of Israel’s war in Gaza, as part of a broader program to
reduce military spending and take steps toward negotiated peace to end wars
taking place in Europe, Africa, the Middle East is a means to recapture the
hope that flickered briefly in 1945: that all people are entitled to live a
life of dignity, equality, and peace. As the ceasefire resolution issued by
the Coalition of Labor Union Women
<https://www.cluw.org/index.cfm?zone=/unionactive/view_article.cfm&HomeID=913384>
concludes:

“The time has come again for the labor movement to speak up and act out
against the atrocities of war. We cannot become inured to the barbarism our
species still resorts to when conflicts arise. As women, workers, veterans,
and citizens of the world, we must continue to demand a peaceful world, and
work to create it.” •

Kurt Stand is a member of UFCW Local 1994, and serves as a *Portside*
labour moderator.

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