By Scott Marshall
People's World
VANCOUVER, Canada - World labor leaders gathered here in the second congress of the International Trade Union Confederation are of one mind in rejecting the "Washington consensus" that calls for deregulation of banks and financial markets.
In his opening address, Guy Ryder, the outgoing ITUC general secretary, called for an end to the "dictatorship of the finance-atariate." He said it is the people's time to fight for "fundamental change in globalization."
The delegates amplified Ryders message in their remarks, and in one voice declared that decent jobs is the only real answer to the economic crisis. Overwhelmingly the delegates called for financial transaction taxes to pay for jobs and economic recovery.
AFL-CIO President Richard Trumka, speaking from the U.S. delegation, called for bold action for a "new economic order." Citing the violent government attacks and repression against the Mexican miners' union in Cananea, Trumka said the new order must include strong labor and human rights. He said collective bargaining and the right to organize are cornerstones of real democracy in a new economic order.
Many delegates raised the need to fight for the unemployed and jobs at the same time as global labor puts forward the demand for stock transaction taxes and re-regulation of the financial markets. Many also pointed out that a crisis of poverty, hunger and homelessness was rampant throughout the developing world long before the financial market meltdown and the Great Recession.
Like many of the delegates, A. Santos of Brazil argued that the crisis shows the failure of the neo-liberal model, with its deregulation, wild speculation and attacks on labor and human rights. He called for a new economic model that will put people back to work with decent jobs and income, that will provide a strong role for the state in regulating and controlling finance capital and tackle sustainable economic development to end poverty, hunger and homelessness.
J. Smit of the Netherlands echoed the call of many delegates for fundamental change in globalization. The current system doesn't work and the "invisible hand" of the market is dead, he said. Just as feudalism has failed so this system has to be discarded, Smit said. He called for a new system that provides social security, labor rights, a strong public sector, strong services, and strong banking controls. We need a sustainable green system, he said.
S. Andersson of Sweden spoke of the work of the ITUC's youth committee. She told how young workers are using social networks and new technology to bring young people into the labor movement. She outlined some of the special problems facing young workers including being forced into temporary work with no rights, where they are often cheated out of wages. She said the ITUC must become a loud voice for young workers.
Throughout the discussion it was clear that a new fighting spirit is emerging in global labor. With all the calls for action from the congress came also a realization that labor must form bigger and stronger coalitions to take on finance capital globally. As one delegate put it, "If we are united, if we reach out to all of labor and all of the people, we can push back just as hard as the banks and the multinational corporations try to push us."
Photo: Inuit throat-singers welcome delegates to the second congress of the ITUC in Vancouver. (PW/Scott Marshall)
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