Notice: Function _load_textdomain_just_in_time was called incorrectly. Translation loading for the powerpress domain was triggered too early. This is usually an indicator for some code in the plugin or theme running too early. Translations should be loaded at the init action or later. Please see Debugging in WordPress for more information. (This message was added in version 6.7.0.) in /var/www/alternc/s/solidarityus/www/solidarityus.org/site01/wp-includes/functions.php on line 6114
Lessons of the Staley Fight – Solidarity

Lessons of the Staley Fight

Posted August 27, 2006

A SOLIDARITY PAMPHLET

by Steven Ashby

THERE’S AN ARTICLE in the February 1996 Labor Notes on the end
of the Staley struggle; a far longer, more in-depth analysis came
out in the March/April 1996 issue of
Against the Current
; and
there’s also a hard-hitting, last issue of the UPIU 7837 “News
from the War Zone.”

I’m not going to spend time describing how the fight ended on
December 22nd, how terrible the contract is, the treachery of the
UPIU international, the false promises that newly elected AFL-CIO
President John Sweeney made and never implemented, the bitterness
and betrayal the Staley activists feel toward the Local 7837 sell-out
crowd and UPIU President Wayne Glenn, the calling of the cops
on the militant union members and locking them out of the union
hall, etc. 

In the short time available, the most useful discussion is the
topic of “what can we draw on from this fight, despite the
defeat, that will continue to help our work in the labor movement
and other movements.”

FIRST–This fight symbolized the changes in U.S. and global
capital.  Last year $800 million were spent in mergers.  When
multinationals buy out companies, increasingly there are massive
layoffs and either demands for massive concessions or an all-out
union-busting effort.  Staley is owned by Tate & Lyle,
Caterpillar and Firestone/Bridgestone are also owned by
multinationals. 

The Staley defeat, alongside that of Caterpillar and
Firestone/Bridgestone workers, sends a powerful message to
Corporate America.  You better believe that management was
watching these fights closely and drew strength from the unions’
defeats.  This was the largest use of scab labor and permanent
replacements since the 1930s, and it worked.  This was PATCO
times ten.  [PATCO was the air traffic controllers’ union smashed
by Ronald Reagan in 1981.]

What the Staley workers repeated on their thousands of Road
Warrior trips–“They’re coming after us now, but you’re next”–is
absolutely true.  The corporations succeeded in defeating two of
the founding CIO unions, the United Auto Workers and United
Rubber Workers.  And they beat the one that fought the hardest,
with the most creativity, the most militancy, and the most
energy–the small Staley local.  And that sends a message to every
corporation and multinational. 

We’re already starting to hear from unionists facing management
demanding twelve-hour shifts, massive subcontracting, and the
gutting of contracts.  Across the bargaining table management is
saying, “Remember CAT and Staley, before you reject this
contract.”

SECOND–Despite the defeat, this fight can be a positive message,
a gleam of hope, to progressives and socialists.  Staley was a
typical local union in the 1980s.  They had one strike in the
past fifty years.  No big turnout at union meetings.  No
tremendous identification with the union by its members.  No
special ties to the community.  Ten years ago the work force was
what many called “Reagan Democrats.”  Hundreds of the Staley
workers are Vietnam War vets. 

Yet they were determined to fight.  They organized their
membership.  The membership educated themselves and came to
understand that this was no normal labor conflict but part of a
national and global trend.  They expressed the same ideas that
socialists do about there being a class war against the working
class and the need for a militant response.  But they said it in
down-to-earth, everyday language, in their own words, in better
words, in fact, than ninety-five percent of the organized left
uses. 

Large numbers of the Staley workers were radicalized on class
issues, and on the role of the government, police, and courts.  A
couple dozen have developed ideas that are in line with many
socialist concepts.  That should give us a great deal of hope and
of what is possible.  Especially in these depressing days of the
surging radical right-wing Republicans, and the rightward-heading
Democrats. 

Looking Ahead: Future Battles

THIRD–Most importantly, Solidarity’s emphasis now should be on
the positive lessons of the fight.  Despite the defeat, despite
the weaknesses of UPIU Local 7837–and there were a number–the
fact remains that this small local waged an incredible fight. 
This fight wasn’t just the fight of the decade, in my opinion. 
It surpassed the Hormel P-9 fight. 

Even in defeat, in many ways the Staley workers have shown the
way forward for American labor.  I feel quite confident that if
the Caterpillar and Firestone/Bridgestone workers, with which
they were in alliance, had taken the same tactics, that all three
could have won. 

Solidarity’s emphasis should be on doing everything in our power
to spread those lessons.  The Staley fight can continue to help
us push for a rank-and-file run, democratic, militant, anti-racist,
and politically independent labor movement. 

For example, during the fight, 350 IUE workers at the Raco plant
in South Bend, Indiana considered fighting a planned plant
closure.  And they said, “How are we going to get our members
involved for something like this?  How can we get the community
to care and side with us and speak out?  We’re nearly broke–how
can we raise the money?  Our international is worthless, how can
we win?”

And to every question, there were people saying, “You know
what–the Staley workers did it.  We can do it, too.”  And the IUE
local organized a tremendous labor-community-religious coalition
to save jobs.  And, in fact, they won.  Raco backed down. 

What can we learn from the Staley workers’ fight?  What lessons
should we keep repeating?  What did they do right?

I think there are five themes:

  1. “It happened to us, it’s happening to others, it could
    happen to you.”

    This remains a key problem for the American working class: a lack
    of understanding of what’s going on in the national and global
    economy.  The inability of millions of workers to put what’s
    happening to them in context.  What the Staley workers said was:

    A multinational bought the company out and came after the
    workers. 

    The multinational wanted to use the Local to start a new pattern
    in the industry of twelve-hour shifts, gutting health and safety,
    subcontracting out most union jobs, crushing the union. 

    Our experience with labor-management cooperation backfired on us,
    was used against us, weakened our union, strengthened the company
    and helped it in the lock out. 

    We brought in labor educators and talked about how this was a
    national and global trend. 

    This education led us to come up with idea that it was a “war
    zone” and “war on the workers,” and not just another labor-management
    conflict over negotiating a fair contract. 

  2. “You can’t take on management without the rank and file.”

    The Staley workers organized the membership to see the union as
    their own, as a central part of their lives.  Again, this is a
    critical problem in the labor movement.  We can talk all we want
    about transforming labor, but we can’t do it without members, and
    overwhelmingly most workers don’t identify with their unions. 

    The Staley local was pretty much like every other local union
    before they got into this fight: small attendance at union
    meetings, weak community ties, good relations with the company,
    enthusiastic participation in labor-management committees, not a
    strong identification with the Local by the membership.  It was a
    “family” company for fifty years.  People liked the company–they
    boasted about working at Staley.  It was a good place to work. 

    They brought in educators and had discussions about what they
    were up against. 

    They started weekly solidarity meetings and got hundreds of
    members and spouses to attend. 

    They decided to organize a work-to-rule campaign–and organized
    one of the best we’ve ever seen.  That really was the basis upon
    which the fight began.  The membership was organized through
    work-to-rule.  It strengthened the union.  Hundreds of workers
    identified with the union and understood what they were up
    against. 

    Their awareness of what they were up against and their level of
    commitment and cooperation convinced ninety-seven percent of the
    members to raise their dues to $100 a month.  An incredible
    thing, but it can happen.  You can build rank-and-file
    participation at every level, and you can get people who whine
    about $15-20-25 a month dues to raise their dues.  It is
    possible. 

    They brought their spouses (mostly women) to the solidarity
    meetings, and the women became an integral part in the fight. 

  3. “Unions, including the Staley workers before the fight,
    lack broad community support–but they organized to change
    that in Decatur.”

    Another central weakness of labor: We’re so isolated; there’s so
    much anti-union sentiment that goes unanswered.  We need to start
    now to organize broad support, to make allies, to support
    community and anti-racist struggles.  We need to reach out to the
    clergy and congregations, to the Black community, to the Latino
    community, students, to build these alliances now, and overcome
    our isolation.  This is a central theme of what they succeeded in
    doing.  No miracles–it wasn’t perfect. 

    The Staley workers went door to door in the community over and
    over again with literature to explain their fight and ask for
    community support. 

    They organized, and believed the themes of “it’s our solidarity
    versus theirs” and “corporate greed is tearing Decatur apart,”
    which are central for the labor movement if we are going to
    succeed.  This is not the unions versus a company; this is the
    workers against corporate greed; this is our community, organized
    or unorganized.  Everyone in the community is against corporate
    greed.  We have to convince people of this strategy, and believe
    it in our hearts.  And they did in Decatur. 

    They worked with the clergy.  They had sixty clergy put an ad in
    the local newspaper.  The company refused to meet with them, and
    that infuriated them.  They had a number of churches repeatedly
    giving donations from their congregations, many of them
    unorganized workers.  Far more working-class people go to church
    than go to union meetings.  It was one way to reach people. 

    The clergy were arrested for blocking the company gates.  A
    Catholic priest became a community spokesperson.  When it was
    suspected that the union hall was bugged, strategy sessions were
    held in the Catholic parish, including all meetings when we [the
    fifty arrested for blocking the plant gates on June 4, 1994] were
    on trial.  That was an important part of the struggle, an
    important lesson. 

    And there are lessons from this struggle about dealing with
    racism.  There had never been a woman elected to the executive
    board or bargaining committee, and never an African American. 
    Women were roughly 7% of the local, African Americans were 10%. 
    There’s a fair amount of racism.  There’s more than 180 miles
    between Chicago and Decatur, but Decatur feels more southern–not
    that we don’t have a lot racism in Chicago. 

    The African-American workers organized themselves–they reached
    out to the Black community, they brought a lot of white workers
    with them.  And a lot of white workers became more anti-racist
    because of the struggle, and that was powerful. 

    I don’t know if there was much of a civil rights movement ever in
    Decatur.  But there were 600-800 people marching on the
    anniversary of Martin Luther King’s death, white and Black
    workers chanting “Black and white, unite and fight.”  That was
    unprecedented for Decatur and for those white workers.  You can
    build anti-racism “before” a fight or in the “midst” of a fight. 
    It’s an important lesson: You have to reach out to the community,
    including the Black community. 

    A significant number of workers believed, and organized on the
    theme, that labor rights are civil rights.  They reprinted Martin
    Luther King’s speeches and tied their fight to the 1960s Civil
    Rights Movement. 

    The Staley workers weren’t afraid to bring in outside organizers. 
    I don’t know where this has happened before.  They brought in Ray
    Rogers, who initially played a mostly positive role but for two
    years after the lockout drained and misguided the Local.  They
    also brought in Jerry Tucker from St.  Louis, who, unlike Rogers,
    was an unpaid organizer, and they brought in radical organizers
    from Chicago, Detroit and Champaign. 

    They had open arms to people.  They said, “Help us reach out. 

    Help us reach out to the Black community, to the congregations
    and clergy.  Help us build solidarity committees.”

    And, of course, they ran an election campaign for labor
    candidates running on a labor theme for city council.  They made
    it through the primary, and then Dave Watts lost in the general
    election.  Again, a positive lesson of reaching out for support
    in the city.  A lesson we need to repeat over and over again–that
    is the way forward for the American labor movement. 

  4. The nationwide solidarity campaign was a central part of
    their fight.”

    Inexperienced speakers became Road Warriors–dozens of them–and
    fanned out across the country.  They touched the minds and hearts
    of hundreds of thousands of workers.  We haven’t seen that in
    Detroit [newspaper strike].  We’ve seen a few people going out. 

    Caterpillar and the Rubber Workers did none of these things;
    occasionally they’d send somebody out.  But the Staley local sent
    out dozens of people, who became great speakers. 

    They basically argued when you can use the AFL-CIO bodies, use
    them.  When you can’t–which is most of the time–go around them
    and put the heat on them.  Build solidarity committees.  Again,
    when we asked the Rubber Workers and CAT workers, they said they
    didn’t want solidarity committees. 

    It’s very important when we can say building solidarity
    committees worked, and even though the Staley workers ultimately
    lost, it was an important part of their battle.  They reached out
    and built solidarity committees, unionists and non-unionists,
    official union bodies when they could, as in Madison and
    Milwaukee, and in most cases, unofficial ones. 

    Unionists and unions were their base, including the in the
    solidarity committees, but the Staley workers talked about how
    they worked on a national level with students.  The Road Warriors
    spoke on a lot of campuses.  I believe the Staley fight was one
    of the important catalysts for the formation of the Student Labor
    Action Coalition. 

    The Staley workers said, “We can’t rely on the media–or the AFL-CIO–to
    get our message out.”  Their two videos were powerful
    tools.  Thousands of copies were distributed.  With the second
    video, “The Struggle in the Heartland,” I believe 2,000 were
    distributed in Chicago alone.  These videos played a critical
    role in building nation-wide support.  And here again is an
    important lesson for labor. 

    A corporate campaign was a key part of the fight.  You study a
    corporation’s vulnerabilities and organize a massive solidarity
    campaign to hit the corporation in the pocketbook.  We succeeded
    in pressuring Miller to end its contract with Staley.  The view
    is widespread among the militants in Decatur that we were
    succeeding with Pepsi.  So we need to tell the positive lessons
    of how the corporate campaign worked.  The nation-wide solidarity
    campaign was central to their whole fight. 

    Creative Uses of Non-Violence

  5. Cross That Line: Labor law is against you, so sometimes
    you have to break laws and try creative new tactics in order
    to fight the fight.”

    This was a more complicated part of the fight, issues that were
    never totally resolved.  But certainly the Staley workers came to
    understand, and talk about, how the city council, police and
    courts were tools of the corporation, and used against them. 
    Before this fight the Staley workers had a lot of respect for
    local institutions.  But that changed, out of their experience. 

    They organized the June 4th and June 25th civil disobedience
    demonstrations, which were important civil disobedience actions
    blocking the gates. 

    They consciously chose a non-violent strategy, to maintain
    community support.  And that’s an interesting discussion, about
    “violence” or “non-violence” at plant gates. 

    They went to Springfield and sat-in at the Governor’s office,
    with thirty-one arrests. 

    They went to Bal Harbour, Florida and confronted the AFL-CIO
    leadership.  That action alone was a critical catalyst in
    bringing down Lane Kirkland and opening up an election in the AFL-CIO,
    which allowed John Sweeney to run and win.  And that’s
    important not so much for what Sweeney represents, but for what
    the election represented. 

    There were other controversial tactics, including Dan Lane’s
    sixty-five day fast. 

    They never resolved the question of the injunctions and the
    threat of massive fines.  Basically they felt that if they did
    attempt to defy the injunction, the union officers would lose
    their homes, the AFL-CIO would not be there for them, the UPIU
    would not be there for them.  The labor left was too tiny.  The
    fact is that they never got more than 7,000 people to Decatur. 

    I wished they had moved forward for a more consistent civil
    disobedience campaign at the gates, and that did not happen.  The
    two actions they did were the best ammunition they had, combined
    with the video, to get nation-wide support and solidarity.  But
    the fact that they ran into those obstacles opens up a
    discussion: How do you stop production in the midst of a lockout
    or strike when you are faced with injunctions and police?

    So these are the five themes I think we must continue to talk
    about.  Despite their tactics, the Staley workers lost–but if a
    big chunk of the labor movement took up these themes, we’d be a
    thousand times stronger.  The litany of defeats could end, and we
    could win and keep winning.