Workers Vanguard No. 1003
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25 May 2012
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Solidarity with Longview ILWU and Its Supporters
Our article “Protest State Vendetta Against Longview ILWU and Its
Allies!” (WV No. 998, 16 March) urged unions, both nationally and
internationally, to protest the vindictive prosecution of some 100 members of
the International Longshore and Warehouse Union (ILWU), mainly from Local 21 in
Longview, and their supporters. As the article noted, this anti-union vendetta
“is a shot at all of labor, aimed at creating a chilling effect on trade
unionists who were inspired by the power ILWU members brought to bear during
their fight against EGT union-busting in Longview.” Union locals from
California, New York and Wisconsin sent letters. International solidarity was
expressed by unions in Canada, France and Germany. The Partisan Defense
Committee—a class-struggle legal and social defense organization affiliated with
the Spartacist League—and its fraternal organizations internationally issued an
appeal for unions to send protest letters to Cowlitz County prosecuting attorney
Susan Baur.
In its letter, the Northern Region of the German Locomotive
Engineers recalled the fines and restrictions on the right to strike that had
been imposed upon them in the heat of a contract battle in 2006-07. The Oakland
Education Association, one of several unions from the San Francisco Bay Area
that sent protest letters, wrote: “The motto of the ILWU is ‘An Injury to One is
an Injury to All.’ We concur with this viewpoint and are sending a donation to
Local 21 to be used in the legal defense of their members and supporters.” In
its letter, the New York chapter of the Coalition of Black Trade Unionists
demanded “an end to this persecution” and that all charges be dropped.
WV is publishing in this issue a letter from the wife of one
of the persecuted unionists, who was president of the Cowlitz County Central
Labor Council (see page 4). While that unionist, Jeff Washburn, was convicted,
at least six others facing similar charges were acquitted in jury trials.
Prosecutor Baur subsequently dropped a number of misdemeanor cases. But she
threatened to file trumped-up felony charges against others—including Local 21
president Dan Coffman—in order to pressure them to plead guilty to misdemeanors
that juries might have acquitted them of. The ILWU has rightly characterized
this now-standard prosecutorial ploy as a “form of extortion.” Those opting to
cop a plea have been sentenced to hundreds of dollars of fines and many hours of
community service. Felony trials against at least two ILWUers are still pending,
and Baur continues to threaten to file additional felony charges.
Two unionists, including ILWU Local 21 secretary-treasurer Byron
Jacobs, have been sentenced to jail time. Jacobs was one of two courageous
ILWUers who came to the aid of Ladies Auxiliary members under attack by police
during a protest against an EGT-bound train on September 21. The two union
members were tackled and forced to the ground, where the cops shot pepper spray
directly into their eyes. This brutal attack was caught on video and later
posted on YouTube. Yet Jacobs was charged with three felony counts! Baur only
agreed to drop these frame-up charges if Jacobs pled guilty to three
misdemeanors. He was sentenced to 20 days of jail work release, $500 in fines,
one year’s probation and an “anger management” assessment. Local 21 member
Ronald P. Stavas was sentenced to 22 days in jail after pleading guilty to
felony attempted burglary and four misdemeanor charges. Dozens of ILWUers
rallied at the Cowlitz County jail in solidarity with Stavas when he began
serving his sentence on April 11.
The union-hating climate fueled by Baur and Cowlitz County sheriff
Mark Nelson has encouraged additional attacks on Local 21. On April 9, the union
hall was broken into, robbed and vandalized. Thousands of dollars of damage was
done, and the words “scabs” and “ILWU fags” were scrawled on the wall with red
spray paint. A significant amount of cash was stolen from the local’s safe, as
well as blank checks, credit cards and other financial records. The union is
offering a $2,000 reward for information leading to the arrest and conviction of
those responsible. Local 21 also had to replace a union billboard publicizing
the ILWU’s long history in the area after it was defaced by graffiti.
Playing its role as the enforcer of anti-union laws, Barack Obama’s
National Labor Relations Board (NLRB) has pursued its own vendetta against the
ILWU. It went to the federal courts and obtained a restraining order last
September against the union for “aggressive picketing,” which resulted in some
$300,000 in fines. The Labor Board also issued a complaint against the union
based on unfair labor practice charges filed by both EGT and the Pacific
Maritime Association (PMA) during the Longview battle. In the April issue of
the union’s newspaper, the Dispatcher, the ILWU International announced a
settlement with the NLRB on this complaint. The PMA is reportedly objecting to
the settlement, the details of which are not yet publicly known. The
Dispatcher estimates that it will take up to two years to resolve the
ILWU International’s appeal of the fines levied by the federal courts. As such,
the fines could well be hanging over the union’s head as it faces off with the
PMA when the coastwide longshore contract expires in 2014.
In the face of the anti-union offensive against the militant labor
struggles waged in Longview last July and September, the ILWU International
leadership backed off. It retreated to filing a lawsuit in the capitalist courts
that charged the city of Longview, Cowlitz County and their top officials,
including Sheriff Nelson, with violating the union’s “respective officers and
members’ rights under the Constitution and laws of the United States and
Washington.” While it is in the interests of the working class to defend all
democratic rights, which have been increasingly curtailed, the battle of
Longview was not a question of defending such civil liberties as freedom of
speech and assembly. It was one of mobilizing the power of labor against the EGT
union-busters, who are backed by the forces of the state. The laws of the United
States are designed to uphold the interests of the capitalist owners—and the
state, namely the courts, cops and military, enforces them against workers in
struggle.
If the working class is to effectively organize to fight in its
class interests, it must wield its ability to stop production and shut off the
flow of profits. There is a vital need to revive the traditions of effective
labor solidarity, not just in words but in deeds.
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