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Cuomo-de Blasio Racist Transit Contract Taking Workers for A Ride

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09 May 2014 328 hits

NEW YORK CITY, May 5 — Workers here are under attack. Masses of city employees are slaving away under expired union contracts. The principle of “No contract, No work” — meaning if workers hadn’t won their demands when their contract expired, they would strike — now seems like ancient history. Gone is the militant, communist leadership that once steered NYC unions towards challenging capitalists’ constant drive to maximize profits off our backs. Instead we have union mis-leaders telling workers for years to hold on for a new, “better” mayor. Recent events have shown that putting faith in union hacks and politicians will get us nowhere!
On April 17, transit workers found they were among the first to be sold out. A deal struck between Transit Workers Union (TWU) Local 100 mis-leaders and NY State Governor Cuomo “The Cutter” raises the cost of workers’ health insurance, lengthens wage-progression to five years (up from three) and only grants pay raises that are really cuts because they’re below inflation. It provides the bosses and their lackeys years of “labor peace” with a five-year contract (also up from three).
This is a racist contract which attacks a mainly black, Latino, Asian and immigrant workforce, and is especially bad for those newly hired who are even more predominately from those groups. Since it will take even longer to get to top pay, the contract will encourage hire-and-fire attacks (especially in already unstable jobs like bus drivers). However, this racist sellout will affect all new transit workers, will further divide the new from the old and thereby weaken all.
While Metropolitan Transit Authority (MTA) unions bargain with the State, the amount that 38,000 TWU Local 100 members earn sets a pattern in the city for all workers, especially other MTA workers who are in Amalgamated Transit Union locals. This is clear from the April 30 deal announced by Bill “Cutbacks” deBlasio and the United Federation of Teachers. The sexist teachers’ contract, which attacks a mainly female workforce, allows for nearly the exact same pay raises that fail to match inflation and represents a longer-than-usual contract.
To be clear, gross totals of inflation for 2012 and 2013 were 3 percent, while pay raises were only 2 percent. New York workers are well aware of this, especially thanks to the Rent Guidelines Board, which has jacked up rents 5.25-7.25 percent in those years!
The cuts in real pay and benefits in store for the rest of the city’s workers could be even worse. Much of this stems from the fact that while the bosses steal trillions of dollars from public and private sector workers’ labor, they spend these monies on imperialist wars. Capitalist politicians are professional liars when in comes to blaming one another for lack of funding for schools, transit and healthcare that workers need.
As workers we need the PLP to grow, to become strong enough to lead workers, students and soldiers away from not only the bosses’ politicians but also from the treadmill of reforms. While it’s good to fight to make workers lives better now, capitalism operates to take away what meager gains we win through higher taxes, mass racist unemployment, two-tier wage systems and outright wage-cuts. That’s why learning to fight the bosses is even more important, so we can ultimately overthrow the capitalist class and take power for ourselves. A communist system could meet all workers’ needs, destroy racism and sexism, homelessness, imperialist war and wage slavery.

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Reject Racist Anti-student Contract

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09 May 2014 345 hits

NEW YORK CITY, May 5  — The UCLA Civil Rights Project just named New York as the state with the most segregated school system in the U.S., with New York City leading the way.
Racist disparities between students of the same age show us each day how unequal our society is. An Annenberg Foundation report of September 2012 found that in black and Latino neighborhoods only 10% of students graduate “college ready.”
The current contract proposal for NYC teachers is — like those before it — a contract ON the mainly black and Latino youth of the NYC school system. The offer of $5,000 to teach in “hard-to-staff” (read black and Latino) schools is a capitulation to racist segregation, to the notion that separate can be made more equal. Teachers must reject this contract because separate can never be made equal.
This contract ought to be rejected also because it contains increased avenues for the Department of Education  and principals to sow division among teachers by offering merit pay. If this contract passes, a small number of teachers will be anointed as ones with the responsibility for coming up with new and sustaining effective teaching practices.
Teachers must reject this contract because our union refuses to fight for a reduction in class size. Yes, it is true the raises are paltry and don’t even keep up with inflation. However, that is not the reason to vote this contract down. We should vote no because we need to send a strong message that we stand in solidarity with the interests of our students. The 2012 teachers strike in Chicago had mass support because the teachers were demanding better conditions for everyone in the schools, not just money for themselves. This kind of working-class solidarity is necessary but not sufficient to bring about the changes we need, which can only be satisfied by communist revolution.
We ought to use this contract vote to truly examine our priorities as educators. Good teachers do not show up to work every day merely for the money, but because we care about equality for the students.
Capitalism wreaks havoc on the lives of our students and it is a never-ending struggle to teach well. The only way out is to band together with students and their families to fight the bosses’ racist, segregated school system. In this fight we tie ourselves to a long tradition of struggle, a tradition that has given birth to revolutionaries committed to the fight for communism. From each day on the job, to local strikes to general strikes to insurrection to the seizure of power, the banner of the struggle for an education our students deserve is emblazoned with the slogan: FIGHT TO LEARN, LEARN TO FIGHT.

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May Day: Haiti

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09 May 2014 324 hits

HAITI, May 1 — On May Day, comrades joined the May Day march with more than 1,000 participants: workers, teachers and students. We distributed hundreds of flyers and led chants.
The march started at the SONAPI (free trade zone industrial park) and wound its way to the Champs de Mars, a large public park in front of the National Palace where tens of thousands of workers lived in tents for more than two years after the 2010 earthquake.
The police attacked the march and one marcher was punched in the eye and two students were arrested. One, a close friend, was beaten in the police precinct. In response, students at the Faculté d’Ethnologie organized a two-day strike on campus demanding their release; there were also several days of street demonstrations, which were attacked by the cops.
Other comrades participated in a speak-out of garment workers, a way to share the daily misery experienced by workers and to press for their demands for an increase in the minimum wage.
In the countryside, a comrade organized a meeting on May Day with 20 farm workers, led by one who is close to Our party. Later in the town’s public square, we showed a documentary film with more than 500 people. There was a lively discussion afterwards, in which communist ideas and our Party was discussed. In another town, a comrade organized a May Day rally and is engaged with other residents of the area in a struggle to take over for public use certain infrastructures left by an NGO.

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May Day: Washington, DC

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09 May 2014 378 hits

WASHINGTON, DC, May 1 — Today 150 marchers gathered at Malcolm X Park to celebrate May Day and reaffirm their determination to fight back on all fronts against racism and capitalism.  
One speaker, formerly imprisoned, described the racist horror of mass incarceration and how background checks, even after someone’s release, makes it impossible to find a job and support yourself.  A Metro bus driver called on workers to unite against racism and sexism everywhere as part of the revolutionary struggle, and noted a small victory against racist background checks at Metro.
Another noted the recent successful unionization of adjunct teachers at two local universities. A tenant organizer called on everyone to come to a city-wide tenant organizing meeting as part of the battle against racist displacement through gentrification. A PL’er described the modern-day racist offensive of mass incarceration and mass deportation, and how only by  building a revolutionary party, not limited to reform efforts, could we hope to succeed in the long run.
With PLP red flags snapping in the breeze and our bold May Day banner at its front, the march surged down 14th Street to the White House, with over 300 copies of CHALLENGE distributed to workers who saw the march pass by. At the White House, we observed a handful of racists who had gathered to oppose the May Day march, completely protected by a phalanx of cops and a metal barricade to defend them from angry protesters. They remembered how the racists were clobbered the year before by May Day marchers!  Finally, the police loaded the racists into a police van and drove away — another example of cop-Klan solidarity with racists.
The day ended with bold speeches against the backdrop of the bosses’ White House, condemning the politicians and the capitalists for their imperialist wars, their racist attacks, and their destruction of the environment, and with a pledge to redouble our efforts in the coming year to smash capitalism!

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May Day: Newark

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09 May 2014 309 hits

Newark, NJ May 1— On this May Day, more workers worldwide are fighting the capitalists’ mass layoffs, cutbacks due to government austerity, and police terror. PLP’s idea that nothing short of communist revolution can ever change the fundamental reality of capitalist exploitation, racism and sexism needs to emerge from these struggles. Some workers here are beginning to examine this idea. Their actions reflect a break from the idea that the bosses’ election circus can help our class.
Today, 75 people, including about 25 legal services workers, family members and clients, along with community and union militants, marched against the continued underfunding of free legal services for unemployed and low-wage workers; continued cuts in unemployment benefits and Food Stamps; mass racist unemployment and for jobs; and in solidarity with public school workers and students facing the ax of state-appointed Superintendent Cami Anderson’s school closing plan.
‘Jobs, Yes. Racism, No — Food Stamp Cuts have Got to Go!’
Chants of “Same struggle, same fight, workers of the world unite,” “Whose day, Our day, What day? May Day,” and “Jobs yes, racism no. Food Stamp cuts have got to go” were heard in downtown Newark.
Over 150 CHALLENGE newspapers were distributed. This march was a major organizing effort for local legal services workers, and included a healthy battle over ideas.
After a Nov. 1 march against budget cuts, legal services workers here initiated a War Against Poverty Coalition (WAPC). We reached out to unions, community and neighborhood groups, teachers, students, and service providers for homeless people. In February, the WAPC decided to organize today’s march with two demands: jobs at living wages, and restore cuts to the safety net. A demand to stop attacks on public school students, parents and teachers was added.
A sharp debate took place within the WAPC over whether politicians who said they supported the demands of the march should be allowed to speak on May Day. Some honestly believed that having the politicians on our side will help win our demands. They also didn’t see a viable alternative to voting as a way to change the system. Opponents strongly argued that, no matter who the individual politician is, their role is to serve the current masters of society, the ruling class. They also said that any politician who speaks will use that opportunity for their own narrow political purpose — getting elected.
The Coalition decided to only recognize those politicians who supported the demands of the march, but to not allow them to speak. Because there are hotly-contested May 13 mayoral and city council elections, various Democratic Party candidates or staffers contacted the Coalition and unsuccessfully tried to worm their way on to the speakers’ list. However, WAPC stuck to its position.
The legal services worker who spoke for WAPC linked the cutbacks to war preparations. She said U.S. bosses  “are trying to use us as mere pawns in their war games in their battle for supremacy against other international imperialists around the globe” and said that we should fight back instead of allowing these same bosses to place us “in a Hunger Games Arena.”
The community fighter stated it was not enough to fight for reforms; that we must also fight for revolution to change the economic and political system that workers live under. However, he hoped such a revolution would not require violent struggle. He invoked Martin Luther King’s pacifism and Frederick Douglass’s call to action against slavery.
Only Armed Struggle Can Topple the Bosses
PLP says there can’t be a peaceful revolution to get rid of capitalism. For centuries, oppressed people who rose up against their masters, kings and bosses to change conditions were violently suppressed by these same rulers. The struggle to abolish chattel slavery in the U.S., which did not end all forms of exploitation here, only came through armed struggle against the armies of the plantation owners.  As Marx said, “Force is the midwife of every old society pregnant with a new one.” It has taken many lost lives and broken spirits for class-conscious workers to realize that neither the election of “progressive” candidates, or a mass reform movement, or both, can break the power of any boss-run government.
The final rally ended with the singing of the Internationale, a song written by a transport worker who fled the Paris Commune (an uprising of workers that led to the first worker-run government in the world) in 1871 to escape the slaughter of 30,000 Communards by the army of the French capitalists. One worker was inspired and asked for words to that song. As we move to the next stage in this struggle against capitalism, we are a step closer to the “better world in birth” that PLP is fighting for.

  1. May Day: Tel-Aviv
  2. May Day: San Francisco
  3. Mass Strikes Hit China’s Nike Exploiters
  4. China’s Capitalist Roaders Wreck Proletarian Cultural Revolution

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