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U.S. Army May Break Steelworker's Strike!

War MachineThe US Army is considering measures to force striking workers back to their jobs at a Goodyear Tire & Rubber plant in Kansas in the face of a looming shortage of tyres for Humvee trucks and other military equipment used in Iraq and Afghanistan. A strike involving 17,000 members of the United Steelworkers union has crippled 16 Goodyear plants in the US and Canada since October 5. The main issues in dispute are the company's plans to close a unionised plant in Texas, and a proposal for workers to shoulder future increases in healthcare costs. By Bernard Simon in Toronto

The US Army is considering measures to force striking workers back to their jobs at a Goodyear Tire & Rubber plant in Kansas in the face of a looming shortage of tyres for Humvee trucks and other military equipment used in Iraq and Afghanistan.

A strike involving 17,000 members of the United Steelworkers union has crippled 16 Goodyear plants in the US and Canada since October 5.

The main issues in dispute are the company's plans to close a unionised plant in Texas, and a proposal for workers to shoulder future increases in healthcare costs.

An army spokeswoman said on Friday that "there's not a shortage right now but there possibly will be one in the future".

According to Duncan Hunter, chairman of the House of Representatives armed services committee, the strike has cut output of Humvee tyres by about 35 per cent.

Mr Hunter said that the army had stopped supplying tyres to units not related to the Central Command, which is responsible for operations in Iraq and Afghanistan. Tyres were also not being provided to army repair depots.

While concern has centred on the Humvees, tyres are also critical to aircraft and other military equipment.

Goodyear brushed off concerns of looming shortages, saying that production at the Kansas plant, where the Humvee tyres are made, "is near normal levels and will be back to 100 per cent in the near future."

It added that "we're in daily contact with the military to ensure delivery of the required Humvee tyres".

The company said it was using salaried and temporary workers to keep the Kansas plant running. It has taken similar measures at other plants, as well as stepping up imports from overseas factories to maintain supplies to the car and truck industry.

The union claims that the strikebound plants are running at about 20 per cent of capacity. Goodyear has said that North American output is at about half normal levels, including non-union plants.

According to Mr Hunter, the army is exploring a possible injunction under the Taft-Hartley Act to force the 200 Kansas workers back to their jobs.

He proposed that they return under their current terms of employment, on the understanding that any settlement would be extended to them.

http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/16226231/


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Taft-Hartley Act
From Wikipedia
The Labor-Management Relations Act, commonly known as the Taft-Hartley Act, is a United States federal law that severely restricts the activities and power of labor unions. The Act, still largely in effect, was sponsored by Senator Robert Taft and Representative Fred A. Hartley, Jr.. U.S. President Harry S. Truman described the act as a "slave-labor bill" and vetoed it, adding that it would "conflict with important principles of our democratic society". The Senate followed the House of Representatives in overriding Truman's veto on June 23, 1947, establishing the act as a law. The Taft-Hartley Act amended the National Labor Relations Act (NLRA, also known as the Wagner Act), which Congress had passed in 1935.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Taft-Hartley_Act

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U.S. Army May Break Steelworker's Strike! | 16 comments | Create New Account
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U.S. Army May Break Steelworker's Strike!
Authored by: Anonymous on Sunday, December 17 2006 @ 02:33 PM UTC
this is great. now all we need, is for this to happen to every other industry out there, and let nature take its course. . .
U.S. Army May Break Steelworker's Strike!
Authored by: Anonymous on Sunday, December 17 2006 @ 02:46 PM UTC
damn that sounds like a real ass strike!
U.S. Army May Break Steelworker's Strike!
Authored by: Anonymous on Sunday, December 17 2006 @ 02:56 PM UTC
this wouldn't be the first time the military has forced strikers back to work.
U.S. Army May Break Steelworker's Strike!
Authored by: Anonymous on Sunday, December 17 2006 @ 04:20 PM UTC
disgusting. this is why anarchists and other supporters of labor need to get out there and find ways to shead light on these evils. sabatoge the militarys anti-worker machiene.
U.S. Army May Break Steelworker's Strike!
Authored by: Admin on Sunday, December 17 2006 @ 06:11 PM UTC
This highlights one of the fundamental failing of the current U.S. anti-war movement. This is why national organizations such as UFPJ and ANSWER have no credibility nor should they have any claim on leadership of the anti-war opposition. They've given us one symbolic mass demonstration after another in D.C., New York City and other cities. They haven't organized *any* mass protests against military bases or the infrastructure of the military industrial complex.

If any national coalition is interested in *really* ending this war and future ones, I invite them to Kansas City to protest at the following places:

1) The Goodyear plant in Topeka. See above.
2) The Lake City ammunition plant outside of Independence, Missouri, which manufacture most of the small arms munitions being used in the current war. If any of these funded national coalitions were spending YOUR donations wisely, they could have at least organized a protest at the plant last week when U.N. Secretary Kofi Annan spoke in Independence.

Chuck
Infoshop News
U.S. Army May Break Steelworker's Strike!
Authored by: Anonymous on Monday, December 18 2006 @ 10:08 AM UTC
WORD!
U.S. Army May Break Steelworker's Strike!
Authored by: Anonymous on Sunday, December 17 2006 @ 06:28 PM UTC
Just so we're clear, the workers aren't doing this because they want to stop the war machine, they are doing it for retiree healthcare and to halt plant closings. In fact, they have been blasting Goodyear for being unpatriotic by forcing them out, hurting the troops.
U.S. Army May Break Steelworker's Strike!
Authored by: Anonymous on Sunday, December 17 2006 @ 08:05 PM UTC
We talked to a lot of workers in Topeka yesterday about the war, and some members, including leadership of the USW may be using the "unpatriotic" and "hurting the troops" lines, but the folks out there on the picket lines yesterday weren't having it. They were angry about the war, angry about NAFTA and free trade policies, angry about cuts to education... angry about the way shit is right now.

I agree that they aren't striking because of the war, but one guy I spoke with yesterday who was a vet and was working on the humvee tires said that maybe the Goodyear strike would force the U.S. to "bring the boys home".

This is a class issue, just like the war is. Don't sell off these workers and this struggle.

In reality, this strike is very very important and very symbolic of the struggle facing almost every worker in the U.S. If the USW loses, we all lose.

We'll post a write-up about the support we did at the USW action in Topeka yesterday soon.

Dave
Kansas Mutual Aid
U.S. Army May Break Steelworker's Strike!
Authored by: Anonymous on Monday, December 18 2006 @ 09:17 AM UTC
Dave,
One quick question: In addition to being angry about the war, NAFTA, etc, were the workers also angry about immigration?

in solidarity,
a texas comrade
U.S. Army May Break Steelworker's Strike!
Authored by: Anonymous on Monday, December 18 2006 @ 06:37 PM UTC
Texas Comrade...

The little conversation that did happen wasn't about immigration at all. The closest I hear anyone mention it was that they understood all too well that these kind of free trade policies hurt workers in every country, not just here. I know that several folks I talked to were very knowledgeable about the crisis affecting Mexican workers. One of them even mentioned Oaxaca!

I don't want to whitewash the obvious Nationalistic ideas of many of those there, nor paint a picture that all of the strikers (if any) are militant anti-capitalists with a thorough analysis of U.S. hegemony and Empire. However, a lot of these "common working folk" are really radical, whether we realize it or now.

Again, that write up will be coming soon. Probably tomorrow or Wednesday, and that should explain a lot of the impressions we in KMA got from the demo on Saturday.
U.S. Army May Break Steelworker's Strike!
Authored by: Anonymous on Monday, December 18 2006 @ 09:23 PM UTC
wouldn't most of the workers there only be pissed off at free trade because it takes away their jobs?
this is the whole thing with globalisation etc, it's a bit like how the industrial revolution affected the workplace
in the 1800s it was
less jobs - more people || caused by a reduction on the need of labour
and now in the 2000s its
lots of jobs - billions of people || caused by 'overpopulation'

I'm not trying to say kill off people, or that this very simple observation/theory is right, I'd just like some viewpoints on it,
Cheers
nopassword
U.S. Army May Break Steelworker's Strike!
Authored by: Anonymous on Monday, December 18 2006 @ 10:19 AM UTC
Hey Dave,

I posted what you responded to, and that's hype as fuck. I've been following this strike, and it's great to hear that kind of stuff.
U.S. Army May Break Steelworker's Strike!
Authored by: Anonymous on Monday, December 18 2006 @ 01:23 PM UTC
Quick Question:

Do Humvees and Hummers use the same tires?

In other words, would a shortage of one mean a shortage of the other?
U.S. Army May Break Steelworker's Strike!
Authored by: Anonymous on Monday, December 18 2006 @ 01:43 PM UTC
I don't think so, and it's not that there is a shortage of tires that go on Humvees per se. There is a shortage of tires that go to the military. GY is a military contractor.
U.S. Army May Break Steelworker's Strike!
Authored by: Admin on Monday, December 18 2006 @ 06:48 PM UTC
It would be nice if activists in Topeka and Lawrence could create a feature on this situation for Kansas City Indymedia.

Wink, wink, nudge, nudge, pretty please!

Chuck
U.S. Army May Break Steelworker's Strike!
Authored by: Anonymous on Monday, December 18 2006 @ 08:33 PM UTC
If the military DOES breaks the strike, it is up to us radicals to make this a major example in the connection between imperialism, capitalism, and the state and the interconnectedness of the struggle against all of them.

We must organize around this issue of capitalism and war marching hand in hand. This could be a lesson of how a radical response is the only response when it comes to capitalism (take that AFL CIO)