MARX
AND MAKHNO MEET MCDONALD’S:
CASUALIZED WORKERS IN PARIS WIN
SEVERAL STRIKES, HONORABLY LOSE ANOTHER WITH COMBINED UNION AND
EXTRA-UNION, LEGAL AND ILLEGAL TACTICS
By Loren Goldner (1)
Over the last several years, a revolving network of militants in Paris,
France, have developed a strategy and tactics for winning strikes by
marginal, low-paid, outsourced and immigrant workers against
international chains, in situations where the strikers are often
ignored by unions to which they nominally belong, or are actually
obstructed by them. While some of these methods benefit from aspects of
French labor law that are more favorable to strikers than one finds in
the backward U.S. of A, the overall strategy can certainly find its
uses in other countries.
The group, which calls itself simply Collectif de Solidarite
(Solidarity Collective) slowly emerged as a network from the ferment
and upswing in struggle following the 1995 near-general strike in
France over pension “reform”. Their composition ranges from casualized
workers to people with steady jobs, people who want to fight and who
see no perspective for doing so within a traditional union framework.
Experience taught them that initially isolated strikes of marginal
workers employed by big chains, in the worst possible conditions, can
win if they are turned into city-wide actions by militants from
“outside” the workplace (but hardly “outside” the increasingly
downsized and outsourced work force), and—-equally important—-militants
who are not members of vanguard groups coming mainly to fish in
troubled waters for their own recruitment. The strategy could not be
farther from the timid “corporate campaigns” as developed by the likes
of Ray Rogers, politely asking stockholders to sympathize with workers,
but instead involve direct action to shut down businesses with a
mixture of legal and “extra-legal” (in the grey area between legality
and illegality) tactics. The network also makes use, where and when it
can, of better-known methods of creating embarrassing publicity for
well- known corporate logos.
The current wave of activity took off in 2002 in a victory for a
McDonald’s strike in the heart of Paris. Five employees were
arbitrarily fired, accused of stealing from the cash register. A strike
of 115 days ensued, with regular support actions from other McDonald’s
and fast food restaurants around Paris. In this strike, one organizer
from the restaurant department of the largest French union, the C.G.T.
(Confederation Generale du Travail), sensing an opportunity for some
publicity, did help the strikers (who were members of the
C.G.T.), against the indifference or hostility of the rest of the union.
But the actions of the Solidarity Collective were indispensable in
keeping up picket lines, turning away customers and explaining the
strike to them, and occasionally shutting down other McDonald’s
locations around Paris. After nearly four months, McDonald’s management
caved, rehired the fired workers, and granted other concessions.
The committee then turned its attention to a struggle that became its
greatest success to date, the 10-month strike of African immigrant
maids at ACCOR, the third-ranking multinational hotel chain.
... The Senegalese and Malian women involved were often barely
literate, spoke little or no French, had never been informed of what
rights they had under French labor law, and were subjected to killing
piece rates based on the number of rooms cleaned. Further, their jobs
were outsourced to a cleaning company, Arcade, with completely
arbitrary scheduling based on the amount of work available from week to
week. Most of the women developed work-related physical conditions
after a couple of years on the job, which were not recognized as
workplace injuries. They did belong to the small alternative union SUD
(Solidarity-Unity-Democracy), but even this union mainly walked away
from the strike early on.
In spite of these obstacles, the Solidarity Collective was able to keep
the strike alive with unceasing “pin-prick” tactics, disrupting hotel
lobbies with leafleting twice a week, explaining the strike to hotel
guests and putting pressure on customers and other hotel employees to
support the strike; these and and other highly visible interventions
placed ACCOR and Arcade management on the defensive. Their main object
was a (successful) attempt to disrupt the smooth impersonal functioning
of the hotels and to expose the outrageous conditions of the maids to
public view. As in the McDonald’s strike, the Solidarity Collective
provided the decisive forces that on occasion kept the strike alive
even when most of the strikers were demoralized and close to giving up,
while always being careful not to substitute themselves for the
strikers. Benefit concerts made the strike more widely known and raised
money. After 10 months, management again caved, most importantly on the
crucial issue of piece rates, the pressures of which were significantly
reduced. Further concessions were made in the introduction of regular
scheduling, rehiring of fired strikers, and a payment of 35% of wages
for the time struck. The only concession made by the strikers was an
agreement not to make the contract public, so that it could not be used
as a guideline in other situations. This did not, however, prevent the
terms of the settlement from becoming widely known in the militant
milieu. On the other hand, ACCOR was able to play on the secrecy of the
agreement to make its application as difficult as possible, leaving
enforcement in the dubious hands of the very union (SUD) which involved
itself in the strike only at the end, to claim credit for the victory
to which it had contributed next to nothing.
The experience of this strike in turn set the stage for further
involvement in a renewed strike at MacDonald’s in Paris. As soon as
management thought they could get away with it, they moved to fire and
harass employees involved in the original strike. As a result, the
struggle erupted anew in early March 2003.
What follows is a description of a few days’ work by the Solidarity
Collective in early May 2003. It attempts to convey the culture
of direct action which is at the center of its perspective, in which I
was able to participate through a number of months.
Following the traditional march of an estimated 300,000 people in Paris
on a not particularly spirited May Day, the Solidarity Collective
managed to assemble 100 people for direct action against Frog Pub, a
British chain with four restaurants in Paris, where 28 Tamil (Sri
Lankan) kitchen employees had been on strike since mid-April. The group
invaded the restaurant, confronted the manager and attempted to
persuade the customers to leave.
On May 3, 30-40 members of the Solidarity Collective held a meeting in
the occupied McDonald’s restaurant in the Strasbourg St-Denis area of
downtown Paris. We then marched to the nearest Frog restaurant about 10
minutes away. The strike of Tamil workers had begun in reaction against
the firing of a Tamil assistant manager but that question was quickly
overshadowed by demands over outrageous working and sanitary conditions
and numerous violations of labor law. The boss assigned people their
vacation time when it suited him; the dishwashers had to work with cold
water; there was no extra pay for overtime; people getting off at 1 AM
had to be back at 8 AM, (whereas legally there are supposed to be at
least 11 hours between shifts). The Frog manager had told one Tamil
worker: “I’m pleased with your work. A European wouldn’t do it for even
an hour.”
The pleasure of participation was heightened because a fair number of
the Frog clientele were arrogant yuppies, many of them Brits, as was
the manager quoted above, who became apoplectic. On this second
intervention, the Solidarity Collective did not fool around. Here a
certain “strike culture” specific to France came into play, one not
easily transposable to American conditions. People marched into the pub
and immediately one spokesman started shouting through a bullhorn;
within minutes the main door was blocked and covered by a 15-foot tape
with strike slogans in 10 languages and a detailed leaflet in French
and in English.
Then the police showed up and a bizarre ballet began. (One can only
imagine the response of the NYPD or the San Francisco TAC Squad in a
comparable situation.) They treated the strikers and strike supporters
with kid gloves (it was generally assumed they were under orders to do
so, in order to avoid episodes creating bad publicity for the
right-wing Chirac government, just then gearing up for an attack on
public sector workers), huddling with the strike supporters over a
legal restraining order saying that pickets could do this, but not
that, etc. We could block the main entrance, but not be inside
persuading the customers to leave, and so forth. Periodically one of
the strikers set off a bullhorn that sounded like a police siren,
adding to the generally unravelling atmosphere.
Then we marched to another MacDonald's that was also on strike. It was
packed but it was shut down in about five minutes by the same tactics.
We were turning people away at the door telling them the place was
closed and 90% left immediately. It was particularly interesting to see
lots of scruffy "hip hop" types taking note of the strike.
At 6:30 PM the same day, a second action was undertaken at another Frog
location in the very upscale St-Germain des Pres neighborhood, on a
little side street. For all the complications that later emerged
between the strikers and the CNT (Conferation Nationale du Travail) ,
the anarcho-syndicalist union they had joined, it was initially an
upper to turn the corner and see the
Tamil pickets with their red and black banners CNT banners, somehow
symbolic of a real internationalism. Most of the Tamils barely spoke
French and at times it was difficult to tell (through the lone
interpreter) what they made of all the factional politics swirling
around them, not to mention (as it later turned out) their own
factional politics (cf. below) Nonetheless, as union members in the
anarcho-syndicalist CNT, they were protected by all kinds of labor laws
that don’t exist or are a dead letter in the U.S.: they couldn’t be
fired for striking, they couldn’t be permanently replaced by scabs (but
could be replaced by temps during the strike itself),
and if they returned to work they would be protected by their
open-ended contract. Nevertheless, public support for the strike was
impaired by a widespread overestimation of the efficacy of these laws,
and an underestimation of the need for direct action to tip the balance
of forces.
The locale was hardly a "proletarian" scene, with mainly upscale
foreign tourists and French bourgeois passing by. The Solidarity
Collective managed to get a fair number not to cross the picket line,
and some of us were explaining the strike to people in English, French,
German and Spanish. With an old shoe box, we started collecting money
and raised about 30 euros ($35) in 2 hours. This is a great crash
course in sociology, seeing who responds and who doesn't. It was also
interesting because even people who were obviously indifferent or
hostile were polite. I imagined similar types in the U.S. telling me
they were damn well going to eat where they pleased. That said, it must
be pointed out that the specific climate leading up to the imminent
showdown over public sector pensions in May-June 2003, definitely
increased sympathy for the strike among passers-by and potential
patrons.
The Solidarity Collective has developed these tactics in 5-6 strikes of
the most exploited immigrant and young French workers in the Paris
region and the tactics often work. The collective is made up of a
Paris-wide network of militants who see the need to go beyond
workplace-organizing; the decisive elements in winning such strikes are
30-40 people from outside the workplace who give, or try to give the
strikers the forces they need for all the aspects of waging a strike
that gets into trouble, above all through isolation. At the same time
it's not "Leninist" in that no one is there to recruit people to an
organization. The Collective aims to put the strikers in charge of
their own struggle in a way that neither a union nor a typical leftist
group does. It has as its sole aims the victory of the strike and the
deepening of the “flying picket” network available for the next battle.
What kind of reservations can be articulated about the kind of roving
tactics of the strike support group? They obviously don't solve "all"
problems, and the Collective itself recognizes that its ability to turn
away customers at the door made for the special vulnerability of the
locales in which they were successful. The Collective is the first to
recognize that far greater numbers would be necessary to stop a plant
closing or to paralyze a military machine.
But these tactics do create something like a small-scale version of the
Toledo Auto-Lite strike (1934), in which other members of the
precarious labor force turn isolated losing strikes of the most
downtrodden (immigrant) workers into something that really hurts
management, both in the pocketbook and in terms of their reputation. It
responds at least partially to the great success of management in
atomizing resistance at the “point of production” by having a rapid
turnover of teenagers, etc. It turns the management success of the last
20 years on its head; the latter’s intent was to create a precarious
constantly recycled temporary work force that would never be around
long enough to organize at the work place, and here is that same work
force showing up “outside” the work place to shut down business and
enforce conditions for some of their number. Today's strikers will be
tomorrow's pickets at other sites, or they will be strikers at other
sites. Recycling thus cuts both ways by downsizing but also in freeing
groups of workers from corporatist attachment to lifetime jobs and
making them into potentially roving pickets supporting necessarily
roving workers. Further, it solves the problem of union indifference or
obstruction; it uses unions where possible for legal protection but
circumvents unions when they ignore, or worse, obstruct a strike for
some instrumental end of their own. It tells unions to put up or shut
up, and when, as in most cases, they do the latter, it uses a mixture
of legal and illegal tactics which unions (at least in the U.S.) would
never dare attempt. It circumvents the Labor Notes-type strategy of
ingratiating oneself with the left wing bureaucrats or of becoming
left-wing bureaucrats; the Committee takes the initiative while not
waiting for the unions to do so. In a comparable situation in the U.S.,
a typical union would show up, set up its own skeleton picket line,
tell "outsiders" the matter was none of their business, and honor
whatever injunction some judge hands down. Finally, unlike various
front organizations set up in the past, Solidarity Collective people
are NOT a vanguard group fishing for members in troubled waters; they
come as equals in the recycled labor market.
Beginning in May, 2003, the Frog Pub strike began to be transformed by
the large public sector strikes that began in March and continued until
the end of June. For weeks, Paris saw one (mainly controlled) mass
demonstration after another. The main issues (which can only be dealt
with in the most summary way here) were the government’s (ultimately
successful) attempt to increase the work requirement for full
retirement benefits for public employees to the 37 years already in
effect for the private sector, and to attack teachers with a series of
educational “reforms” aiming at large-scale layoffs of non-academic
personnel and the reorganization of curriculum in accordance with the
“local” job market.
The Frog strikers, many of whom were cooks by profession, hit upon the
idea of selling drinks and sandwiches to the passing demonstrators from
strategically-located sites along the demo route, combined with the
aggressive publicity for the strike and fund-raising which the
Solidarity Committee was conducting in every demo already. This tactic
netted the strike fund a much-needed boost, and just as importantly
made the strike against the “patrons negriers” (slave-driving bosses)
known on a scale unimaginable in its initial phase.
At the same time, it must be said that the series of mass
demonstrations, mass meetings and occasional confrontations with the
police totally dwarfed the forces of the Solidarity Collective, and
created a situation in which the traditional leftist vanguards, above
all Lutte Ouvriere, could successfully carry out their systematic
takeover and manipulation of the mass assemblies. In spite of numerous
independent rank-and-file initiatives, the unions and the leftist
groups ultimately were able to to their work of demobilization well.
Even before the mass movements faded away, however, several factors
began to weigh on the Frog pub strike, and, in contrast to the
successes of the initial Macdonald’s strike and of the African maids
against ACCOR and Arcade, set the stage for a defeat, one for
which, however, Frog management paid a steep price on several fronts.
The first unfavorable turn of events was an internal crisis of the CNT
which directly undermined the Frog strike. Little enough is known
outside the union about this internal crisis, which unconscionably
turned the strike into a factional football among CNT mini-bureaucrats,
except that at its culmination it led to the summary replacement of the
head of the CNT’s restaurant section. Instead of largely ignoring the
strike (as the CGT, with one notable exception, had done with
Macdonald’s) or walking away and then claiming responsibility for the
victory at the end (as SUD had done with the African maids’ strike),
the CNT initially ran the strike with little attempt to involve the
strikers, presenting themselves as “professionals” who would made short
shrift of Frog management in a few weeks.(2) The upshot of this method,
when this bravado was revealed for the empty pretension it was, led the
strikers to see as their only reliable allies the Solidarity
Collective, which latter the CNT was treating as nothing but an
organizational rival, projecting their own gate-receipt mentality onto
the Collective’s intentions. In the final months of the strike, only a
handful of CNT militants continued to work seriously with the strikers
and the Solidarity Committee.
Taking a similar destructive toll was the discovery, in mid-summer,
that 7 of the strikers were members of the nationalist Tamil Tigers.
One of the two Frog Pub managers had managed to contact the Tigers, who
constitute a sort of shadow government for the 15,000 Tamils living in
the Paris region, much as the North African Islamic fundamentalist
groups attempt to impose themselves on the North African population in
France. Through whatever deal or payoff, the Tamil Tigers not only
pulled their own members out of the strike but threatened the life of
one of the strikers who refused to give up.
By mid-summer, the public sector and teachers’ strikes had largely been
defeated, except for the ongoing actions of the intermittents du
spectacle (3) which continued sporadically into the fall.
Nonetheless, the work of the remaining 7 strikers and of the Solidarity
Collective began to bite, particularly at the largest Frog pub at
Bercy, whose clientele had seriously diminished in sympathy with the
strike, a situation prevailing well into the fall.
As a result, in spite of the fadeout of the CNT and the “intervention”
of the Tamil Tigers, the Frog managers were still keen to settle.
Finally, in October 2003, the remaining strikers accepted a lump sum
payment of 5000 euros each in exchange for being laid off (which would
qualify them for further unemployment benefits).
This article, in sum, has as its intent making these tactics and these
successes and failures known to militants outside France. Nor should it
be misunderstood as any kind of triumphalism. As indicated, Collective
members are acutely aware of what they can and cannot do with their
small numbers, and of the specific vulnerabilities of the types of
employers where their tactics have succeeded. Further, in the wake of
these struggles, management has returned to the offensive. Only a year
after their first defeat, as recounted, Macdonald’s attempted another
provocation and took a long second strike; the ACCOR hotel chain is
harassing the maids who struck, firing one of the most militant and
visible militants, and a new campaign by the Collective is
underway. From other quarters of defenders of elements of the
status quo, some leftist groups have had the effrontery to accuse the
Collective of manipulating the strikers, whereas a refusal of
substitutionism has always been one of its distinguishing features.
Transposing these tactics to U.S. conditions will obviously have to
take account of the significantly rougher terrain they will confront.
But I am aware of no other approach, in confronting the employer
offensive now underway for more than three decades, which has had
anything like the Solidarity Collective’s small, but still impressive
successes.
FOOTNOTES:
1) I wish to thank Nicole The and G. Soriano, whose camaraderie
in extended discussions during the events of 2003, made this article
possible. It further benefited from a close reading and criticisms by
Nicole The. Also cf. Note #2 below.
2)For readers with a knowledge of French, the article of G. Soriano
"L'experience des collectifs de solidarite parisiens: une nouvelle
etape", in
La Question Sociale
(No. 1, 2004) offers a much more detailed analysis of the Frog strike,
and of all the machinations of the CNT. This publication can be
contacted at laquestionsociale@hotmail.com
3) The “intermittents du spectacle” were culture workers in the arts
and media who, until 2003, who eligible for minimally-livable
unemployment benefits between jobs. The government’s overall attack on
public sector pension rights and teachers also eliminated this program,
though the “intermittents” continued their struggle for months after
the other strikes had folded. For an overall analysis of the
strike movement of 2003 in France, cf. the Echanges et Mouvement
pamphlet Pour une comprehension critique du mouvement du printemps 2003
(September 2004). BP 241, 75866 Paris, Cedex 18, France.
This text is from the
Break Their Haughty Power web site at
http://home.earthlink.net/~lrgoldner