James Petras
Introduction
             Many billions of Euros are being
extracted from Europe’s vassal-debtor nations – Spain ,
Greece , Portugal  and Ireland 
–and transferred to the creditor banks, financial speculators and swindlers
located in the City of London , Wall Street , Geneva Frankfort 
            To learn first-hand about the capitalist
crisis and the workers’ responses, I spent the better part of May in Ireland 
            The Irish and Spanish states,
societies and economies (which includes the Basque country pending a
referendum) – have been victims of a prolonged, deep capitalist depression
devastating the living standards of millions. 
Unemployment and underemployment in Ireland 
            The incumbent bourgeois political
parties, in power at the beginning of the crash, have been replaced by new
regimes which are signing additional agreements with the ‘troika’ and
bankers.  These agreements impose even
deeper and more savage cuts in public employment and further weakened workers’
rights and protection.  The employers now
have arbitrary power is to hire and fire workers at a moment’s notice, without
severance pay or worse.  Some contracts
in Ireland Brussels London , Geneva , Frankfort Ireland 
            The similarities in socio-economic
conditions between Ireland 
Facing the
Crisis:  Basque Fight, Irish Flight
            In the face of the long-term,
large-scale crisis, Ireland Brussels 
The class
collaborationist policies of the Irish trade unions have led to a sharp
generational break – with the older workers signing deals with the bosses to
‘preserve’ their jobs at the expense of job security for younger workers.  Left without any organized means for mass
struggle, young Irish workers have been leaving the country on a scale not seen
since the Great Famine of the mid-19th century: 
Over 300,000 have emigrated in the past 4 years, with another 75,000
expected to leave in 2013, out of a working population of 2.16 million.  In the face of this 21st century catastrophe,
the bitterness and ‘generational break’ of the emigrating workers is expressed
in the very low level of remittances sent back ‘home’.  One reason Irish unemployment rate remains at
14% instead of 20-25% is because of the astounding overseas flight of young
workers.
            In contrast there is no such mass
emigration of young workers from the Basque country.  Instead of flight, the class fight has
intensified.  The struggle for national
liberation has gained support among the middle class and small business owners
faced with the complete failure of the right-wing regime in Madrid (ruled by
the self-styled ‘Popular Party’ ) to stem the downward spiral.  The fusion of class and national struggle in
the Basque country has militated against any sell-out agreements signed by the
‘moderate’ trade unions, Workers Commissions (CCOO) and the General Union of
Workers (UGT).  LAB, the militant Basque
Workers Commission, has vastly more influence than their number of formally
affiliated unionized workers would suggest. 
LAB’s capacity to mobilize is rooted in their influence among factory
delegates who are elected in all workplaces which far exceeds all trade union
membership.  Through the delegates
meeting in assemblies, workers discuss and vote on the general strike –
frequently bypassing orders from central headquarters in Madrid Ireland 
            In the Basque country, there is a
powerful tradition of co-operatives, especially the Mondragon industrial
complex, which has created worker solidarity in the urban-rural communities
absent among Irish workers.  The leading
Irish politicians and economic advisers have groveled before the multi-national
corporations, offering them the lowest tax rates, biggest and longest-term tax
exemptions and most submissive labor regulations of any country in the European
Union.
            In the Basque country, the
nationalist-socialist EH Bildu- Sortu political party, the daily newspaper Gara
and the LAB provide mutual political and ideological support during strikes,
electoral contests  and mass mobilizations
based on class struggle.  Together they
confront the ‘austerity’ programs as a united force.
            In Ireland 
            The Basque country’s revolt against
centralized rule from Madrid  is partly based
on the fact that it is one of Spain Spain Madrid 
Conclusion:  Political Perspectives
            If current austerity policies and
emigration trends continue, Ireland 
will become a ‘hollowed out country’ of historical monuments, tourist-filled
bars and ancient churches, devoid of its most ambitious, best trained and
innovative workers:  a de-industrialized
tax-haven, the Cayman  Island  of the North Atlantic .  No country of its size and dimensions can
remain a viable state faced with the current and continuing levels of
out-migration of its young workers.  Ireland 
            In the case of the Basque country
the rising class and national mass struggle, linked to the legacy of powerful
co-operatives and solidarity based worker assemblies, provides hope that the
current reactionary regime in Madrid 
            My sense is that Madrid Spain 
 
