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
and Frankfort . Under what has been termed ‘austerity’
programs vast tributary payments are amassed by ruling Conservative and Social
Democratic regimes via unprecedented savage budget cuts in salaries, public
investment, social programs and employment.
The result has been a catastrophic growth in unemployment,
under-employment and casual labor reaching over 50% among young workers under
25 and between 15% and 32% of the total labor force. Wages, salaries and pensions have been
slashed between 25% and 40%. The age of
retirement has been postponed from 3 to 5 years. Labor contracts (dubbed ‘reforms’)
concentrate power exclusively in the hands of the bosses and labor contractors
who now impose work conditions reminiscent of the early 19th century.
To learn first-hand about the capitalist
crisis and the workers’ responses, I spent the better part of May in Ireland and the
Basque country meeting with labor leaders, rank and file militants, unemployed
workers, political activists, academics and journalists. Numerous interviews, observations,
publications, visits to job sites and households - in cities and villages
-provide the basis for this essay.
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 reaches 35% and in the
Basque country exceeds 40%, with youth unemployment reaching 50%. Both
economies have contracted over 20% and show no signs of recovery. The governing parties have slashed public
spending from 15% to 30% in a range of social services. By bailing out banks, paying overseas
creditors and complying with the dictates of the autocratic ‘troika’
(International Monetary Fund, European Central Bank and European Commission)
the capitalist ruling class in Ireland and the Basque region have undermined
any possible investments for recovery. The
so-called ‘austerity’ program is imposed only on the workers, employees and
small businesspeople, never on the elite.
The Brussels-based ‘troika’ and its local collaborators have lowered or
eliminated corporate taxes and provide subsidies and other monetary incentives
to attract multi-national corporations and foreign finance capital.
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
allow employers to demand partial repayment of wages if workers are forced to
leave their jobs before the end of their contract because of employer
abuse. The Spanish economy – including
the Basque country-- is subject to a modern form of ‘tributary payments’
dictated by the ruling imperial oligarchy in Brussels .
This oligarchy is not elected and does not represent the people they tax
and exploit. They are only accountable
to the international bankers. In other
words, the European Unions has become a de facto empire – ruled by and for the
bankers based in the City of London , Geneva , Frankfort
and Wall Street. Ireland and the
Basque country are ruled by collaborator vassal regimes which implement the
economic pillage of their electorate and enforce the dictates of the EU
oligarchy – including the criminalization of mass political protests.
The similarities in socio-economic
conditions between Ireland
and the Basque country in the face of crisis, austerity and imperial
domination, however, contrast with the sharply divergent responses among the
workers in the two regions due to profoundly different political, social and
economic structures, histories and practices.
Facing the
Crisis: Basque Fight, Irish Flight
In the face of the long-term,
large-scale crisis, Ireland
has become the ‘model’ vassal state for the creditor imperial states. The leading Irish trade union confederation
and the dominant political parties – including the Labor Party currently in the
coalition with the ruling Fine Gael Party – have signed off on a series of
agreements with the Brussels
oligarchs to slash public employment and spending. In contrast, the militant pro-independence
Basque Workers Commission, or LAB, has led seven successful general strikes
with over 60% worker participation in the Basque country – including the
latest on May 30, 2013.
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 .
Direct democracy and grass roots militancy frees the militant Basque
workers of the centralized bureaucratic trade union structure which, in Ireland , has
imposed retrograde ‘give backs’ to the multi-national corporations.
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 Labor Party,
supposedly linked to be trade unions, has joined the current governing
coalition. They have agreed to a new
wave of cuts in social spending, layoffs of public employees, and wage and
salary reductions of 20%. The trade
union leadership may be divided on these draconian cuts yet most still support
the Labor Party. The more militant
retail workers union rejects the cuts but has no political alternative. Apart from support from the
republican-nationalist Sein Fein and smaller leftist parties – the political
class offer no clear progressive political program or strategy. The Sein Fein has made the ‘transition’ from
armed to electoral struggle. According to the latest (May 2013) polls it has
doubled its voter approval rating from under 10% to 20% due to the crisis. However, Sein Fein is internally divided: the
‘left’ pro-socialist wing looks to intensifying the ‘anti-austerity’ struggle
while the ‘republican’ parliamentary leaders focus on unification and downplay
class struggle. As a result of its
collaboration with the ‘troika’ and the new regressive tax laws, the Labor
Party is losing support and the traditional right-wing party, Fianne Fail,
which presided over the massive swindles, speculative boom and corporate
giveaways, is making an electoral comeback – and may even return to power! This helps to explain why Irish workers have
lost hope in any positive political change and are fleeing in droves from the
perpetual job insecurity imposed by their elite: ‘Better a plane ticket to Australia than a
lifetime of debt peonage, regressive bankruptcy laws and boss-dictated
contracts approved by trade union chiefs who draw six digit salaries’.
The Basque country’s revolt against
centralized rule from Madrid is partly based
on the fact that it is one of Spain ’s
most productive, technologically advanced and socially progressive
regions. Basque unemployment is less
then that of the rest of Spain . Higher levels of education, a comprehensive
regional health system, especially in rural areas and a widespread network of
local elected assembles, combined with the unique linguistic and cultural
heritages has advanced the Basque Nation toward greater political
autonomy. For many this marks the
Basques as a political ‘vanguard’ in the struggle to break with the neo-liberal
dictates of the EU and the decrepit regime in 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 will be
remembered for its postcards and tax holidays.
Yet there is hope as the left republicans of the Sein Fein, socialists,
communists and anti-imperialist activists, join the unemployed and underpaid
workers in forming new grassroots networks.
At some point the revolving doors of Irish politicos in and out of
office may finally come to a halt. Unemployed
educated angry young people may decide to stay home, stand their ground and
turn their energies toward a popular rebellion.
One consequential socialist leader summed it up: “Deep pessimism and the
influence of bankrupt social democracy and imperialist ideology within the
labor movement are very strong. As you
know we can’t start a journey other than from where we are”. The determination and conviction of Irish
trade union militants is indeed a reason to hope and believe that current
flight will turn into a future fight.
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
can be defeated. The ruling neo-fascist
junta (the ruling party still honors the Franco dictatorship and military) is
increasingly discredited and has to resort to greater repression. With regard to the militant Basque movements,
the regime has taken violent provocative measures: criminalizing legal mass protests, arresting
independence fighters on trumped up charges and forcefully banning the public
display of the photos of political prisoners (called ‘terrorists’ by
Madrid). It is clear the government is
increasingly worried by the strength of the general strikes, the rising
electoral power of the pro-independence left – and has been trying to provoke a
‘violent response’ as a pretext to ban the press, party and program of the EH Bildu Sortu and
LAB.
My sense is that Madrid will not succeed. Spain as a centralized state is
disintegrating: the neo-liberal policies have destroyed the economic links,
shattered the social bond and opened the door for the advance of mass social
movements. The bi-party system is crumbling and the class-collaborationist
policies of the traditional trade union confederations are being challenged by
a new generation of autonomous movements