US: California workers take on ‘Governator’ Schwarzenegger

Unions outraged by governor’s “kicking their butts” threat

On April 7, California Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger announced he was abandoning, for the time being, his effort to privatise public employees’ pensions. His announcement came after growing protests organised by the California Nurses Association (CNA) and other public sector unions, including teachers and firefighters.

Schwarzenegger’s dramatic backing down from an issue that was the centerpiece (along with cutting $2 billion from public education and eroding teachers’ tenure) of his attack on California’s public sector workers, came as his approval ratings fell dramatically from 75% after his election to under 50%, for the first time.

Supported by millions of dollars from his corporate sponsors, and encouraged by his victory over the unpopular Democrat Governor Davis in the 2003 recall election, Schwarzenegger promised to use his popularity to fight against "special interests" in Sacramento to deal with a big budget deficit in California.

Snowball effect

In November 2004, Schwarzenegger tried to halt a state-mandated reduction of the nurse-to-patient ratio. When the California Nurses Association (CAN) staged protests and tried to interrupt Schwarzenegger’s speech at the Governor’s Conference on Women, the "Governator" announced the nurses were a "special interest" and they were angry because he was "kicking their butt." Soon after, the teachers’ union joined the nurses when Schwarzenegger tried to cut $2 billion from the state schools’ budget.

"The more moderate and Republican members of our union are angrier than some of our more liberal members because they got their hopes up and then [Schwarzenegger] broke his promise," said Barbara Barr, president of the California Teachers’ Association (CTA).

The Service Employees’ International Union (SEIU) joined the protests when Schwarzenegger next attacked state subsidies for in-home healthcare assistance. Finally, Schwarzenegger announced his plan to privatise public sector pensions by converting them to 401(k)-style plans. This triggered a reaction even from the more conservative police, correctional, and firefighters’ unions, who started participating in the Alliance for a Better California, a coalition of public sector unions.

For months, thousands of protesters staged dozens of demonstrations at Schwarzenneger’s public appearances and fund-raisers for his 2006 re-election campaign, even hiring an airplane with the banner “ARNOLD: CALIFORNIA IS NOT FOR SALE” to fly overhead as the Governor spoke.

This political backlash came as unions organised rallies in San Francisco against Bush’s proposed privatisation of Social Security, and as thousands of hotel workers (members of the UNITE-HERE union) held protests, strikes, and lockouts in San Francisco and Los Angeles in anticipation of a major national contract dispute in 2006.

Schwarzenegger has threatened that if the Democrat-controlled state legislature does not agree to his proposals and meet his demands, he will go directly to the voters through a special election to approve merit pay for teachers (bypassing union contracts), the private pension proposal, a political redistricting measure, and a budget spending cap.

The Democrats in the California legislature have collaborated with Schwarzenegger to cut the budget, "reform" workers’ compensation laws, and on other austerity policies. Schwarzenegger’s "bi-partisan" administration was sprinkled with liberal Democrats who covered up the real reactionary character of Schwarzenegger’s administration. Schwarzenegger’s policies are now being discredited, and will prove unpopular with the people of California, just like the policies of the right-wing Governor Davis were before.

As part of the mobilisation against Schwarzenegger, the key unions (the CNA with 60,000 members, the CTA with 335,000 members, and SEIU Local 1000 with 90,000 home care workers) should escalate the struggle, mobilising tens and hundreds of thousands of workers in mass rallies to expose the real programme of Schwarzenegger and his backers.

It is necessary to explain that workers should place no trust on the discredited Democratic Party hacks that have no alternative but to continue attacking working people and immigrants, and that working people and youth need to build a mass workers’ party independent of big business.

To the anti-worker agenda of Schwarzenegger, the unions should counter an agenda that serves the interests of workers and their families. This includes taxing the rich and big business, papers for all, a massive plan of public works to create jobs at union wages and benefits, a universal healthcare plan, a massive environmental clean-up, and an end to the occupation of Iraq and to bring the troops home now.

This article appears in the new edition of ‘Justice’, paper of Socialist Alternative (CWI) in the US

Special financial appeal to all readers of socialistworld.net

Support building alternative socialist media

Socialistworld.net provides a unique analysis and perspective of world events. Socialistworld.net also plays a crucial role in building the struggle for socialism across all continents. Capitalism has failed! Assist us to build the fight-back and prepare for the stormy period of class struggles ahead.
Please make a donation to help us reach more readers and to widen our socialist campaigning work across the world.

Donate via Paypal

Liked this article? We need your support to improve our work. Please become a Patron! and support our work
Become a patron at Patreon!

Be the first to comment

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published.


*


May 2005
M T W T F S S
 1
2345678
9101112131415
16171819202122
23242526272829
3031