Resolution of the
San Francisco
Labor Council opposing War on Iraq
Adopted unanimously by the San Francisco Labor
Council, December 9, 2002
Labor Needs to Take a Clear Stand Against the War.+
Whereas, since the tragic events of September 11,
2001, we have seen the beginning of a relentless new assault on
labor -- from the employers, and from the government acting on
their behalf; and Whereas, using the so-called "war on terrorism"
and "national security" as a pretext, the Bush Administration
has spearheaded a renewed assault on organized labor, starting
with the use of Taft-Hartley (and threats to militarize the ports)
against West Coast dockworkers...wholesale threats to the job
security and union rights of 170,000 federal workers...the racist
firings of experienced airport screeners...threats to curtail
the right to strike and organize…and the impending contracting
out of hundreds of thousands of federal jobs. On more than one
occasion, government spokespersons have referred to union actions
defending our jobs, working conditions and living standards as
akin to terrorism, or as "aiding and abetting terrorists",
or as a "threat to national security"; and
Whereas, Bush's war (on Afghanistan, Iraq, Colombia,
the Philippines, where next?) has become the main engine for the
repression of labor. "National security", in the hands
of a thoroughly anti-labor Bush Administration, is being used
as a bludgeon against labor, with the intent of rolling back all
the gains workers have won since the 1930s, including collective
bargaining itself, and including social programs championed by
the labor movement like welfare, social security, unemploymentinsurance;
and
Whereas, a strong fight-back requires that labor
make it a priority to stake out a clear, forthright and fighting
stance against Bush's war, and see the anti-war and anti-globalization
movements as our strategic allies, needed if we are to defeat
the assault on labor and move to the offensive. We got a glimpse
of the potential power of this combination during the 1999 showdown
in Seattle; and
Whereas, the Rev. Martin Luther King, Jr. embodied
the coming together of the labor, anti-war and civil rights movements
during the tremendous upsurge of the mass movement in the 1960s,
and we need to revive this powerful combination of the people's
forces to defeat Bush's war and the racism that underlies it and
that it promotes; and
Whereas, our opposition to the Bush Administration's
war on the Iraqi people, and to their attacks or threats against
other smaller, sovereign countries around the globe, fits hand
in glove with labor's fighting defense of the interests of the
working people of all races and nationalities here at home; therefore
be it
RESOLVED: That the San Francisco Labor Council,
AFL-CIO, endorse the Martin Luther King weekend anti-war activities
-- the January 18, 2003 marches in San Francisco and Washington,
DC in opposition to the war on Iraq, and the Grassroots Peace
Congress being held in Washington, as well as the People's Anti-War
Referendum ["VoteNoWar"] by which millions of Americans
are casting their "votes" against this war; and be it
further
RESOLVED: That this council work to ensure that
organized labor and the national AFL-CIO take a clear and early
stand against Bush's war.
-- Adopted unanimously by the San Francisco Labor Council, December
9, 2002
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