Friday, November 29, 2013

The power of the strike

Governments and employers are terrified of workers collective action. That is why so many governments seek to limit the ability of workers to strike.  Such is the case in Alberta, where the government is seeking to limit the ability of public sector workers to strike.

Yet, the strike itself is a powerful weapon for workers.  Illegal strikes are even more powerful, as they often take on a life of their own.  While wildcat (illegal) strikes are rare these days, the spontaneity of such actions speaks to the power of class solidarity amongst workers.  Walmart workers are certainly taking this approach in the United States.  So are dock workers in Halifax.  While the origins of the Halifax wildcat are depressing, the workers themselves are taking power back by challenging the bullying of management.  Chinese workers are taking similar actions, challenging the powers government and employers.  Good for them.


Monday, November 18, 2013

Privacy and the Right to Strike in Canada

The neoliberal assault on labour has now entered its fourth decade.  While Canada's labour union density continues to hover around thirty percent, that number hides declining density rates in the private sector.  Equally concerning for the labour movement has been the long assault on the post-war labour freedoms to organize, bargain, and strike.  As Leo Panitch and Donald Swartz have shown in their book, governments routinely seek to limit labour's core freedoms, especially the right to strike.  When Stephen Harper's government claimed that the fragility of the Canadian economy was justification to take away the right of thousands of federal workers to strike, it became clear that strikes themselves were in danger of being legislated away.

One of labour's responses has been to challenge legislative assaults in court.  To date, those results have been mixed.  Almost universally, the courts have shown little interest in expanding labour’s freedom through the Charter.   However, when unions have used the Charter to defend postwar gains such as union security or the right to expression on the picket line, there has been some success.

That formula was on full display when the Supreme Court of Canada (SCC) released its decision in Alberta v. UFCW on November 15, 2013.  Dubbed the “Palace Casino” dispute, the case addressed state imposed limits on the picket line with regards to personal privacy.  In a unanimous ruling, the court struck down Alberta’s Personal Information Protection Act (PIPA) on the grounds that its use in a labour dispute violated the union’s constitutional rights of free expression.

Privacy and the Capitalist State

In the age of smartphones and social media, the question of personal privacy has become a central topic of debate in liberal capitalist democracies.  In response, some governments have passed legislation designed to protect an individual’s personal information.  Alberta’s legislation was modeled after the federal government’s Personal Information Protection and Electronic Documents Act (2000).  As detailed in court, the legislation is part of an “international movement towards giving individuals better control over their personal information” (para 13). Both the federal and provincial legislation is designed to limit how private sector organizations will use personal information for commercial gain.   

The goal to limit how private organizations collect and use personal information is certainly laudable: everyone should have control over how their private information is used private businesses for profitable gain.  The irony is that while some governments have passed legislation in the name of privacy, many of those same governments are enhancing their surveillance capabilities to spy on their own citizens.  One has to look no further than the super data collection centres in Ottawa and the United States or by companies such as Bell, RBC,  or Google, Apple, and Microsoft to recognize that current legislation is certainly not capable of protecting individual privacy.  Given these limitations, it is likely that personal privacy will be one of the central civil rights battles in this century.

The question of personal privacy on a picket line was at the centre of the debate in Alberta v. UFCW.  The very fact that this dispute arose at all speaks to the contradictory nature of personal privacy laws.  Ostensibly the law is to protect government and private companies from using personal information without individual consent.  In this case, anti-union individuals argued that a union using images from a picket line violated their privacy rights. As in most strikes, unions and employers routinely photograph and capture video images of events on a picket line.  Unions use those images for a variety of purposes, one of which is to publicly shame replacement workers or other individuals who cross a picket line. In order to maintain solidarity and morale on a picket line such acts are of vital importance, especially for a strike that last several months.  

Privacy on the Picket Line?

During the course of a yearlong strike at an Edmonton casino, the UFCW captured numerous images of replacement workers, managers, and others who crossed the picket line.  The union used those images on various websites and in union pamphlets.  The individuals complained that the union’s actions violated PIPA.  Alberta’s privacy commissioner agreed with the complainants and ordered the images and personal information destroyed.  The UFCW appealed to the courts, stating that the decision violated its freedom of expression rights guaranteed in the Charter of Rights and Freedoms.

The SCC unanimously agreed that PIPA could not be used to limit the expression of the union.  In coming to this conclusion, the SCC relied on Pepsi (2002) and Kmart (1999) to conclude that the right to strike is inextricably linked to free expression. Indeed, the court ruled that the unions routinely used images taken from the picket line to dissuade the public from crossing the line, to build public support for their cause, to gather evidence for future litigation, to build the morale of strikers, and to shame possible replacement workers (para 6).    

Moreover, the union captured these images in a public place and during public demonstrations.  When an individual leaves the privacy of their own residence, surely there is some expectation that they are forgoing some expectations of privacy?  This led the court to conclude:

Those crossing the picket line would reasonably expect that their image could be caught and disseminated by others such as journalists, for example.  Moreover, the personal information collected, used and disclosed by the Union was limited to images of individuals crossing a picket line and did not include intimate biographical details.  No intimate details of the lifestyle or personal choices of the individuals were revealed (para 26).

Having come to this conclusion, the SCC argued that the sweeping nature of PIPA was disproportionate to the goals of protecting individual privacy and could therefore not be saved by s. 1 of the Charter.  In other words, the legislation’s goals of protecting personal privacy did not outweigh the workers’ right to free expression on a picket line. 

The court’s unanimity on these questions was somewhat surprising.  While Justice Abella and Cromwell had both sided with labour in the past, Justice Rothstein had argued quite strongly against further enhancing union Charter gains in the 2011 Fraser decision.  Then again, since Pepsi and Kmart were established precedent, perhaps Rothstein's rationale makes sense.  Nevertheless, it was the unanimity I believe, that led long time union lawyer and advocate of labour union rights Paul Cavalluzzo to declare that the court’s decision “recognized that the right to strike is a fundamental right under the Charter.”  

Cavalluzzo’s argument may be stretching reality a little farther than the court was willing to go.  The court has not overturned the 1987 labour trilogy which stated that there was no constitutional right to strike. 

Yet, Cavalluzzo clearly has his eyes on the forthcoming case examining Saskatchewan’s essential service legislation. In that case, the Saskatchewan Federation of Labour has challenged the Saskatchewan’s Party’s essential service legislation which takes away the right of thousands of public sector workers to strike.   Having agreed to hear that case, it is certainly plausible that the court is now willing to reexamine the 1987 labour trilogy.  And one could take some solace in the courts wording that the “use of picket lines is an invaluable tool in the economic arsenal of workers in the collective bargaining process.” (para 35).  

Inherent limits, but a victory nonetheless

There are of course inherent limits to the court’s decision.  The ruling is premised on the notion that the union was on legal strike.  If a union were to step outside of the law and strike illegally, there is no indication that Charter rights would apply.  This suggests that Canada's specific regime of industrial legality-often dubbed Wagnerism-is closely tied to any potential Charter right to strike.

The Wagner model sets specific rules surrounding the right to organize, bargain, and strike. In particular, it protects the sanctity of a contract, allows workers to grieve management decisions, and allows workers’ third party representation if disciplined. In exchange, workers concede the right to strike except in specific circumstances as the end of a contract.  If workers sought to move beyond Wagnerism (by expanding the right to strike for instance) there is little chance that the Charter would assist in significantly challenge the existing economic paradigm.

Indeed, there is some irony about the court's continued reliance on "legal" strikes as a protected form of expression.  Throughout its jurisprudence on this issue, the court routinely defends the right to picket when those actions are legal.  Yet, in almost all of its jurisprudence on labour rights, the court continuously states that it does not favour any particular form of labour relations regime.  On the strike jurisprudence, that is not true.  In all the cases before it, the SCC only defends legal strikes.  And legal strikes in Canada can only be understood as an extension of Wagnerism.  On this question, the court has backed itself into a corner.  It can only defend the right to strike by protecting Canada’s specific Wagner model, something that it refused to do in the 2011 Fraser decision.    


Of course, these were not the questions the court was asked. Given the narrow confines of the dispute, this is clearly a victory for the union.  In an age when neoliberal models of individualism dominate public discourse, there is little question that collective organizations such as labour unions will be vulnerable to legislation like PIPA.  This case shows that anti-union crusaders will use multiple means to weaken the collective capacity of workers to resist employers.  The fact that the SCC has read some collective dimensions into its freedom of expression jurisprudence is an important.  Although it is unlikely that the Charter will offer substantial gains for workers, it remains an important defensive tool to preserve the existing paradigm.  On that note, Alberta v. UFCW is a victory. The larger questions about how the working class can move beyond Wagnerism or neoliberalism, however, will unlikely be answered in court.  Rather, those political questions will likely be addressed on a picket line. Whether the SCC would agree that those types of expression were legal or constitutional is an entirely different question.   Given past decisions, workers would be wise to approach the SCC with caution.  

Tuesday, November 12, 2013

Social Justice and Right to Work

The debate continues about workers rights and the so-called right to work. Yesterday, it was revealed that Ontario's Progressive Conservative leader Tim Hudak planned to campaign on an aggressive anti-union platform in the next election.  His plan, according to various news sources, is to undermine unions through a right-to-work plan.

Right to work laws allow individuals to opt-out of paying union dues upon being hired by an employer. Supporters argue that right to work laws allow individuals to determine where their money is spent.  If an individual doesn't like that a union donates to anti-nuclear campaigns, for instance, they can opt-out of union dues (incidentally, this was the very issue in Lavigne v. OPSEU where the Supreme Court of Canada upheld mandatory dues requirements as consistent with the Charter of Rights).  

The problem with this argument is that it takes the "collective" out of collective bargaining.  There is no possible way that a worker can negotiate with an employer on an equal footing.  Even the most skilled workers lose their capacities to negotiate with an employer over time as skill sets are constantly changing.  The changing nature of labour skill is not a naturally occurring phenomena.  Rather, changing skill sets are imposed in the labour process by employers seeking to appropriate relative surplus value (or the value created by new technologies). The result has been a continuous process of skilling (through public institutions like Universities) and as Harry Braverman showed decades ago, de-skilling through standardization and mechanization of the labour process.  In this process, workers are at the mercy of employers unless they can resist unilateral change to their workplace. That resistance occurs collectively.

The only way that the power imbalance can be addressed is through collective representation.  Perhaps one of the most essential components of collective representation and collective bargaining is to take wages out of competition so that employers cannot force workers to compete through lower wages. Right to work laws seek to weaken collective representation which weakens the ability of working people to maintain more of the surplus from their labour.  In other words, as the American Federation of Labor shows, right to work will lower wages and living standards for all. That being the case, right to work laws can never be defended as just.  These laws are simply a way to weaken workers' rights in the workplace.        

Saturday, November 9, 2013

Thinking about democracy

Yesterday, I published a small opinion piece in the Saskatoon Star Phoenix about the state of Canada's democracy.  No matter how you measure it, official democracy in Canada is increasingly limited.  The list is long: increasing concentration of power in the Prime Minister's office, the increasing irrelevance of Parliament, muzzling of MPs, ignoring of election laws, shorter campaign periods, falling voter turnout, politicians refusing to take responsibility for their actions, etc. etc. etc.   What is more, institutions such as labour unions - institutions that are far more democratic than Parliament - are increasingly attacked by governments in the name of economic efficiency.

Alan Sears and James Cairns have challenged the limitations of official democracy in Canada.  In their book on the Democratic Imagination, they explore the concept of democracy from below.    According to their book, the authors argue that democracy from below is "about the masses of people engaging in genuine self-rule in all aspects of their life."

According to the authors, democracy from below allows us to examine how we can introduce democratic decision-making into otherwise authoritarian relationships.  For instance, the work relationship is not a democratic space.  To the contrary, workers submit to the absolute authority of employers. Democracy from below challenges this relationship and asks how we can democratize work.  The book is required reading for those interested in democracy and democratic reform.