The article below has been provided by a CWO sympathiser. It gives a brief sketch of a continuing struggle where we again see workers organising themselves against their bosses and against the bosses' props, the Labor Unions. At this point the outcome of the struggle is not yet determined but even now it is clear that the struggle is part of our class's resistance against the capitalists' crisis-driven onslaught.

The grim reality of the maquiladora workers [1] has long been known.

• Human rights of workers are frequently not respected. Going to the bathroom and drinking water are not permitted to most workers in order to speed production.

• Labor rights are not respected. The Mexican labor laws are rarely followed.

• The health and safety of the workers is at high risk. Unsafe working conditions often result in labour accidents. Exposure to toxic chemicals often causes industrial diseases.

• Environmental laws are frequently not respected. The factories pollute the air, water and land.

• The wages are not enough to meet the most basic needs of families. Living in a shanty house and hunger are the reality of workers’ children.

• Women’s rights are not respected. Sexual harassment and sanctions for being pregnant are normal in many factories

Just one aspect of the grim condition of the Mexican proletariat in general, where some 40% of the workforce combine unemployment and subemployment, and competition for jobs is intense. But even so, in these awful conditions, the proletariat has been able to put up a fight.

The strikers are now demanding 20% above the new minimum wage of 176 pesos daily, approx. $8,(this is the frontier zone rate, higher than the rest of the country, however the cost of living is much higher) plus a bonus of 32,000 pesos. The original demand was for a 100% wage rise.

This was provoked by the new MORENA [2] President Andrés Manuel Lopez Obrador (AMLO) who came to power promising the transformation of Mexico. [3] But of course, there can never be a fair wage, never be a fair rate of exploitation and the strikers seized the moment to go one step beyond.

“President Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador (AMLO) followed through on a campaign promise Monday announcing a minimum wage hike of 16.21 percent, Mexico’s largest in 23 years. "The minimum wage (increase) sets the stage to advance the country's labor policy through an agreement … of unity and trust between the private sector, workers and the public sector," said the head of state Monday afternoon at the National Palace. Daily salaries are set to increase from an average of 88.36 pesos (US$4.40) to 102.68 pesos (US$5.11) on Jan. 1, 2019. "Over many years the minimum wage has lost its purchasing power. Some say it has lost 70 percent of its purchasing power over the last 30 years," said Lopez Obrador during his speech surrounded by government officials, national business leaders, and labor unions.” [4]

Although the percentage amounts may at first glance seem significant to those not aware of the extent of Mexico’s social problems, they represent percentages of next to nothing. We have written extensively about the economic plight of the majority of Mexicans, including in the recent past when a wave of looting hit the country due to gasoline price hikes. [5] The minimum wage hike (which is only a continuation of a series of hikes before the current government came to power [6]) will not address the massive reality of pauperisation. Mexico’s inequality and high levels of poverty remain the defining feature of its economy. Under Peña Nieto’s government, recently dethroned by the AMLO/MORENA victory that wound only deepened. According to BBC Mundo July 2015

“In the last two years, the National Council for the Evaluation of Policies of Social Development (Coneval), has informed us that two million Mexicans fell into poverty. Thus the percentage of the population in that situation went from 45.5% in 2012 to 46.2% in 2014. That is to say, 55.3 million people are poor in the second largest Latin American economy.”

According to the same source, only 20.5% of the country’s population fall in the category of not poor and not vulnerable.

This is very much a live situation but at the time of writing, 4 of the 45 businesses affected by the strike have agreed to the demands. [7] Two have shut down their operations, claiming the demands are impossible. There are also reports of state forces protecting union leaders and tearing down red and black strike banners from factory gates, instructed by the AMLO administration to end the dispute. But the strike continues.

A strike of any description in itself is an event in a country where extremes of poverty and inequality have only intensified due to a proletariat under the deadly tyranny of unions which illustrate perfectly the communist position on these thoroughly bourgeois organs as statist organs of preservation of bourgeois class rule, not organs of proletarian defence.

This strike of necessity began as a wildcat. On 12th of January 2019 workers at Autoliv realised that management and union, the hated Union of Laborers and Industrial Workers of the Maquiladora Industry (SJOIIM) headed by Juan Villafuerte, who is over and over regarded as a particularly odious Judas on the strikers’ Facebook pages, were conspiring to rob them of bonus payments to claw back the wage increases already announced. This was particularly bad for the Matamoros workers as they were already receiving the new rate (due to the high cost of living in the area) and were now facing loss of other benefits. They reacted by setting up an independent strike committee. 2000 workers gathered in a general assembly and elected the committee, then they went to other factories and called out workers there hanging the traditional red and black factory closures flags on the gates. The maquiladora industry of the city of Matamoros was shut down.

Thus, caught off guard, the union quickly moved to regain its lost control. On Friday 25th January at 2pm it was declared a legal strike. Rather than the initial 100% pay rise demanded by the strikers, the SJOIIM agreed to “fight” for 20% and a bonus of 32,000 pesos. Another key demand of the self-organised strikers, an end to the extortionate 4% of salary union dues also seems to have disappeared for the time being.

However, the union has only gone on to reveal itself for the bosses’ stooge it always was and has been attempting to close down the strike, open the factory gates and essentially betray the strikers.

The labour lawyer Susana Prieto has thus far been able to play an important role in preventing the return to self-organisation and a deepening of the dispute. She has presented herself as the champion of the strikers and dedicated to their cause, but in reality, she has been careful to prevent the rupture with the official structures which would risk a widening class confrontation. Prieto, a MORENA activist has convinced strikers to follow the channels of applying pressure to the union and appeals to AMLO.

However, if the confused situation of the present clarifies, if it becomes evident that AMLO is indeed calling for the closing down of the strike, that the strikers have been sold down the river by the currently popular Susana Prieto and that their hopes have been quashed, then there still remains the chance that the strike will revert to the methods of self-organisation, will call into question the social realities of the working class and serve as a detonator for a wider struggle.

For now, this remains to be seen.

Supporters of the ICT have contacted the strikers via social media. We have done this to encourage proletarian self-organisation outside of the suffocating death grip of capitalism’s structures that keep us as supine suppliers of unpaid labour in Matamoros and everywhere. For example;

Internationalist Greetings from the Internationalist Communist Tendency.

The unions, AMLO, the entire official structure of society is built on capitalism and today that capitalism can only survive by attacking the working-class majority. We only have our own strength as a class, a class which can stop this system and build another system where our needs are all that matter. That is socialism or communism. This has to start somewhere and today the maquiladora workers of Mexico face the capitalist system. They are not alone. Everywhere the working-class face attacks and a future of nothing but worse. But we are strong. We are many. We are the working class everywhere. We need to create our own organs of struggle, our own workplace groups and to start, send delegates to a city-wide council. This will be the authority we listen to, not the union traitors, not the capitalist politicians. We have to appeal to other workers to do the same, and whatever the outcome of this or that episode in the struggle, we need to be aware we need to fight for a different society; this society is a nightmare. We need this message to spread globally. We need information about this struggle so important for the world working class. Contact us. info@leftcom.org

To conclude, let us remember the words of our comrade Onorato Damen. [8]

"To put forward revolutionary demands on the ground, however small, in the current insecure and feeble conditions of workers' struggle, to engage in an active political militancy not just restricted to a typewriter and theorising which is an individual activity that is always debatable in intention as well as results." (O. Damen) Battaglia Comunista n.11, 1958.

Ant

[1] Maquiladoras are factories and assembly centres of foreign companies operating in Mexico under the Mexico/US agreement called: “Maquiladora Program.” Most maquiladoras are US companies, but corporations form Europe, Japan, South Korea, and even sweatshop China operate maquiladoras.

[2] The National Regeneration Movement (Spanish: Movimiento Regeneración Nacional), also known by its acronym MORENA (Spanish for "dark-skinned"). For the 2018 general elections, it formed the coalition Juntos Haremos Historia (Together we'll make history) along with the left-wing Labor Party and right-wing Social Encounter Party. It won the presidency with 53% of the popular vote, and won a majority in both the Senate and Chamber of Deputies.

[3] leftcom.org

[4] telesurenglish.net

[5] leftcom.org

[6] Mexico’s minimum wage was raised on Dec 1, 2017—a month earlier than usual—to $88.36 pesos per day; a 10% rise on the 2017 level of $80.04 pesos a day introduced on January 1st 2017, and the second year in a row it has made above-inflation increases to the minimum salary. In 2016, Mexico’s minimum wage was $73.04 pesos a day. In years past the minimum wage had been raised more-or-less in line with inflation, to avoid a wave of wage demands that could cause a spiral of increases in prices and wages which would eventually have the most impact on the poorest people. The problem was that the minimum wage has for years been so low that it isn’t enough to for a single person to live on, never mind a whole family. mexperience.com

[7] Imagen Television youtube.com

[8] Onorato Damen was a key figure in the Communist Left that defended revolutionary Communism against the degeneration of the Comintern from the early 1920s. He helped plan the formation in 1943 of the Internationalist Communist Party. In the seventies the Internationalist Communist Party around Prometeo and Battaglia Comunista organised the first of the International Conferences of the Communist Left. Out of these conferences the Internationalist Communist Party and the Communist Workers' Organisation together formed the International Bureau for the Revolutionary Party around the basis of a common platform. In recognition of the adherence of new forces the IBRP was later named the Internationalist Communist Tendency. Onorato Damen died in 1979 aged 85.