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China
Panama Papers name eight Chinese leaders

06/04/2016: Massive clampdown by state censors

  China

Britain
Panama Papers scandal

06/04/2016: ‘They're all in it together!’

  Britain

Sri Lanka
Left political leader imprisoned

06/04/2016: Socialists demand immediate release

  Sri Lanka

US
Chicago teachers’ Day of Action

05/04/2016: 15,000 demonstrate

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Germany
420 attend “Socialism Days”!

05/04/2016: An expression of the recent advances and growing support for the SAV

  Germany

Belgium
Scandal in Brussels

04/04/2016: Antiracists arrested while the far right can demonstrate

  Belgium

Britain
Why socialists should vote to leave the EU

03/04/2016: Hannah Sell, Socialist Party deputy general secretary, answers some common questions about the socialist case for exit.

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Turkey
The antidote against war, terror and exploitation.

02/04/2016: For the unity of Turkish and Kurdish working classes

  Turkey

US election turmoil

01/04/2016: Bernie Sanders campaign - an opportunity to build a new party of the 99%

  US

Bangladesh
Stop the Rampal power project

31/03/2016: The world’s largest mangrove forest lies on the deltas of three rivers: the Ganges, Brahmaputra and Meghna rivers on the Bay of Bengal. It is here, in an area of outstanding natural beauty called the Sundarbans, that the Bangladeshi government plans to site a coal-fired power plant.

  Bangladesh

 Britain
Steel crisis

30/03/2016: Sold down the river by Tata

  Britain, Solidarity

Belgium
How the far-right was able to disturb the vigil for the victims

30/03/2016: Action by far-right led hooligans last Sunday in Brussels

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Britain
A new moment

28/03/2016: Extracts from a statement discussed at the Socialist Party’s recent congress

  Britain

Ireland
100th anniversary of Easter 1916 Rising

26/03/2016: A revolt against imperial power and war

  History, Ireland Republic

History
When Khrushchev denounced Stalin

26/03/2016: 1956 ‘secret speech’ a devastating blow to Stalinist regimes

  History, Russia

Britain
Socialist Party national congress 2016

25/03/2016: A serious, thoughtful, optimistic and lively national congress of the Socialist Party took place from 19-21 March.

  Britain

China
Twin meetings, mass layoffs and failed reforms

24/03/2016: Discussion on what is happening in China

  China

Belgium
Brussels terror bombings

23/03/2016: Oppose terrorism, war and poverty

  Belgium

Brazil rocked by deep crisis

23/03/2016: Dilma’s government brought to brink of collapse

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 11th CWI World Congress
World Perspectives

22/03/2016: Amended agreed version of the World Perspectives document agreed by the CWI’s 11th World Congress

  CWI

Germany
Big gains for right-wing, nationalist, AfD in state elections

22/03/2016: DIE LINKE (Left Party) urgently needs to change course

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US
Sanders needs to run as an independent in November

18/03/2016: Continuing the Political Revolution

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France
Up to half a million on streets to stop new labour law

18/03/2016: Will there be a general strike against the Valls-Hollande government ?

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China
Miners’ strike while People’s Congress discusses mass redundancies

16/03/2016: Thousands march in Heilongjiang province opposing job cuts.

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Britain
A chance for the trade unions to lead the EU referendum debate

11/03/2016: For a socialist, working class no campaign

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Refugee crisis

10/03/2016: Cruel capitalist regimes responsible

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European Union
Alliance with Turkey to close borders

09/03/2016: Crises for refugees - and the EU – continues

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Germany
Between hatred and solidarity

08/03/2016: The situation in Germany

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 International Women’s Day

07/03/2016: Working women’s fight for a world without oppression

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Sanders campaign at a crossroads

04/03/2016: Bernie’s political revolution will be strangled if it remains imprisoned within the corporate-controlled Democratic Party.

  US

Turkey
No intervention in Syria! Stop the war on the Kurds!

01/03/2016: Two articles on the current situation in Turkey and Kurdistan

  Kurdistan, Syria, Turkey

Italy

Metalworkers resist FIAT blackmail

www.socialistworld.net, 23/07/2010
website of the committee for a workers' international, CWI

Struggle at Pomigliano brings out need for workers’ party

Events at the FIAT Pomigliano factory in recent weeks in Italy have shown that even in the most difficult circumstances workers are prepared to struggle if given a lead. Marco Veruggio of ControCorrente describes what has been happening and explains the significance of these developments.

Following the big waves of immigration from the south of Italy to Turin in search of work in the 1950s and 1960s, FIAT Cars – the biggest private company in Italy - realised that it would be profitable to set up its own factories directly in the south. Pomigliano d’Arco, near Naples, was one of a series of plants, the last being Melfi in the 1990s, which in an historic agreement meant that the Turin-based company could take advantage of the southern labour force.

When the company then moved production to Eastern Europe and South America it was in search of cheap labour and new markets for its cars. In fact, FIAT plants have existed in Poland since the 1920s, but it was in the last years of ‘real socialism’ that the Agnellis (the owners of FIAT) began to work with the ‘communist’ government to mass produce cars.

For a period it seemed that the powerful Agnelli family was about to hive off its car production in order to invest in more profitable sectors (the energy sector, for example). But with the arrival of Sergio Marchionne as chief executive in 2004 came the message that the auto sector would remain the group’s core business. The partnership agreement with Chrysler last year was presented as clear proof of that.

During the failed talks with Opel, rumours abounded that two Italian plants were going to close, but Marchionne guaranteed that the company would continue to invest in Italy too. The announcement that production of the Panda car was to be transferred from Poland to Pomigliano, with 700 million euros worth of investment, seemed to underline this promise and partially compensate for the announced closure of another factory in the south, Termini Imerese (Sicily).

A few years ago, Marchionne was presenting himself in the media as a manager prepared to go against the stream, determined to save jobs and even praised by Fausto Bertinotti (former leader of Rifondazione Comunista) saying “We need a Marchionne in Italian politics”. Now, Marchionne is demanding a heavy price in exchange for investing in Pomigliano: not only increased exploitation (18 weekly shifts, a reduction in breaks, compulsory overtime), but challenging the most elementary democratic rights that Italian workers have won since the 1960s. FIAT is demanding significant restrictions on the right to strike, with the possibility of fines for unions which do not comply with these conditions and even sacking workers who take strike action. In addition, it will be possible to not pay sick pay to all workers if the level of ‘absenteeism’ goes above a certain threshold.

Industrial blackmail

Marchionne went into negotiations clearly saying that there was no room for changes to the proposals: either the trade unions signed up to them or there would be no investment, the Panda would stay in Poland and around 10,000 workers directly and indirectly employed by FIAT would lose their jobs. All the unions criticised the company’s stance but, once more, only the FIOM (metalworking section of the CGIL union) was prepared to fight. It said it was prepared to negotiate on shift changes and how work was organised in the factory (putting forward counter-proposals) but that as far as union rights are concerned, national laws and contracts must be respected. And so, when the other unions signed the ‘umpteenth’ separate agreement with management and, together with the company, launched a referendum amongst the workers, FIOM, which has the most members in the factory, announced that it would not take part. They said that the workers would be voting with a gun held to their heads and that constitutional rights of workers cannot be subject to a referendum. (The Italian constitution recognises an individual’s right to strike). However, because workers were facing so much pressure from management, FIOM decided not to boycott the referendum.

The national CGIL leadership took an ambiguous position. On the one hand they did not dare to directly oppose the FIOM, but on the other, the federation’s general secretary, Epifani, said that the FIOM should have consulted with the CGIL leadership before taking a decision, that the referendum was a democratic fact and that the workers would overwhelmingly vote ‘yes’.

Just before the vote, one TV journalist speculated that if the ‘yes’ vote was higher than 85% (which nearly everyone was expecting) the FIOM would be defeated. But in the end only 62% of the workers voted in favour of the agreement in the referendum.

What happened at Pomigliano shows that the idea that, when workers are confronted with a stronger adversary they must accept everything because they are ‘weak’, is just an excuse to mask the union leaders’ own complicity and subordination. In recent years, the FIOM has built up its own identity and strength as a consequence of its ability to clearly say ‘no’, when to have said ‘yes’ would have meant not defending its own members. At Pomigliano, FIOM represents 17% of the workforce, but 36% said ‘no’ to Marchionne in the referendum.

About a week before, when the discussions over Pomigliano were underway, elections took place for union representatives in the Melfi FIAT plant. Here the numbers were also clear: the ‘extremists’ of the FIOM once again became the main union in the factory increasing their votes from 950 in 2007 to 1,377, while the votes for the unions prepared to collaborate with the employers fell ( FIM CISL from 951 to 866, UILM UIL from 1,376 to 1,357 and FISMIC from 803 to 598).

Workers’ political representation

“Where is the political ‘home’? The problem is that today workers don’t vote for the Left anymore because they can’t find any political representation there. The political parties should be saying that what is being fought over at Pomigliano is of much wider interest. That was how things were once”. These seem like phrases from a ControCorrente leaflet. Instead, they are from Maurizio Landini, leader of the FIOM. The fact that he is forcefully raising the question of workers’ political representation is confirmation of the correctness of our campaign for a workers’ party which was launched at the CGIL congress at Rimini in May this year. And this discussion has broadened out.

“Unfortunately in Italy there is a shadow hanging over workers: politics is only concerned with consumers, not producers” (Cofferati, former leader CGIL). These and other similar comments about the weakness of the centre left, indicate which way the wind is blowing. Today, building a Workers’ Left in Italy is not just a ControCorrente dream, it is a possibility that is sinking roots in reality and is being discussed.

On the self-styled Left there has been no ‘strategic’ reflection about events at Pomigliano. Waking up from their hibernation, the left leaders have written resounding declarations against FIAT and hurried down to the factory gates. But as usual, they have done it in an impromptu way: something to get done before they dive back into their favourite occupation – to find a way to return to the ‘corridors of power’. So what if most of their trade union members supported the attempts of Epifani to isolate the FIOM at the CGIL congress? What’s the problem if Nichola Nicolosi, newly elected national secretary of the CGIL and member of Rifondazione Comunista hasn’t said a word about Pomigliano? And why worry if Nichi Vendola (ex Rifondazione) has expressed his lyrical solidarity with the FIOM, and on the day they said no to Marchionne, Emma Marcegalia - head of the bosses’ organisation, Confindustria - defines him as “the best regional governor in the south” and one that her factories in the region are extremely happy with? The important thing they all feel passionately about is that they get themselves back into parliament. So that they can put the workers’ case there…of course!

Political vacuum

In Italy (as elsewhere) there is no real alternative to those who want not only to make workers pay for the crisis but to use it to reshape the relationship of social forces against them. There is no political representation for workers and this is therefore the terrain on which we have to act. The FIOM is inevitably taking on a surrogate role in this respect because it is seen as the only left force both in the trade union field and the political field.

During the ‘symbolic’ general strike which the CGIL called in June, many workers from different sectors marched in the metalworkers’ contingent asking, “Can I join the FIOM?” But the FIOM cannot be left on its own to fill the vacuum.

The angry response of Marchionne, with the sacking of FIOM representatives at two other factories, only confirms the sympathy of workers and the left for the courageous stand that Landini and his people have taken. He has also announced that another 20 workers will lose their jobs because of ‘anomalous sickness’. In Genova, 19 FIOM members, including members of ControCorrente, are under investigation for damaging a metal barrier during an occupation at the Fincantieri shipyard last December.

Today, not just the FIOM but the whole trade union movement needs a political ‘home’, a possible point of reference. This is also true of the anti-capitalist struggles, the anti-Berlusconi intellectuals and the millions of young people who would struggle to change the world if only they were not so disgusted by ‘politics’.

It will not be Bertinotti or the current ‘left’ leaders who will take on this role. The experiences of other countries have shown that the trade unions that can take the initiative. It is to the working class that the anti-capitalist Left in Italy must turn.



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NEWS

China: Panama Papers name eight Chinese leaders
06/04/2016, Vincent Kolo, chinaworker.info :
Massive clampdown by state censors

Britain: Panama Papers scandal
06/04/2016, Dave Murray, from The Socialist (weekly paper of the Socialist Party England & Wales):
‘They're all in it together!’

Sri Lanka: Left political leader imprisoned
06/04/2016, United Socialist Party (CWI Sri Lanka) :
Socialists demand immediate release

US: Chicago teachers’ Day of Action
05/04/2016, Two articles by Socialist Alternative members, Nick Wozniak and Steve Edwards:
15,000 demonstrate

Germany: 420 attend “Socialism Days”!
05/04/2016, SAV (CWI in Germany) reporters:
An expression of the recent advances and growing support for the SAV

Belgium: Scandal in Brussels
04/04/2016, PSL/LSP (CWI in Belgium):
Antiracists arrested while the far right can demonstrate

Britain: Why socialists should vote to leave the EU
03/04/2016, From the Socialist, paper of the Socialist Party (CWI in England & Wales):
Hannah Sell, Socialist Party deputy general secretary, answers some common questions about the socialist case for exit.

Turkey: The antidote against war, terror and exploitation.
02/04/2016, Sosyalist Alternatif, CWI in Turkey:
For the unity of Turkish and Kurdish working classes

US election turmoil
01/04/2016, By Tony Saunois (CWI Secretary) who recently visited the US for meetings of Socialist Alternative:
Bernie Sanders campaign - an opportunity to build a new party of the 99%

Bangladesh: Stop the Rampal power project
31/03/2016, Pete Mason, Barking and Dagenham Socialist Party (CWI in England & Wales):
The world’s largest mangrove forest lies on the deltas of three rivers: the Ganges, Brahmaputra and Meghna rivers on the Bay of Bengal. It is here, in an area of outstanding natural beauty called the Sundarbans, that the Bangladeshi government plans to site a coal-fired power plant.

Britain: Steel crisis
30/03/2016, Alec Thraves, Socialist Party (England and Wales), CWI Britain:
Sold down the river by Tata

Belgium: How the far-right was able to disturb the vigil for the victims
30/03/2016, PSL/LSP (CWI in Belgium) reporters:
Action by far-right led hooligans last Sunday in Brussels

Britain: Socialist Party national congress 2016
25/03/2016, Socialist Party (CWI in England & Wales) reporters:
A serious, thoughtful, optimistic and lively national congress of the Socialist Party took place from 19-21 March.

China : Twin meetings, mass layoffs and failed reforms
24/03/2016, Chinaworker.info:
Discussion on what is happening in China

Belgium: Brussels terror bombings
23/03/2016, Linkse Socialistische Partij/Parti Socialiste de Lutte (CWI Belgium) :
Oppose terrorism, war and poverty

Brazil rocked by deep crisis
23/03/2016, Marcus Kollbrunner, LSR (CWI in Brazil):
Dilma’s government brought to brink of collapse

France : Up to half a million on streets to stop new labour law
18/03/2016, Leila Messaoudi, Gauche Revolutionnaire (CWI in France):
Will there be a general strike against the Valls-Hollande government ?

Kazakhstan: European Parliament condemns treatment of political prisoners
16/03/2016, CWI reporters:
Basic rights must be respected

China: Miners’ strike while People’s Congress discusses mass redundancies
16/03/2016, Dikang, chinaworker.info:
Thousands march in Heilongjiang province opposing job cuts.

Ireland: Establishment parties hit a wall of anger
14/03/2016, By Cillian Gillespie and Ruth Coppinger MP, Socialist Party (CWI in Ireland) members:
Political crisis looms

Britain: A chance for the trade unions to lead the EU referendum debate
11/03/2016, Clive Heemskerk, Socialist Party (CWI in England & Wales):
For a socialist, working class no campaign

Refugee crisis
10/03/2016, Editorial from the Socialist, paper of the Socialist Party (CWI in England & Wales):
Cruel capitalist regimes responsible

International Women’s Day
07/03/2016, Clare Doyle, CWI:
Working women’s fight for a world without oppression

Sanders campaign at a crossroads
04/03/2016, socialistalternative.org, US:
Bernie’s political revolution will be strangled if it remains imprisoned within the corporate-controlled Democratic Party.

Ireland South: Voters reject ’two-and-a-half party system’
03/03/2016, Interview with Ruth Coppinger TD:
Left makes important gains

CWI Comment and Analysis

ANALYSIS

Britain: A new moment
28/03/2016, Socialist Party (CWI in England & Wales), published in April 2016 issue of Socialism Today:
Extracts from a statement discussed at the Socialist Party’s recent congress

Ireland: 100th anniversary of Easter 1916 Rising
26/03/2016, Cillian Gillespie, Socialist Party (CWI Ireland):
A revolt against imperial power and war

History: When Khrushchev denounced Stalin
26/03/2016, Niall Mulholland, from Socialism Today (April 2016 issue of the monthly journal of Socialist Party, England & Wales):
1956 ‘secret speech’ a devastating blow to Stalinist regimes

11th CWI World Congress: World Perspectives
22/03/2016, socialistworld.net:
Amended agreed version of the World Perspectives document agreed by the CWI’s 11th World Congress

Germany: Big gains for right-wing, nationalist, AfD in state elections
22/03/2016, Sascha Stanicic, Sozialistische Alternative (CWI in Germany):
DIE LINKE (Left Party) urgently needs to change course

US: Sanders needs to run as an independent in November
18/03/2016, Calvin Priest, Socialist Alternative (CWI supporters in USA):
Continuing the Political Revolution

European Union: Alliance with Turkey to close borders
09/03/2016, Per-Ãke Westerlund, from Offensiv - the weekly paper of Rattvisepartiet Socialisterna (CWI in Sweden):
Crises for refugees - and the EU – continues

Germany: Between hatred and solidarity
08/03/2016, By Sascha Stanicic, Sozialistische Alternative (CWI in Germany):
The situation in Germany

Turkey: No intervention in Syria! Stop the war on the Kurds!
01/03/2016, By Murat Karin, Sosyalist Alternatif (CWI in Turkey) and Paula Mitchell, Socialist Party (CWI in England & Wales):
Two articles on the current situation in Turkey and Kurdistan

US: Nevada Goes to Clinton – Sanders Looks to Super Tuesday
26/02/2016, Calvin Priest, Socialist Alternative (CWI in the USA):
Huge enthusiasm for Bernie Sanders’ call for a political revolution leads to serious challenge to Hillary Clinton

Five years on from the “Arab Spring”
20/02/2016, Serge Jordan (CWI), article to be published in the March 2016 edition of Socialism Today, No.196.:
The “Arab Spring” revolutionary wave brought dictators in Tunisia and Egypt crashing down. It swept through the Middle East, inspiring workers and youth the world over. It has since ebbed, however, leaving the region wracked with war and sectarian conflict.

CWI 11th World Congress: South Asia wracked by instability
15/02/2016, Geert Cool, CWI Belgium:
Huge potential for workers’ struggles

US: Bernie’s political revolution opens new era for American politics
13/02/2016, Patrick Ayers, Socialist Alternative (CWI in the USA):
Build a #Movement4Bernie to Defeat the Billionaire Class and the Democratic Party Establishment.

CWI 11th World Congress 2016: Women and oppression in class society
13/02/2016, CWI World Congress Document:
A socialist approach

CWI 11th World Congress: Upheaval of traditional European political framework
12/02/2016, Sarah Wrack, Socialist Party (CWI England & Wales):
Workers’ fury at austerity and capitalist system will find more expression

11th CWI World Congress: A World in turmoil
11/02/2016, Kevin Parslow, Socialist Party (CWI England & Wales):
Renewed economic crisis, wars, political polarisation & class struggle perspectives

Africa: New political storms and mass struggles
08/02/2016, CWI 11th World Congress Document:
Opportunities will arise for working class and poor to organise

India: Rising class struggle reflects seething anger of working class
08/02/2016, Anand Kumar, from Dudiyora Horaata (Workers’ Struggle – newspaper of the CWI in India), Bangalore:
Is ‘Modimania’ on the wane?

World relations, economy and the class struggle
08/02/2016, Socialistworld.net:
CWI 11th World Congress document

Spain: A break in the political establishment
07/02/2016, Danny Byrne, CWI (article from issue 195 of ’Socialism Today’):
December’s elections broke the hold of the two main capitalist parties for the first time since the Franco dictatorship. The high vote for representatives of workers’ and social movements, and the recovery of the left-populist Podemos, open up a new phase in the struggle against austerity.

Japan: Social and political unease after “twenty lost years”
03/02/2016, Carl Simmons, Kokusai Rentai (CWI in Japan):
Weakness of opposition is Prime Minister Abe’s only strength

World Economy: Capitalism buffeted by choppy waters
02/02/2016, Lynn Walsh, from The Socialist (weekly paper of the Socialist Party, CWI England & Wales):
Bosses strive to offload cost of crisis on working class - a struggle for system change is needed

Venezuela: Right-wing landslide
20/01/2016, Tony Saunois, from February edition of Socialism Today, magazine of the Socialist Party (CWI in England & Wales):
First electoral defeat suffered by the Chavistas since Hugo Chávez was first elected president in 1998

Leningrad: ‘Hero City’
19/01/2016, Clare Doyle (fuller version of a review article to be published in the February 2016 issue of Socialism Today):
900 days of siege in World War Two

China: Financial turmoil spreads fear across global markets
14/01/2016, Per-Åke Westerlund, with additional reporting by Vincent Kolo:
Setting the tone for 2016?