The World Cup is in full swing, and official propaganda from
President Dilma Roussef’s administration portrays Brazil as a
wonderland. But Brazilians have been exposing the truth in a full year
of demonstrations, protests, and strikes.
The massive public spending on the World Cup has thrown into contrast
the poor pay, high fares, and starved public services Brazilians
endure. And the construction has driven up housing costs and displaced
poor workers.
Protests began last summer when two million people, mainly youth, filled the streets of several cities.
The demonstrations kicked off protesting transit fare hikes and spread
to include causes such as an end to official corruption.
Worker mobilizations took the national stage in 2014.
In January, a 10-day bus drivers strike brought the city of Porto
Alegre to a halt. The strike wasn’t led by union officials—the union is
conservative—but by the opposition union caucus backed by Bloco de Lutas
(Fighting Bloc).
This first bus strike triggered others in Rio de Janeiro, Belo
Horizonte, Fortaleza, and Sao Paulo, plunging traffic into chaos in
these major cities.
Janitors who clean the streets in Rio de Janeiro also struck during
Carnival, leaving the city a mess. In spite of that, most people
supported the janitors against the mayor, who was refusing to increase
their wages.
“The mayor says that our movement is a riot, but a riot is an
uprising of prisoners,” one of their leaders declared to the mainstream
newspaper O Globo. “Here is an action of workers, unless the mayor believes that janitors are thugs.”
The janitors’ rebellion started because the mayor and union officials
had agreed on what workers thought was a too-small wage increase: 10
percent (Brazil faces 6.37 percent inflation this year). Like the bus
strike, this was led by an opposition caucus. It ended with janitors
winning a 37 percent increase.
Another wildcat strike, by the 22,000 workers at the Petrochemical
Complex (Comperj) in Rio de Janeiro, lasted 40 days. They got a 9
percent increase plus some other benefits.
In the end, a fired member of the safety commission said, “Even
dismissed with no rights, I feel proud to have carried out this
struggle, as today I feel myself [to be] a real human being.”
Construction workers too carried out many strikes in 2013 and 2014,
though these also were not supported by their unions. Eleven workers
have lost their lives building or renovating football stadiums.
It’s notable that many strikes are being organized from below,
without the approval of union leaders. Activists are seeking
alternatives to pro-government unions and federations.
CSP-Conlutas, a militant federation formed by unions and activists
who broke away from Brazil’s largest labor federation, the CUT, is
becoming a pole of attraction for this new generation of labor
activists.
“Without support from their unions, they look to us or any of the
unions affiliated to CSP-Conlutas to provide infrastructure for their
struggles,” says Atnágoras Lopes, a construction worker who is one of
the federation’s leaders.
Labor sociologist Ruy Braga, at the University of Sao Paulo, links
this new labor movement to the increase in casual and outsourced
workers, underpaid and working in degraded conditions. They’re the ones
who are “rising against union officials and their compromising spirit,”
he explained to alternative newspaper Correio da Cidadania. Casual and
outsourced workers in Brazil may have unions, but often don’t share the
same union or the same contract as regular workers.
Union officials have led some strikes, including those of public
university employees, and workers in the Ministry of Culture and in the
Brazilian Institute of Geography and Statistics.
The most important was the Sao Paulo metro workers strike June 5, the
anniversary of the 2013 demonstrations about fare increases, and
shortly before the start of the World Cup. The union was defending the
right of public transit and demanding a 12.2 percent pay increase.
Nearly all workers crossed their arms for five days, and rallied with
community members raising banners reading “Transport is not a
commodity.” The union offered to suspend the strike if the metro were
made free.
A court ordered them back to work, but they refused. Only supervisors
kept working and managed to open some metro stations. Despite the
disruption to the transportation system, 77 percent of the population
supported the strike, according to a survey carried out by a mainstream
TV channel.
The governor of Sao Paulo sent the riot police into metro stations to
beat and arrest striking workers. Courts sided with the governor and
declared the strike “abusive.” Then 42 workers were fired. The union is
campaigning to reinstate them, and the strike is suspended as of this
writing.
The Sao Paolo metro strike got international attention and support. The mainstream newspaper O Estado de Sao Paulo published a profile of Altino Prazeres, the union president, with the headline, “Who is the man who threatens the World Cup?”
On top of labor struggles, there are community and student
mobilizations to protest exorbitant World Cup expenditures. They’re
motivated by dissatisfaction with corporate privileges and low-quality
public services. Dilma Roussef’s administration is their main target.
Interestingly, these mobilizations have no presence from traditional
organizations like the CUT, the landless movement, or the national
students’ association. Even the homeless movement, which had been
occupying an area next to a $400 million stadium in Sao Paulo,
compromised with Roussef’s administration in exchange for the building
of 2,000 housing units.
Instead, the protests are led by new formations, such as Na Copa vai ter luta (There will be struggles during the world cup), Não vai ter Copa (There will be no World Cup) and ¿Copa para quem? (Who is the World Cup for?).
There’s no sign this struggling mood will stop after the World Cup.
On the contrary, there are many opportunities for contract campaigns in
traditional sectors—metal, oil, and bank workers—to link up with
popular, youth, and non-union labor struggles.
from here
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