On February 18, reporters from the World Socialist Web Site spoke to Marc Blondel, general secretary of the CGT-FO (Confédération générale du travail/Force Ouvrière—General Labor Federation/Workers Power), generally known simply as FO, the third largest trade union federation in France.
FO has politically unsavory origins as a right-wing split-off from the Communist Party-dominated CGT union federation in 1948, partially financed and supported by Washington as part of its Cold War effort. Its first president was Léon Jouhaux, the veteran class collaborator of the French trade union movement. Jouhaux lived long enough to be denounced by Lenin as a social-patriotic traitor at the time of the First World War, to line up with Stalinists in the Popular Front era, during which he remained silent about the Moscow Trials, and end up as an ally of US imperialism.
According to estimates, FO's membership stands at slightly below 300,000, or perhaps 15 percent of the total number of trade union members in France (one estimate puts it lower, at merely 180,000). Union membership has traditionally been lower in France, where there has never been any type of dues check-off system or closed shop, than in other industrialized countries. Nonunion members have traditionally gone on strike in a particular enterprise when the union or unions called a walkout. Nonetheless, trade union membership has dropped to an all-time low in France, from over 23 percent of the workforce in 1973 to approximately 21 percent in 1978, 17 percent in 1983 and 11 percent in 1993. Today union membership stands at 8 percent.
FO represents primarily civil servants and employees at state-owned companies. The union has played a major role in setting up and operating the jointly managed vocational training and social protection organizations in such fields as health benefits, pensions and unemployment insurance. This explains, in part, the relative vigor with which Blondel and the FO leadership responded to the attempts in the mid-1990s by the government of Alain Juppé to reorganize these institutions and reduce the unions' role. These programs have been a major source of finances for FO.
Corruption is as pervasive in the French trade unions as elsewhere. Dominique Labbé, a political science professor at the University of Grenoble, estimates that members' dues account for no more than 25 percent of the unions' operating budgets—the rest comes from legal and illegal relations with various levels of government.
In January 2000, Le Monde published the results of a report prepared by the General Inspectorate of Social Affairs (IGAS), alleging that a jointly-managed pension fund, the CRI, was directly and indirectly funding the five trade unions that sit on its board (including FO). The IGAS charged that between 1995 and 1998, the unions, with the blessing of the employers' federation, MEDEF, collected 34.3 million francs (3.2 million euros) in the form of salaries for full-time union officials. The French unions, according to the report, received financial support through a complex system of trading services or influence, secretly negotiated between the director general of the CRI and the highest levels of the various union bureaucracies.
The French media has reported that Blondel and FO agreed to reimburse the city of Paris 281,000 euros for payments illegally made by the city to 250 union officials between 1990 and 2001. The deal had been made secretly between Jacques Chirac (then mayor of Paris) and Blondel. The union agreed to the payment in exchange for the city dropping any legal action.
Under Blondel, who assumed leadership in 1989, FO attempted to take a more left course. It is widely rumored that the FO general secretary had long-term relations with the Parti des travailleurs (PT), formerly the OCI, led by Pierre Lambert. The pseudo-Trotskyist PT continues to exercise considerable influence in FO.
Something of a mythology has grown up around Blondel's role in the mass strikes of 1995. While FO took an uncharacteristically aggressive verbal stance against the Juppé government's attacks, Blondel was as instrumental as Louis Viannet (CGT) and Nicole Notat (CFDT—Confédération française démocratique du travail [French Democratic Labor Federation]) in bringing the mass movement under control and leaving the right-wing regime in power.
We spoke to Blondel in his office on the fifth floor of Force
Ouvrière's headquarters on the Avenue du Maine in Paris. The FO
general secretary's desk was piled high with papers and he
described himself as a paperivore.
We first asked Blondel about his attitude to a war against Iraq. He
expressed opposition on several grounds, while acknowledging a debt to
American democracy
during the Second World War. I am an
internationalist and a pacifist,
he said. He suggested that the US
political system was not the democracy they think it is,
with
its millions of excluded.
Blondel criticized America for
attempting to play the gendarme all over the world. He observed that
war was always based on the sacrifice of the working class. So I
demonstrated [on February 15],
he said.
Why was the US attacking Iraq? The union leader's comments on
world affairs were superficial and right-wing in character. He seemed
to take the US arguments at face value, simply arguing that America
had responded too rapidly
to the September 11 terrorist attacks
and was making Iraq a scapegoat.
There was no reference in his
comments to Iraq's oil riches or any geopolitical ambitions on the
part of American imperialism.
While he criticized American policy, without ever making reference to
the Bush administration or its political character, he aimed much of
his fire at the Saddam Hussein regime. The FO general secretary
pointed to the fact that there were no free trade unions in Iraq or
the rest of the Arab world. One of my first concerns is free trade
unions in the Arab world, and China,
he declared.
Blondel speaks like an anticommunist social democrat, which is what he is politically. The role of the Lambert tendency, which for years evaded the problem of Stalinism by orienting itself toward the French Socialist Party, comes into focus in this regard. The OCI-PT also was the political incubus for the former Socialist Party prime minister, Lionel Jospin, another staunch defender of the existing social order.
In a February 18 editorial in the weekly magazine of Force Ouvrière,
Blondel explained why he participated in the February 15
demonstrations: In this particular case, we were acting within the
framework of the ICFTU [International Confederation of Free Trade
Unions], and, parallel to that, the AFL-CIO.
His identification
with the anticommunist ICFTU, founded in 1949 in opposition to the
Stalinist-dominated World Federation of Trade Unions, and the
arch-reactionary AFL-CIO, conduit for various CIA activities
internationally, is revealing.
Blondel goes on in his editorial: In the name of workers'
internationalism, we fought for this objective (free trade unions)
during the time of Stalinism. We will not lack for energy against Arab
or Chinese dictatorships.
The conflict between France and the US over an Iraq war, reflecting
the different interests of the two imperialist powers, has given an
entire layer of the left
(Socialist Party, French Communist
Party, the Greens, the Ligue Communiste Révolutionnaire, and others)
another opportunity to align themselves with the chosen representative
of the French bourgeoisie, President Jacques Chirac. In our
conversation Blondel did not waste the opportunity to solidarize
himself with French government policy.
I congratulate Chirac. He has taken a courageous position in the
UN,
Blondel told us. He went on to explain that his support for
Chirac was an alliance of circumstance.
He hastened to add that
this did not translate into support for the French president's
economic and social policies. But on this we agree,
he said.
As for the conflict between the US and Europe, Blondel clearly had not
spent any time thinking about the matter. He never answered the
question directly, telling us that Europe is not unified,
and
that most of the European countries are monarchies, even if they
are democratic.
He went on to note that most European nations were
based on religion,
and that only France and Portugal were
secular countries.
(This is also one of the obsessions of the
PT group.)
The US has demanded that the UN support a war with Iraq, Blondel
commented, but on this there is a divergence.
He explained that
he did not have complete confidence in the UN, which was nonetheless
indispensable,
but it's good that there is a
divergence.
He continued, Whether it's the UN or some other
organization, there must be an opposition to war.
Turning to French politics, Blondel criticized the right for its
opportunist, venal character. He complained that the left
had
no political structure, but they are gaining credibility because of
the (Jean-Pierre Raffarin) government's right-wing policies.
The left parties (Socialist Party, Communist Party) had no precise
perspective or structure,
he said. There will be a swing
(alternance) back to the left, which might form the next government,
but what would it do? Since the collapse of the USSR, the left had no
common ideas, no willingness to fight. He expressed no confidence in
the so-called far left.
Throughout the conversation, Blondel expressed a deep pessimism about
the future. He deplored the rise of communalism and ethnic-based
politics. He expressed concern that the population might descend into
Jacquerie
(a reference to the indiscriminate violence of the
peasant uprising of the fourteenth century). The revolutionary
initiative of the past
has gone, he said.
I began as a miner,
he told us, and when doing a difficult job
like that, one does not identify oneself by ethnicity, but simply as a
worker. My best friend was a Pole, but he didn't think of
himself as a Pole, but as a miner, a worker.
Today it's
different, he asserted.
I believe in the public service, I'm a collectivist,
he
told us. But, he said, that flows against the current. He spoke
against deregulation, privatization and the Anglo-Saxon model.
But what did he propose under the present circumstances? We asked him what he thought was the role of nationally based organizations in the face of the global character of capitalism and in light of the international antiwar demonstrations. His responses to this question were the most critical remarks in the entire conversation.
Blondel heaped scorn on the possibility of organizing the working
class internationally (after describing himself earlier as an
internationalist
!). International organization is
utopian,
he said, it's literature (i.e., fantasy).
All
serious organizations, he informed us, are nationally based.
To illustrate his point, he noted that many people had marched on
February 15 against the war in Iraq, some of whom he disagreed
with. He wasn't happy to be marching with women in veils, Blondel
said, because veils connote submission,
but he and these women
were both against the war, so they had marched together. (In passing,
he noted the presence of ethnic associations and similar groups, as
well as the absence of certain groups. Why were there so few Asians
on the march?
he wondered, pointing out that the march had taken
place near the 13th arrondissement, a heavily Asian area.)
Blondel was apparently arguing that marching against imperialist war required a lower level of agreement and consciousness than participating in wages struggles. According to him, unions are the heart of the working class; working class struggle equals trade union struggle.
The explicit rejection of internationalism, the blindness to world
economic and social realities, the quasi-chauvinist references to
immigrants, the devotion to the most narrow economic issues—in
all of this one sees the outlines of a portrait of the contemporary
union bureaucrat, including the French left
variety. Blondel
sees himself, one feels, as the last of a dying breed of stalwart
workers' leaders,
fighting the good fight against
impossible odds and in the face of popular indifference.
There is something darkly comical about Blondel's obtuseness. When
we asked him about the conditions facing the French working class, he
responded with a single word, catastrophic.
He described how
pensions, social security and all the gains
of the working
class were systematically under attack. Little by little, he said,
they're destroying everything.
You are not optimistic, we suggested. No,
he replied firmly.
The unions today, Blondel told us, are reduced to self-defense. This is a kind of unionism that is far more difficult. I prefer unionism, he said, that brings something to people. Capitalism had changed, he commented. It is no longer the individual capitalists one faces, but finance capital, global capital.
So, in response to the conditions that he characterizes as
catastrophic,
in which workers face globally organized capital,
what does Blondel propose? More of the same: nationally based trade
unionism, the same policy that has so manifestly failed the working
class in every part of the world.