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Dashing Mayor to the Rescue

by Richard Mellor (aactivist [at] igc.org)
San Francisco's millionaire mayor has not said the hotel workers deserve a victory, let's not forget that.
Dashing Mayor to the Rescue

Richard Mellor
Retired member, AFSCME Local 444
Oakland CA
10-26-04

There was considerable chatter on the hotel workers picket lines in San Francisco today after the City’s mayor threatened to walk the picket lines. Mayor Gavin Newsome also said he would call for a public boycott of the hotels and get the city to stop doing business with them if they did not end their lockout and allow employees back to work for a 90-day cooling off period.

Many of the workers I spoke to on the picket lines I visited were hopeful that the mayor would get them back on the job. Some 4000 members of UNITE/HERE Local 2 have been off the job for four weeks now. The Union initially called a two week strike at four hotels but the employers responded by locking out the employees at all ten hotels and refused to let them back to work after the two-week strike deadline.

Reading the reports in the local papers this morning, the dashing young millionaire mayor sure sounded like he was on the side of working people in this dispute. “I will do everything in my power to see to it that the city and county of San Francisco does not do business with those hotels…..” he said. He added, “We have people who are suffering out on the streets and in turn the image of the city is suffering.” (SF Chronicle 10-26-04)

Newsome’s real concern of course is the image of the city and that means an image that might offend business. Labor peace is the face that must be put forward. Strikes, disputes, workers angry with their bosses, this is not good for business. Also, despite the fact that the Union leadership has agreed not to actually picket entrances to hotels, as their main strategy is to get people to boycott them, the mayor is concerned, as all employers are, that at some point if this continues, the membership’s anger could become harder to control. The Union leadership has gone along with pretty much any restriction that the city has put on them. Picketers can’t make too much noise, they can’t picket in front of the entrances, they must stay within the tape, they can’t bang their sticks anymore on their signs, they can’t harass the scabs, they can’t, they mustn’t they shouldn’t. In fact, many of the picketers I spoke to today actually think it is illegal to picket entrances to businesses. When I explained to one older worker that it wasn’t, he said, “well my boss said we can’t and we have to do what she says”, and he pointed to the young Union rep in her mid-twenties.

The other reason Newsome wants the workers back on the job and the two sides talking is that both he and the Union leaders are coming under pressure to do something from the workers themselves. Newsome is confident that the employers can pretty much get what they want at the negotiating table and it will be much harder to get workers back out after they go back so leverage will be lost. Back on the job, the possibility of a strike breaking through the conservative grip of the Union leadership does not exist. The Union leaders on the other hand can say they fought the good fight and will hopefully end up with slightly fewer concessions than originally demanded. This is called the defensive strategy or damage control.

Nowhere was Newsome quoted as calling for a victory to the workers or for the employers to concede to the Union’s demands or he would carry out his threats. His contempt for working people is clear. Going on strike is a serious issue and takes great sacrifice particularly for low waged immigrant workers as many of the hotel employees are. He told the Chronicle that, “The hotels now have gotten their two weeks in after the two-week strike….fair is fair. As far as I’m concerned you’re even. Now let’s all grow up and get back to work.” “Let’s all grow up” Does he think this is a game?

This year, shortly after being elected with support from the majority of the San Francisco labor leaders, the mayor shifted the city’s economic crisis on to the backs of working people at the behest of his corporate masters. With the help of Union leaders he forced city workers to put 7.5% of their paychecks toward their retirement fund for the next two years. Public workers had already taken a 7.5% pay cut the previous year and a 1.7% pay-cut the year before that. (SF Chronicle 12-13-03) The 7.5% retirement contribution/paycut made this year by city employees was approved as Andy Stern President of SEIU, spoke to the SEIU convention held in the city. I am sure the Mayor was also a keynote speaker. There was no public report of Stern saying anything about his members taking such cuts or attacking Newsome for implementing them..

We should not be fooled by the millionaire mayor’s tricks. After San Francisco Union leaders helped him get elected and pushed him on their members, he warned them in the press prior to his attacks on working people, “I never made one commitment to any public employee union with regard to any consideration of contracts or negotiation as relates to my refusal to consider layoffs or rollbacks or whatever.”

Relying on a millionaire mayor like Newsome is going in the wrong direction. Getting people back out on strike after going back to work will be almost impossible, even if the labor leaders wanted to do it. Instead, the strike should be expanded, strengthened. The San Francisco Central Labor Council should set a date for one-day work stoppage as a first step in resolving this dispute in our favor. Any attacks on pickets by the police or the politicians should be met with further escalation. The community can be won over if the Unions fight for health care for all and add other social demands in this struggle. Given their record, it is unlikely that the Local 2 leadership or the Labor Council will take this path without pressure from below to do so. The struggle to change the course of the union is not a welcome one, fighting the employers is hard enough, but relying on the employers’ politicians like Newsome will dig us a deeper whole that will be even harder to get out of in the future.
Add Your Comments

Comments (Hide Comments)
by anonymous
The workers started the 2 week strike at 4 hotels, 2 days later the hotel owners(Multi Employer Group) locked out workers from the other 10 hotels. Which means that in reality the hotel owners have locked out workers from the 10 hotels for 3 weeks and 5 days as of tomorrow(10/27). Obviously the Mayor has to grow up and admit that he has a math problem and that he needs to go back to school.
by let's not forget
His active support of gay marriage is interesting after the protest against him in the Pride parade the previous summer. You can see the cogs turning... "how can I get the gay vote by next year?"

now it's "how can I get the labor vote" (and not screw it up with management and the tourist industry.)

He won't be around for any longer than he has to be. This city is just a convenience, a stepping stone for that rich SOB.
by sf peep who thinks Newsom is being legit
I'm sick and tired of all the progressive-leaning people in SF bashing on Newsom's pro-Gay Marriage and pro-hotel workers stance as some simplistic "stepping stone" for his ultimate political dreams or some shit. When you fuckers actually come up with any shred of evidence as to Newsom's "real" intentions, it would be nice if you shut up.

I definitely am in the progressive side of things in SF, and I hate the ridiculous hater policies that Newsom has towards the homeless. Even some of his housing politics. And while I'm no expert in SF politics, I do work and live here. But Newsom's political intentions helping the gay and labor community seem to be very well appreciated. I don't know if any of you fools get this, but he would've politically fried by now in any other major city. He has admitted that he has made no strides up the ranks of the Dem party, and instead some enemies. The hotel industry isn't looking very buddy-buddy with him right now either.

Oh, and let's not forget how he managed to have a truce called by the gangs by meeting with the leaders. Mad brownie points there.

And just to be open about this, having seen the mayor on numerous interviews and talk shows about gay marriave (and now the hotel workers and the lockout), I think the dude is being honest.

Stop these ridiculous conspiracy theories about Newsom's intentions and get out there and fight for what you know he ain't doing. Plenty of fools already are. Stop wasting so much time trying to villify him. What, did you expect Matt Gonzalez was gonna do everything for ya? Please.
by radical
<<He has admitted that he has made no strides up the ranks of the Dem party>>

this is no "admission." an important element of newsome's gambit is to pretend that he's some great risk-taker.

you have obviously fallen for it hook-line-and-sinker.

it would be more accurate to say "newsome claims..."

being for gay marriage in SF takes no guts. it's not a "radical" position among urban right- and left-liberals. the people who consider gay marriage a really important issue have money and will help finance Newsome's future political
ambitions.

as to the hotel workers: again little risk involved. he hasn't stopped the police from enforcing noise ordinances, ticketing drivers that honk, and making certain that the pickets don't impede commerce.

to the extent that his support for the hotel workers isn't political, it's economic (probably even more so). note how up-in-arms our the unctuous mayor is when tourism might take a hit and how little he seems to care for people who're really suffering.

but i guess some people just want to believe.


by sf peep
<< an important element of newsome's gambit is to pretend that he's some great risk-taker. >>

what? so you're saying that is all you dwindle newsom down to? a risk-taker? again, please present any evidence to your claim. you are entitled to your opinion, of course.

<< you have obviously fallen for it hook-line-and-sinker.>>
allowing gay marriages that now have provided a path in the court system to challenge the state proposition that bans gay marriage AND calling for a boycott of the hotels that are locking out the workers, is this supposed to be some type of stunt to gain popularity? are you kidding me? give the mayor some credit.

<< it would be more accurate to say "newsome claims..." >>
hello, you too, dumbass.

<< the people who consider gay marriage a really important issue have money and will help finance Newsome's future political
ambitions. >>
i support gay marriage, i think it's one of the biggest issues, but i ain't gay, and i ain't giving newsom any money. how's that for the sucker you think i am? and to be transparent, i ain't a hotel worker, not in a union currently, and i ain't giving newsom any money still.

<< as to the hotel workers: again little risk involved. stopped the police from enforcing noise ordinances, ticketing drivers that honk, and making certain that the pickets don't impede commerce.>>
he called for a boycott and put the workers' struggle in the news, what else do you want a mayor to do? join the union? sorry, even i who love unions cannot agree to that. there are paid bureacratic (sp?) union "leaders" (many who never even worked a hotel job, like newsom) for that. as for the ordinances, why should the mayor just order them to not be enforced? again, he's the mayor, not a union member.

<<to the extent that his support for the hotel workers isn't political, it's economic (probably even more so). note how up-in-arms our the unctuous mayor is when tourism might take a hit and how little he seems to care for people who're really suffering.>>
unfortunately, there are plenty of scabs (to the point the hotels are keeping the union members locked out still) to make sure tourism isn't taking a "hit". but considering that to the hotel workers this action by the mayor really helps their struggle, i will leave your comment as another self-entitled opinion. maybe when you stop thinking the factories (or hotels) will be taken by the proletariat and run by them, then you'll actually have some appreciation for some of the things the mayor is doing for the hotel workers in a city of much tourism.
by dear sfpeep
dd_kimgavin01.jpgfqnqhi.jpg
Gavin is a politician. Do you get it? He is furthering his career and doing a pretty slick job of it. Hey, if I was a politician, I might be doing the same thing. THAT'S WHAT POLITICIANS DO.

To think that Newsom's acts spring from the milk of human kindness is deluded.
by sf peep
well, there went the idea that even matt gonzalez would've done anything out of natural kindness. be glad we at least aren't dealing with a bush-style of kindness :)
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