More on the Citroën strike
This is another (shorter) comment on the Citroën strike, sent
to us by a comrade from ‘Mouvement Communiste’ (see also their leaflet
on the 35-hour-week below).
Strike at Citroën Aulnay
An
assembly plant, 15 km in the north-east suburbs of Paris, France, 3rd
of March 2005. In the factory 4,500 people are employed (plus 500 temp
workers). Their average monthly wage is about 1,200 Euros. The
management tried with various measures to cut extra-payment and reduce
break-time, which is made easier for them by the legal changes (see
leaflet on the 35-hours law in this newsletter). The strike kicked off
when the management announced not to pay the days off which were
imposed by the management itself. For 2005 40 days off were planned,
the eight days in March would mean a wage loss of 177 Euros. The
struggle started on the shop-floor level.
On Wednesday, 2nd of
March, during an information meeting the management announced that the
year 2005 will include 40 days off, some of which will not be paid. At
the beginning of the afternoon, 17 workers from the ‚sellerie‘
department [saddlery], where the car interior is equipped with seats
etc., put down their tools and demanded a 100 percent payment for the
days in question. (This department is due to hard work conditions
mainly composed of young, low-qualified workers). These workers went
around the department getting other colleagues to come out on strike.
At the change of shifts (1:00 p.m.) about 150 strikers welcomed the
next shift.
Later on 250 workers were engaged in the conflict and
when the night shift arrived (8:00 p.m.), production in the ‚sellerie‘
department had been brought to a stand-still. However, due to the
production process and the stocks available, not the whole factory was
blocked. The following Thursday (3rd of March) the three shifts of the
‚sellerie‘ (250 out of 350 workers) were on strike and tried to spread
the strike to the ‚Talerie‘ (car bodies making [forging press
department]) but without clear success. Surprised at the beginning, the
unions quickly arrived (the CGT is lead by Trotskyist members of Lutte
Ouvrière and some of them were among those who initated the strike) and
tried to cool down things. As Friday, 4th of March, was already a day
off, everybody was looking to the following Monday, 7th of March.
On
the 7th of March somewhere between 400 and 700 workers marched through
the factory (we do not exactly know which part of the factory was
crossed by the demo) in order to convince others to stop working. But
all they received was some sympathy, and not an all out strike. The
management was forced to negotiate on one hand, but on the other hand
they reorganized the production in the ‚sellerie‘ by regrouping workers
as follows: one shift completely on strike, one completely at work and
the third half and half.
A first agreement signed by the unions on
Wednesday 9th (except by the CGT, for the above mentioned reasons) did
not result in the end of strike at the ‚sellerie‘, but the strikers
remained isolated. The production of cars was not blocked (to be more
accurate we are looking for production figures for March to see what
really was the percentage of drop in the production, but management
seems not to be eager to display them openly). Tuesday 10th was a
national day of action called by the unions. There were no banners from
the strikers of Aulnay, but alongside the demo the workers distributed
a short leaflet (signed ‚striking workers from Aulnay‘ and inspired by
Lutte Ouvrière explaining the strike reasons and objectives).
After
that, the strike slowly decreased. The management proposed that 30 days
off will be paid during 2005, the 20 remaining during 2006 and even
possibly 2007, plus some compensations for transport costs and shifting
of some bonus delivery in order to reduce the cost of the strike for
the strikers. Isolation of the strikers, adamant management and a not
so bad agreement lead the remaining strikers to cease their movement on
the 14th of March. As far as we know, striking workers do not have the
feeling that the movement was defeated. Perhaps a first step in a
longer fight.
Additional comment (sent later)
What we
have heard about the strike: 1) Before the strike broke out on
Wednesday, Lutte Ouvrière militants with other fellow workers had
created a committee for the strike organization. During the strike it
was this commitee which was promoted as the organizer of the strike by
all those in struggle. 2) The workers of the ‘sellerie’ remained
isolated not because of the union’s strategy, but because other workers
did not want to go on strike. 3) Nevertheless the strikers remained
united and perceived their strike as being successfull and the mood was
high. After trying to continue the strike as long as possible they
organised a big „fiesta“ to celebrate their strike.
[prol-position news #2, 5/2005]

