Open Letter to the AFL-CIO

The Worker to Worker Solidarity Committee is a coalition of union members and solidarity and peoples' democracy activists. We are calling on the AFL-CIO to end its relationship with the mis-named National Endowment for Democracy and other organs of the State Department, and to open its books and come clear about its foreign relations. Special mention is made about AFL-CIO activities in Venezuela, Haiti, Chile and Iraq. Signers are invited to join our email list by sending a blank email to: wwsc-subscribe@workertoworker.net
Worker to Worker Solidarity Committee - Touch One, Touch All!

SIGN-ON LETTER TO THE AFL-CIO

As workers, we know that the only way for us to protect our interests in this age of corporate globalization and US Empire is to stand together in solidarity, across national boundaries.

It troubles us greatly to know that the AFL-CIO, the largest organization representing US workers, has been associated with anti-worker and anti-democratic activities abroad. This has included a history of partnerships with the CIA and State Department in attacking labor groups, and collaborating with dictatorships or supporting the overthrow of elected governments.  Two of the best known of these labor–US government interventions led to the overthrow of the Salvador Allende government in Chile in 1973, and the unsuccessful Venezuela coup in 2002. 

Today, the AFL-CIO's Solidarity Center is one of four core institutes of the National Endowment for Democracy, partnering with the International Republican Institute, the National Democratic Institute, and the Center for International Private Enterprise (Chambers of Commerce).  The Solidarity Center is more than 90 per cent funded by the federal government.  Most of its funding is from the State Department (via the NED and USAID) and the Department of Labor.

Whatever genuine solidarity work the Solidarity Center has done—and it has done some—it does not give it license to advance corporate interests as an arm of US foreign policy by sponsoring politically aligned labor organizations against progressive trade unionists and popular governments.

In Venezuela, the Solidarity Center worked with and funded what it called the "flagship organizations" behind illegal, company-initiated lockouts of oil workers and the failed coup against the democratically elected government of Hugo Chavez.

In Haiti, the Solidarity Center has only supported a labor organization that agitated for the ousting of the democratically elected government of Jean-Bertrand Aristide, while failing to act against or condemn the massive persecution of pro-Lavalas, pro-Aristide, public sector trade unionists since the 2004 coup.  Furthermore, the Solidarity Center’s partner in the NED, in line with the Bush Agenda, is the International Republican Institute, which funded, prepared and trained the perpetrators of the coup. 

In Iraq, where 50 per cent of NED funding is now directed, the Solidarity Center plays an active role backing a US occupation despised by Iraqi workers.  It recognizes only one of several union centers.  That federation is the only center participating in the government empowered by the Bush Administration, and the only one to state support for the occupation.   Choosing to support one union over others violates the AFL-CIO's own primary principle recognizing the rights of workers to choose who will represent them.  That principle is called “Freedom of Association.”

These activities are carried out in the name of AFL-CIO rank and file, and are paid for with tax dollars.  Whether we are in the AFL-CIO or not, as workers we feel that the AFL-CIO, is OUR organization.  It is outrageous that the AFL-CIO accepts funding and backing for its so-called  “Solidarity Center” from the Bush Administration or from any administration whose agenda sells out the interests of workers for the sake of corporate interests and political power.  We all know that the Bush Administration does not give one dime to any group that does not advance its anti-worker agenda at home and abroad.

The AFL-CIO should never use our credibility as workers to undermine the struggles of workers abroad – to serve as a government weapon for Corporate America.   The struggles of workers abroad to improve their conditions are part of our own struggle in the US for a better future.  It is totally unacceptable that Solidarity Center activities are done behind the backs of US workers, without any honest reporting and with closed books. It is unaccountable to AFL-CIO unions and certainly to the rank and file.  It does not report finances in the manner demanded, by law, of every local union. 

We are affronted by the anti-democratic measures that were used by top-level AFL-CIO leaders to prevent a full and honest floor discussion at the 2005 AFL-CIO National Convention in Chicago of the "Build Unity and Trust With Workers Worldwide" resolution.  That resolution to account for and end foreign activities tied to government agencies was submitted with unanimous approval by the 2004 Convention of the California State AFL-CIO, representing 2.4 million workers.  We cannot accept this distortion of trade union democracy that enables top-level AFL-CIO officials to make deals with the Bush Administration (or any other) to intervene against the will of workers abroad and the sovereignty of nations.

Therefore, in accord with the unanimous vote in the California Labor Federation, we join the call for:

1) The Solidarity Center to immediately terminate its collaboration with the Bush Administration and the NED, withdraw as one of the four core institutes of the NED, refuse to re-enter such relationships in the future and stop all collaboration with the agents of US government foreign policy and corporate globalization;

2) The AFL-CI O to open its books about all projects, past, present, and future, undertaken by the Solidarity Center and predecessor groups that carried out AFL-CIO foreign operations.  These would include, but not be limited to, operations that preceded the coup against Salvador Allende in Chile in 1973, the attempted coup against Hugo Chavez in Venezuela in 2002, operations in Haiti leading up to and following the coup, and current activities in and/or related to Iraq.  We want detailed reports on a country-by-country basis wherever the Solidarity Center is active—and an immediate termination of any operations that are not specifically intended to help workers in that country.
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