February 11 saw 300,000 people march
in the Portuguese capital Lisbon against the reform of the labour law
and the austerity measures proposed by the government as part of the
bailout agreed with the troika. The CGTP trade union, which
organised the demonstration under the slogan of “no to exploitation,
inequality and impoverishment”, described it as the largest in 30 years.
February 11 saw 300,000 people march
in the Portuguese capital Lisbon against the reform of the labour law
and the austerity measures proposed by the government as part of the
bailout agreed with the troika. The CGTP trade union, which
organised the demonstration under the slogan of “no to exploitation,
inequality and impoverishment”, described it as the largest in 30 years.
See Pictures here and at the end of this article)
The demonstration had four rallying points and converged in the huge Palace Square, which was renamed the “People’s Square”. (
Since it was elected in June, the right-wing coalition government of
Passos Coelho has faithfully implemented the demands of the troika
as part of the bailout of the Portuguese economy. Coelho has even
boasted that in cutting the deficit and addressing the economy’s
“structural problems” he is going further than what is actually being
demanded in the terms of the Memorandum of Understanding.
These are massive attacks on the living standards of the Portuguese
workers and people, through increased taxes, cuts in wages and pensions,
privatisation of public companies, payment for healthcare, increased
fares in public transport, higher tuition fees, increased hours of work,
attacks on collective bargaining rights, etc.
As was to be expected, these measures have contributed to worsening
the economic crisis. Portugal’s GDP contracted by 1.6% in 2011, and is
expected by the Bank of Portugal to suffer an “unprecedented economic
contraction” of 3.1% in 2012 and a further 0.3% fall in 2013. These
sacrifices which are demanded of the Portuguese people are not even
achieving their stated aim of reducing public debt which is forecast to
grow to 116% of GDP in 2012 (from 107% in 2011). To this you have to add
94% household debt and 130% corporate debt, both figures unchanged
since 2009.
No-one really believes that Portugal will be able to return to the
markets for further funding in 2013 as was the initial aim of the
bailout. Portuguese bonds were trading in the secondary market at an
interest rate of 17% after Standard and Poor’s downgraded them to junk
bond status in January.
These economic figures are what dominated the mood at the trade union
demonstration on Saturday. The experience of Greece is very much in the
minds of millions of Portuguese today: the Greek workers and people
have been forced to take massive cuts in living standards and still
nothing has been resolved. Why should the Portuguese go through the same
experience?
in Greece, to the futility of it all you have to add the realisation
that the country is no longer ruled by its elected representatives, but
by unelected faceless forces in Brussels, Frankfurt and Washington. The troika
representatives regularly visit Portugal to oversee progress in the
implementation of the measures, like colonial governors in the past.
European bureaucrats whisper in the ears of Portuguese ministers: “you
are being good, bleeding your country dry, unlike the naughty Greeks,
and as a reward you might get some relief in the terms of the bail out”.
Not only this, but the institutions of the troika (IMF, ECB,
EU) will also be paid 30 billion euro in interest and commissions on
top of the 78 billion euro bailout (of which 12 billion are going
directly to bail out private banks).
The Portuguese government is also being praised by the troika
for its speed in delivering the programme of privatisation of
state-owned companies, having sold off the electricity grid and power
generating companies to Chinese state investors.
The latest package of measures, related above all to the reform of
the labour law, which is going to be presented to parliament in the next
few days, has been agreed with the bosses’ organisations but also with
the leaders of the UGT trade union, which have thus broken the unity of
action with the CGTP. The so-called “Social Partnership Agreement”
includes the following measures:
•Reduction of holiday entitlement from 25 to 22 days a year.
•Reduction in the number of public holidays from 13 to 9 (significantly Independence day and Republic day are axed!).
•Reduction in lay off compensation from 30 days per year worked to 20 days.
•Flexibilisation of working hours – 150 hours a year will be decided
by the employer, lengthening the working day in busy periods, shortening
it in others.
•Unemployed workers who accept work that pays less than their
unemployment benefit are to keep 50 per cent of that benefit (thus
saving the employer a lot of money).
•50% reduction in overtime payment and in the payment of the 2 annual bonus payments.
•Increasing the cases in which workers can be sacked legally.
•Reduction in unemployment benefit, both in relation to the amount of
money received and the length of time for which it will be received.
•Weakening of national collective bargaining in favour of company agreements (where workers are in a weaker position).
The UGT leaders justified their signing up to these measures with the
“lesser evil” argument, saying that the conditions demanded by the troika
in the Memorandum were even worse and that through negotiations they
had managed to somehow soften the blow. This argument, similar to the
one used by the leaders of UGT and CCOO trade unions in Spain to sign a
wage restraint agreement which also weakens national collective
bargaining, does not have any merit to it. Once you agree to the
principle that workers must accept attacks in their rights and
conditions (and these are serious attacks), then, inevitably the
capitalists will demand more and more attacks, while the union
organisations will have been discredited in front of their own members
and will be in a much worse position to organise any resistance.
The truth is that, looking at the hard economic facts, the troika
will demand even harsher cuts from the Portuguese government in order
to comply with the deficit reduction targets in the face of deeper
economic recession. The agreement that the UGT leaders have signed will
not mean the end but the beginning of sustained attacks on workers’
rights and conditions which are “necessary” from the point of view of
“restoring Portugal’s competitivity.”
A skilful non-sectarian policy on the part of the leadership and the
activists of the CGTP would now put the leaders of the UGT under a lot
of pressure. It is vital to build on the unity of action achieved in the
last two general strikes (the most recent one in November 2011
http://www.marxist.com/powerful-november-general-strike-portugal.htm) at
factory and workplace level. The aim should be to put the UGT leaders
under enormous pressure from below so that they break the agreement they
have signed and return to the path of mobilization or else, that
workplace, regional and industry-wide structures and rank and file
activists of the union disown the policies of their own leaders and join
the CGTP in protest actions.
A genuine socialist alternative required
More than 6 months after the election of the right-wing government,
opinion polls only register a very slight shift to the left. The two
coalition partners, PSD and CDS/PP, have lost about 3% (from 50.3% to
46.7%), while the former ruling social-democratic PS has increased from
28 to 30%, having mildly criticized some of the measures, which at the
end of the day are fundamentally the same ones contained in the
Memorandum they signed while in office. To the left of the Socialist
Party, the Communist Party increases from 7.9% to 8.5% and the Bloco de
Esquerda from 5.1% to 6.5%.
These two parties present a comprehensive criticism of the measures
proposed and have now started to adopt a language which includes more
references to capitalism and with socialism as the alternative. However,
the leaders of these two formations are not offering a serious
alternative to the consequences of the crisis of capitalism in Portugal.
Instead of saying clearly that the debt should be repudiated, both
the PCP and the BE talk of “renegotiating the debt,” while the BE
leaders insist on an audit of the debt with the aim of determining which
parts of it are “illegitimate” and which should therefore be
repudiated. This is a false argument. If you accept the debt has to be
renegotiated, you are saying that it should be paid, but perhaps not all
of it, not so fast, etc. For the investors to accept such a deal, you
will have to show that you are serious about lowering the deficit and
the debt… by making massive cuts! This is exactly what is already
happening in Greece. The latest austerity package which the Greek people
are resisting in the streets is the result of the renegotiation of the
debt with the private investors!
The main difference between the BE and the PCP seems to be that while
the leaders of the former have the illusion that Europe should be saved
and given a “social” character
(http://www.esquerda.net/sites/default/files/resolmesa4fev2012.pdf), the
Communist Party leaders erect themselves as the defenders of “national
production” and “the struggle against imports”
(http://pcp.pt/contra_exploracao_aumento_horario/lutar-por-um-portugal-com-futuro).
This is a false choice. There is no such thing as a “social Europe”.
The European Union under capitalism means permanent austerity policies
and the rule of capitalists and bankers, dominated by those of the
countries with a stronger capitalist class.
On the other hand, the idea of defending national production through
protectionist barriers means pitching Portuguese workers against the
workers of other countries while leaving the profits of the capitalists
untouched. Hardly a Communist policy! A “sovereign” capitalist Portugal
implementing protectionist policies is also a reactionary utopia. It is
precisely the weakness of Portuguese capitalism that has made the
economic crisis worse. How could Portuguese products compete in a world
market riddled with protectionist counter-measures from its trading
partners? Only by attacking workers rights and conditions.
The real alternative is to first of all recognize that these measures
are the direct consequence of the crisis of capitalism and the attempt
of the ruling class to solve it by making workers pay. Therefore, the
only realistic solution is a decisive break with the capitalist system,
through the collective ownership and democratic planning of the economy
in the interests of the majority of the population. The alternative is
socialism. Such an alternative cannot be conceived within the limits of
one nation state and even less within the borders of an economically
weak country like Portugal. It needs to be linked to the struggle for
the Socialist United States of Europe.
On the other hand, neither the trade union leaders nor the leaders of
these two parties offer a clear plan of struggle to defeat these
austerity measures. The BE correctly talks of a sustained plan of
mobilization and the need for the widest possible unity of action
against these measures, but then makes no concrete proposals other than
some “days of action” in late April. The CGTP statement adopted at the
demonstration, again, correctly talks of the need for unity in action
and to enlarge the mobilization, but gives no concrete lead, other than
calling on all to participate in yet another demonstration on February
29th coinciding with the day of action called by the European TUC.
The mass demonstration on February 11 was a very positive step, but
it also came after the November 24 general strike which in itself did
not force the government to retreat. In Greece there have been now over
17 separate 24 and 48 hour general strikes and the ruling class still
continues to impose austerity packages.
Conclusions need to be drawn from this. What is required is, on the
industrial plane, a plan of increasing and sustained action to defeat
these measures. That should start with a 24-hour general strike, and
then needs to be escalated towards a 48h, a 72h and then an indefinite
general strike if necessary. These strikes should be built through
democratic strike committees at all levels (company, local, regional and
national), so that the workers themselves are fully involved in
deciding the plan of action and organizing the movement.
On the political front, the PCP and the BE should offer a united
front on the basis of a clear socialist programme, including the
repudiation of the debt and the nationalization of the banks and main
companies under democratic workers’ control. This should be combined
with an internationalist approach of linking the struggle of the
Portuguese workers with that of the workers in the rest of Europe and
the world.
In our opinion, there is no other “realistic” solution to the
problems facing the Portuguese workers and youth. In the course of the
bitter struggles and experiences of the next few months and years, wider
layers of the workers’ movement will draw the conclusion that it is the
capitalism system that is the problem. What is required is the building
of a Marxist revolutionary tendency with roots in the working class
organizations able to offer a clear and general alternative that
connects with this instinctive conclusions of the masses and gives these
a concrete expression.