Black workers brought the spirit and disciplined non-violence of the Civil Rights Movement to the Postal Strike of 1970. |
The
day after St. Patrick’s Day in New York City was often little more
than an intense, city-wide hangover. But on March 18, 1970 residents of the Big Apple awoke to more than just a headache.
Thousands of local Postal
workers were on the picket line in
defiance of both Federal Law which
prohibited strikes by government employees and their own union leadership. Within days business in the commercial and
financial center of the nation
ground to a halt in those pre-electronic
communications days and the strike spread to more than 30 cities with
200,000 off the job. It was a big
deal. A very big deal.
But
chances are unless you were one of the strikers or a member of their families,
you have forgotten or never heard of one of the biggest—and ultimately most successful—labor
battles of the Post-War era. Maybe that’s because of all the other turmoil in the country that year. With the Vietnam
War dragging on, protests were growing bigger and attracting more than just
students and hippies. Major cities were tinderboxes,
exploding regularly in Black riots that
seemed more and more like insurrections. Even middleclass
women—wives, mothers, and secretaries—were taking to the streets and shaking their
fists. Draconian drug laws fueled an underground
economy, gang warfare that was
more wide spread and pervasive than between rival bootleggers with Tommy guns,
and ordinary street crime.
So
the Postal workers had a beef? Big deal, seemed the attitude in Washington. Take a number and wait your turn. And the Posties did have a beef, a very big
beef.
It
hadn’t always been that way. In the old days
Post Office jobs at all levels had
been political plumbs and handed out
according to the rough justice of the spoils
system. Every time the Presidency flipped to a different party, there was a general house cleaning, and fresh armies of patronage workers. Civil Service in the early 20th Century had ended that for all but
local postmasters and other muckety-mucks. During the Depression working for the Post Office meant not only unheard of job security, but came with an array of
benefits—paid holidays and vacations,
health insurance, and pensions—that
industrial workers in the private sector could only win by
wearing out shoe leather and risking
busted heads on the picket
line. During the deep Post-World War II the Post Office
offered preferential hiring to veterans, and many leaped at the chance
for secure employment. In fact the large
cohort of former veterans in New York
would provide the core leadership and rank-and-file muscle for the strike.
Despite
the security and the benefits, Post Office pay had been drifting down in
comparison to the civilian workforce throughout the boom years of the ‘50’s and ‘60’s.
Worker had not had a pay raise since 1967 and that raise had failed to
keep up with inflation. Entry level worker were now laboring at
wages below the poverty line if they
were supporting families, as most of them were.
In addition, conditions in crowded urban
postal facilities were poor and dangerous.
Morale was low and anger growing.
The
situation was even more frustrating because the law not only forbad strike
action, it banned any kind of collective
bargaining. National unions of postal workers, mainly the American
Postal Workers Union (APWU)
representing clerks and mail handlers, and the National Association of Letter Carriers (NALC) could do little but lobby the
administration and Congress for better pay and
conditions. The inherit weakness of such
a position had made that leadership both timid and cautious. But rank and file anger was festering, and becoming
an issue.
In
1968 the Kappel Commission,
established by Congress to review the current state of the Postal Service, had
recommended that postal workers be given the same right as private sector workers
to collective bargaining. When recommendation was rejected by Congress, union
leaders could not be stirred beyond issuing disappointed press releases.
Vincent Sombrotto, Rank-and-file leader of the strike. |
It
was too much for the rank-and-file, especially in New York. Not only did Postal Workers there have ties
to the traditionally militant unions
of the city and included many members with Socialist,
Communist, and radical backgrounds, but
a huge infusion of Black workers
over the previous decade brought with them the spirit of the civil rights movement, familiarity with
direct action and non-violent protest, and cultural and
political connections to the Black
empowerment movement.
Agitation
for strike action began among rank-and-file militants after newly elected President Richard M. Nixon proposed
only a flat 4.1% wage increase in his 1969 budget. The proposal was angrily shouted down at
New York union meetings and pleasure for a strike grew. NALC President
James Rademacher scurried to the White
House with word that he might not be able to control his members. Rademacher
and Nixon reached an agreement in December 1969 that tied a 1970 5.4% raise to
the creation of an independent postal
authority and collective bargaining.
When a Congressional committee finally moved on the agreement in early
March local leaders at New York’s NALC local Branch 36 were hooted from
the platform.
Rank-and-File
leader Vincent Sombrotto and others
demanded an immediate strike vote. Union leaders refused calling such a vote
illegal and against the union’s own constitution. Over a series of acrimonious meetings
union leadership was able to delay a vote until March 17 as the city was
celebrating St. Patrick’s Day. The
strike was overwhelmingly approved and pickets went up after the stroke of
midnight.
The
next day emergency meeting called by the rank and file at other New York locals
of both the NALC and APWU forced their own votes and joined the strike. Over the next few days it would be repeated
in city after city. In Chicago more than 3000 members literally
chased their leadership out of the hall and down the street.
Richard Nixon took to TV to posture against the strike. |
Instinctively
defiant, Nixon went on national TV to
order employees back to work immediately, threatening mass dismissals if they
did not. He vowed that the government
would never negotiate under duress. The speech
only aroused the ire and determination of the strikers and helped spread it
even faster and further.
By
the end of the week better than 200,000 were out in most urban population
centers and the strike was even spreading to conservative small cities and
towns. Newspaper became semi-hysterical as
business paralysis set in and the stock
market plunged on low volume because trades could not be executed without
mail orders and confirmations. Scare
stories of violence, all false, circulated.
Picket lines were noisy, but disciplined and models of non-violence.
After
a week the administration went to court to seek an emergency injunction,
which was quickly granted, against
the strike and threatened individual strikers with jail for contempt of court if
they did not comply. That only
backfired, not only steeling the resolve of the strikers, but bringing
declarations from other Federal employees that they would join the strike if
the injunction was enforce.
On
March 23 a desperate Nixon again took to the airways. He announced the proclamation of a National Emergency—just
a step short of martial law—which authorized
the use of Federal troops to move
the mail. He followed up the speech with
Operation
Graphic Hand which mobilize
24,000 members of the Regular
Army, National Guard, Army Reserve, Air National Guard and Navy,
Air Force, and Marine Corps Reserve of which 18,500 were deployed to 17 New York
City Post Offices. Tens of thousands of
others were put on alert for possible deployment to other cities.
Workers
were outraged and fearful that the introduction of troops would lead to the
violent suppression of the strike in the tradition of the Pullman Strike in which the Army moved the mail at the point of bayonet and machine gun. Strikers
allowed the military to move into the Post Offices without opposition.
Once
inside, however, the untrained troops had no idea what to do. The mail was still snarled.
Time Magazine reflected the national shock at the strike. |
The
desperate administration now entered secret negotiations with union leaders
after vowing never to do so. With no
third TV appearance and as little fanfare as possible, Nixon capitulated to
virtually all of the strikers’ demands on March 25. He agreed to recommend an 8% wage increase
and the right of collective bargaining, albeit without the right to
strike. Amnesty for the strikers was guaranteed.
Workers
went peacefully back to work after an eventful, but peaceful 2 week strike.
Congress
enacted the terms of the agreement in the budget and in the Postal Reorganization Act of 1970 which
went into effect on July 1, 1971 and transformed the Post Office Department
into the U.S. Postal Service, an independent establishment of the executive branch to be operated like a private corporation. Rank-and-file militants rightly feared
that this hybrid creation would come
back to bite them in the ass and become a path
to privatization.
To
prepare themselves for collective bargaining that summer the NALC and four
smaller postal unions merged with APWU.
The new union, retaining the American Postal Workers name, was, like its
components, an affiliated member of the AFL-CIO
and at the time of its creation, the largest union of postal workers in the
world.
Rank-and-File
strike leader Vincent Sombrotto would go on to oust the old conservative
leadership of the APWU in the mid-70’s and be elected as President on a
militant ticket.
One
last note. Remember that declaration of
National Emergency? Guess what. It has never been revoked and continues to
give U.S. Presidents virtually unlimited power to seize property, organize the means
of production, and institute martial law.
It was cited as the authority of some of the government’s most controversial
domestic security actions after the 9/11 attacks and before the passage of the
Patriot Act. It remains an active tool at the disposal
of this and any future President.
Yeah, and I especially love the front page of the Time Magazine, LOL!
ReplyDelete