NEW ZEALAND: New left regroupment initiative

November 17, 1993
Issue 

Peter Boyle, Auckland

The first national Workers Charter conference, attended by more than 100 activists, was held on October 22 in Auckland. The draft charter (see <http://workerscharter.org.nz> ) was endorsed and will now be taken around the country for further discussion and amendment at another open conference in a year's time.

The conference decided to ask activists in each locality to establish regional branches of the Workers Charter, to convene a national committee to coordinate events, publish a broad left newspaper from 2006 and to start organising in solidarity with worker struggles. Campaign ideas included a minimum wage campaign ("$12 now, not in 2008"), the abolition of youth rates, support for Air NZ jobs under threat, and a Workers Charter "roadshow" early next year.

Key organisers included the new Unite union (which has organised 4600 previously non-unionised workers, see <http://unite.org.nz>) led by Matt McCarten and Grant Morgan from the Socialist Worker group. Prominent independent leftists — such as John Minto (a leader of the Halt All Racist Tours campaign against the 1981 Springbok tour), left-wing media commentator Chris Trotter and several long-time trade union, environmentalist and social justice activists — are also involved.

"This is a new political movement that takes us beyond the single-issue campaigns", Morgan told the conference. It was a "response to real political motion in the working class", including recent pay struggles and a "Maori flaxroots revolt".

Mike Treen, a Unite organiser, described the proposed Workers Charter publication as a "solidarity-organising newspaper" and the Charter branches as "spaces for building solidarity".

McCarten said the movement should place the working poor at the centre of its campaigns, citing the low 9% unionisation rate in the private sector and the less than 1% unionisation of young workers.

Three Australian Socialist Alliance members attended the conference, including Geelong Trades and Labour Council secretary Tim Gooden.

From Green Left Weekly, November 2, 2005.
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