Argentina's Labor Unions: Moyano’s Heavy Mantle
Argentina's Labor Unions: Moyano’s Heavy Mantle
As if reflecting the comparable divisive events now afflicting the U.S. labor movement, Hugo Moyano was officially installed on July 14 as the Secretary General of Argentina’s largest trade union conglomerate, the General Confederation of Workers (CGT). This broke the leadership troika agreed upon when the CGT was reunited in 2004. The crowning of Moyano as the de facto leader of Argentina’s labor movement marked the culmination of a power struggle with fellow CGT titan Susana Rueda. In retaliation, Rueda has threatened to pull the eight unions loyal to her leadership out of the CGT. Moyano must also deal with a liberalized labor market in which high unemployment is a volatile component.
Moyano insists he
will fight for increased labor protections, but his close
relationship with President Nestor Kirchner indicates that
he will most likely follow the same corporatist path that
characterized union leadership in the 1990s when the
movement acquiesced to former President Carlos Menem’s
damaging reforms. In order for unions to remain influential,
Moyano must take bold steps to unite the CGT under his firm
leadership, without the seemingly intrusive help from the
nation’s president. A History of Influence
Recently, the
percentage of workers in the formal sector affiliated with a
union has dropped steeply from the Peronist period’s high of
approximately fifty percent, to the present 35 percent. The
decline is primarily due to Menem’s neoliberal reforms,
which ended up causing widespread layoffs and instability in
the labor market. Menem privatized large, state-owned
industries, such as the utilities, telephone and steel
companies, and in the transition from the public to the
private sector, many jobs were lost. He also initiated trade
liberalization, which, as Columbia professor Maria Murillo
explains in her book, Labor Unions, Partisan Coalitions, and
Market Reforms in Latin America, “increases differences
among workers across and within sectors, making it harder to
organize labor unions based on horizontal solidarity.” In
addition, Menem opened up the country to increased foreign
direct investment, which was intended to increase
Argentina’s productivity and foster job creation.
However, much of the new money coming into the country was speculative and would be at risk at the first sign of inflation. The traditional union structure could not handle Menem’s reforms because policy customarily had been created in the presence of a relatively stable working populace, which was no longer a fact. The labor market’s structural changes, combined with Argentina’s 2001 economic crisis, caused a sharp rise in unemployment and a decline in worker solidarity.
In the following 2003 presidential elections,
unions broke from their tradition of voting as a bloc,
splitting their votes between various Peronist Party
factions. A little-known governor Nestor Kirchner, won that
election, but essentially without the support of the labor
lobby. Kirchner and the Unions
Kirchner’s election
incited worried speculation within labor circles, which
questioned whether he would work constructively with a
movement that recently had failed to exercise meaningful
clout. However, as Murillo explained in an interview with
COHA, Kirchner realizes that, “labor unions are essential
for industrial relations.” The administration is now
nurturing close ties to union elites such as Moyano and
maintains labor laws allowing one officially-sanctioned
union to monopolize an entire business sector.
The close personal relationship between Kirchner and Moyano clearlyprovides evidence that Argentina’s corporatist era is far from over. Kirchner supported Moyano when he was struggling to consolidate the CGT under his leadership, through a declaration by his labor minister Carlos Tomada. In addition, shortly after the executive committee of the CGT named Moyano as the federation’s leader, one of Moyano’s closest advisors, Héctor Recalde, was nominated as a Buenos Aires candidate for the national Congress from Kirchner’s subsection of the Peronist party, Frente para la Victoria. It also has been suggested that Kirchner personally negotiated with Moyano to install last June’s 180 peso monthly minimum pay increase. By cultivating close ties to Moyano, Kirchner is looking for union support in October’s midterm elections in which he and former president Eduardo Duhalde, are running opposing slates of candidates in a battle over control of the Peronist Party. As Página 12, the left-leaning Argentine daily has said, “Moyano will look to the entire union to coalesce behind Kirchner.”
Argentina’s
close, if not co-opted labor-government relations may seem
ideal, especially to neighboring countries that experience
frequent union-initiated work stoppages. However, the
Argentine government historically has taken advantage of its
labor partners. For example, in the 1990s, then President
Menem warned the unions of an impending economic crisis
should they ignore the need for labor reform, causing them
to acquiesce to damaging labor give-backs. Regardless, the
economy crashed later in the decade, and the labor market
was hit particularly hard. Since then, workers have been
suspicious of the central government’s labor agenda.
Therefore, although the partnership between Kirchner and
Moyano appears to be mutually beneficial so far, Moyano has
to approach government intervention in the labor sector with
skepticism, as his close ties to Kirchner could still
backfire among CGT members. “Superunions” and their Internal
Problems
Moyano needs to not only deal with a changing
labor market and avoid the traps of corporatism, but he must
also quell an incipient opposition from within. In 2004, the
CGT reunited after a temporary split, and the leaders of the
new conglomerate instituted a troika model of governance,
granting equal power to the leaders of the three most
influential unions: Moyano, José Luis Lingeri and Susana
Rueda. On July 14, after bitter infighting, Moyano was named
the sole head of the CGT by the union’s executive committee.
However, Rueda’s coalition, Los Gordos, is still vocalizing
its opposition to Moyano’s consolidation of power. Rueda did
not attend Moyano’s inauguration, commenting to the Buenos
Aires Herald that “obviously we don’t have to be there [at
the CGT gathering] because Moyano doesn’t represent
us.”
“Superunions” have experienced problems with renegade
factions under their ostensible jurisdiction in the past;
Moyano himself rose to prominence in 2000 when he led the
truckers in a protest against a state labor measure,
negatively affecting the CGT’s leverage. However, the
disagreements between the Moyano and Rueda factions run
deeper than small-scale politicking. Los Gordos was the
dominant union faction of the 1990s and many workers still
blame its leaders for Menem’s being able to institutionalize
his destructive anti-labor reforms. Moyano and his allies
are relatively new to leadership; they rose to power after
the dissident and main factions of the CGT merged in 2004.
The struggle between Rueda and Moyano is a battle between
the old and the new. Without some measure of reconciliation,
the CGT could break up, or worse, remain in a constant state
of gridlock. Moyano’s Heavy Mantle
Moyano now faces a
double challenge in trying to internally unite the
beleaguered CGT and to externally deal with a radically
different labor market than his forebearers have known. On
June 20th, Moyano refuted the claim that he is too close to
Kirchner, saying, “I only say the things I like of the
Kirchner administration, but that does not make me a staunch
Kirchner supporter.” However, it will take more than
Moyano’s rhetoric to convince CGT members--especially
Rueda’s coalition--that he is more than merely Kirchner’s
choice to lead the powerful labor lobby. Moyano attacks his
enemies behind the shield of a governmental mandate. He must
step out of Kirchner’s shadow and engage Rueda and her
rebellious constituents on their own turf if the CGT is to
remain a force worth respecting in the Casa Rosada. This
analysis was prepared by COHA Research Associate Anita
Joseph. August 4, 2005