Macro N Cheese

Organizing For Power with Marianne Garneau


Listen Later

Marianne Garneau is a labor educator and organizer with the historic IWW, Industrial Workers of the World. She’s the publisher of the website Organizing.Work.

According to Marianne, real-life examples of workers taking successful action anywhere, inspires, empowers and emboldens workers everywhere. The crucial tactic our labor movement currently lacks is the ability to exercise the muscle of collective action, acting in an organized, harmonious fashion, building coordinated disruption that defies authority, while spreading trust, preparedness and the very habit of defiance.

Labor has undergone enormous changes from the days of worker-powered assembly lines and shop floors, when workers could engage in day-to-day refusals. One tactic was “whistle bargaining.” The shop steward would blow a whistle, bringing production to a halt. The workers formed a circle around the foreman and voiced their grievances. Another blow of the whistle could send everyone back to work.

Steve recounts the “work to rule” he engaged in as a member of CWA. By fastidiously following every regulation, every safety procedure, the workforce was able to slow things down to a crawl.

Today labor has been reorganized and decentralized, so strategy must adapt to modern conditions. It all comes down to workers understanding the workflow and the ways the employer depends on them.

The need for workers to communicate is as essential as ever. The means of communication are corporate-owned and can be heavily monitored and censored, again requiring creative adaptation. Marianne describes a tactic used by workers for a food delivery service in Canada. They couldn’t contact each other through the app, so they organized the old-fashioned way, person-to-person, identifying each other by company logo and approaching the vehicles.

Marianne and Steve talk about the history of organized labor and the significance of the National Labor Relations Act of 1935.

...a lot of people in the left and in the labor movement still look back on that as a triumph for labor, which in some ways it was. But it was also meant to really regulate and tame the labor movement.
For a movement to build capacity, it must come from the bottom up. To survive, it needs to grow roots, so it is never dependent on individual leaders. Real power comes from mass collective action.
 Marianne Garneau is an organizer with the Industrial Workers of the World, a labor educator, and the publisher of Organizing Work (organizing.work) 

@OrganizingWork on Twitter 
...more
View all episodesView all episodes
Download on the App Store

Macro N CheeseBy Steven D Grumbine

  • 4.8
  • 4.8
  • 4.8
  • 4.8
  • 4.8

4.8

145 ratings


More shows like Macro N Cheese

View all
Economic Update with Richard D. Wolff by Democracy at Work - Richard D. Wolff

Economic Update with Richard D. Wolff

1,987 Listeners

Upstream by Upstream

Upstream

1,820 Listeners

Jacobin Radio by Jacobin

Jacobin Radio

1,448 Listeners

The Katie Halper Show by Katie Halper

The Katie Halper Show

1,483 Listeners

Citations Needed by Nima Shirazi and Adam Johnson

Citations Needed

3,902 Listeners

This Wreckage by Sean KB and AP Andy

This Wreckage

931 Listeners

Useful Idiots with Katie Halper and Aaron Maté by Useful Idiots, LLC

Useful Idiots with Katie Halper and Aaron Maté

4,448 Listeners

This Machine Kills by This Machine Kills

This Machine Kills

208 Listeners

Bad Faith by Briahna Joy Gray

Bad Faith

2,699 Listeners

Guerrilla History by Guerrilla History

Guerrilla History

601 Listeners

The Socialist Program with Brian Becker by The Socialist Program

The Socialist Program with Brian Becker

532 Listeners

Rania Khalek Dispatches by Rania Khalek

Rania Khalek Dispatches

220 Listeners

Lever Time by David Sirota

Lever Time

556 Listeners

Geopolitical Economy Report by Ben Norton

Geopolitical Economy Report

299 Listeners

The Chris Hedges Report by Chris Hedges

The Chris Hedges Report

331 Listeners