LABOR: Violence on the Picket Line

LABOR: Violence on the Picket Line

The milling picket lines, the fire hoses, the club-wielding police were
all reminiscent of the bloody strikes of the 1930s. When the International
Union of Electrical Workers struck General Electric last week, the company
vowed it would keep its plants open for all employees who wanted to work.
Both sides knew the vow could lead to violence. It was not long in coming. Outside G.E.'s big River Works plant in Lynn, Mass., 200 pickets tried
to block cars of nonstrikers from driving into the plant. As police
linked arms to force back the pickets to let the cars pass through, the
pickets shoved forward, stopped the cars, and growled menacingly: “You
are marked men. We'll remember you.” At G.E.'s Electronics Park plant
in Syracuse, 800 pickets battled with 210 police who were trying to
escort carloads of nonstrikers into the plant. Result: 15 union men
were arrested. Breaking through the lines at a small G.E. lamp plant in
Bucyrus , Ohio, nonstriking women squealed and wielded
umbrellas as pickets stuck them with hatpins. Close Votes. The militancy on the picket line barely concealed many of
the union members' misgivings about the strike. The union's local at
the Schenectady, N.Y. plant, the largest of G.E.'s 166 factories, at
first voted 5,033 to 2,895 not to strike. But after the other I.U.E.
locals went out, union officials at Schenectady passed around a
petition until enough names were collected to call out I.U.E. workers
there too. Soon after the strike began at Schenectady, such violent
skirmishes broke out that the mayor declared a state of emergency,
asked New York's Governor Nelson Rockefeller for state police. It was
refused. The chief reasons why the union was split on the strike were the
aggressive labor policy pursued by G.E. and the headstrong,
overdetermined tactics of I.U.E. President James Carey. The last time
G.E. faced a strike of comparable proportions—in 1946—it closed down
its plants, but since then it has hardened its policies. Under Vice
President Lemuel R. Boulware, who now serves only as a consultant, G.E.
developed a broad policy known through the industry as “Boulwarism,”
in which the company makes an unceasing effort to sell itself to the
workers. In bargaining, the company first listens to the unions'
demands, then puts all that it is willing to grant in its first
contract offer; after that it will make only minor concessions, thus
making gains from a strike problematical. The G.E. policy has been so
successful that Carey was unsure of the support of his union members
two years ago and backed off from calling a strike. He has since
changed the I.U.E. constitution to give greater strike authority to a
conference board, make it possible to strike with a majority—instead
of a two-thirds—vote of the members. Two Rights. Locrls of the United Auto Workers and the International
Association of Machinists accepted the G.E. contract offer, which calls
for a 3% raise immediately and a 4% raise in April 1962 plus other
benefits. However, the contract does not contain a cost-of-living
clause, which the old contract contained and which the I.U.E. demands.

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