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Israeli workers declared a general strike this morning at 6 am. The Histadrut trade union confederation, which represents all the public sector workers, declared the strike after reaching an impasse on wage and benefit increase negotiations with the Israeli government.There's no trash collection, no post office service, gov't ministry staff is not at work, no trains, the ports are closed--and the border crossings are closed. By tomorrow, if there isn't a resumption of talks, it's possible that air service will either be halted or disrupted. As an interested party (I'm due to fly out after a month here in a few days...), I am watching the news eagerly, but in the meantime, I am also using this time to reflect on how a strike says something about where Israel is in today's world.

First off, the fact that workers will strike is a good thing, I believe--even if it (gulp) inconveniences me. In Israel, there is a legal system that includes special labor courts and the labor court here ruled that this is a legal strike and that the government must negotiate with the workers. That is something for which US unions would yearn. Israel has experienced massive growth in the last decades in the high income brackets especially and among the high tech sector, but its middle class is struggling and the public sector workers have not had a raise in income since 2001, aside from a new minimum wage law that was recently passed and some seniority benefits that have gone to some workers. The government is offering very little, at least as far as the public statements make obvious (as in all labor negotiations, public statements to the media are part of the negotiating arsenal, so it's difficult to know the reality, but it appears that the government's opening position is, surprisingly, quite adamant).

Meanwhile, this is an Israeli government that can't afford a long strike. It's difficult to imagine Olmert's numbers sinking lower in the single digits. Moreover, if airport action takes hold, the very constituency that will still support this government--those affluent enough to leave the country for August vacation--will be furious at the government, not just at the workers.But, additionally, this shows something else--Israel's connectivity to the outside world. It is a peculiarity of Israeli labor arrangements that the public sector can shut down the borders, too.

So, in today's global economy,upon which Israel is so dependent, a strike will not only inconvience the citizens of the quaint Tel Aviv neighborhood where I am staying, but will also mean that millions of dollars will be lost just in one day with shipments unable to enter or leave Israel's ports and border crossings. Additionally, the Israeli yearning for travel will be sorely inconvienced. The fact is that Israelis are interconnected with the world today, as is their economy. Once the strike is settled, this fact should weigh even more heavily on the Israeli government to search for a negotiated settlement with the Palestinians--and with the Syrians--so that Israel can continue its quest for global integration and normalization.


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Joanne:

Hang in there, and soak in the novelty of lawful and protected concerted activity by public sector workers. I am at a teamster conference this week in the States, and the attendees would undoubtedly marvel at the power that the public sector workers are legally exerting over there.

I hope for your sake and for the sake of the workers and their families that the strike is settled and settled quickly. And, hopefully, when the dust settles, the impact of the strike will, as you say it must, provide even more incentive for rational parties to come together and negotiate a lasting Middle East peace.

Solidarity forever.

Bruce

Good for them!

The Americanization of Israel over the last 2 decades has been an ugly sight: two years ago, Israel stole the crown from the US as the advanced nation with the highest child poverty rate.

One third of all Israeli kids live below the poverty line. (Thanks, Bibi!)

Sorry about the inconvenience, Jo-Ann, but I am glad to see you have the right attitude.

(Do they still have those rolling electrical power strikes? That was a hoot.)

Have a good trip.

contrast this with the recent bus workers strike in Tehran. The strike was broken up by Iranian Hezbollah thugs with knives and clubs and the leaders arrested. Israeli public workers should be very grateful for the rights they are free to exercise. Not many workers in the Middle East are so fortunate.

So, a worker's strike proves that Israel is a democratic light unto the world. I think this is arrogant, self-serving crap. Rich Israelis might be inconvenienced getting to Monaco. OMG. At a time when Israel has shut off Gaza to the world and cut the WB in pieces with closed borders and many Palestinians can't get the basics for survival, this post is not very tactful.

Don Key,

So, a worker's strike proves that Israel is a democratic light unto the world.

No.  What Ms. Mort wrote was,

In Israel, there is a legal system that includes special labor courts and the labor court here ruled that this is a legal strike and that the government must negotiate with the workers. That is something for which US unions would yearn.

When my conservative friends "catch" me saying something positive about the Clinton era, they often accuse me of holding President Clinton up as a "saint," who can "do no wrong," and other such hyperbolic strawmen that are more convenient for them to dismiss than a simple catalogue of facts.

It should strike any reasonable observer as at least somewhat odd that progressives would argue the same way.

It should strike any reasonable observer as at least somewhat odd that progressives would argue the same way.


Ms. Mort is basically implying that Israel is a progressive democracy as witnessed by its liberal labor system without even mentioning treatment of Palestinians. That strikes me as odd. You can say my reading is off or my criticism of her assertion is hyperbolic, in your opinion, but it isn't a straw man.

I don't dispute that it could be a better and fairer system for workers than our own, but when you're talking about Israel's democratic fairness, you cannot ignore its treatment of Palestinians in and out of Israel. To talk about Israeli vacation travel being inconvenienced when images of Palestinians stuck at borders in Gaza for weeks are still fresh strikes me as arrogant and callous. IMHO.

 

Don:

Nowhere does Joanne write that Israel is "a democratic light unto the world". Joanne does point out, and rightfully so, that the strike is a public sector strike which would be unlawful in just about every jurisdiction in the United States.

Joanne is a regular contributer to TPM Cafe and she is also in Israel, where there is a nationwide public sector strike. Joanne is also someone who has spent much of her career in the American labor movement. I think it's certainly understandable that she would be inspired to post about the strike she is experiencing.

And for those of us who work in the labor movement in this country and/or who are union members, and for many "progressives" who read TPM Cafe and who still, in 2007, understand the importance of a strong and democratic labor movement, Joanne's post is both material and a darn good read. Joanne's additional observation that the strike should cause Israelis to understand the importance of obtaining an overall Middle East peace settlement is, perhaps overly optimistic, but hardly offensive. . . unless I'm missing something.

Bruce

Thanks for the bus strike info, however, Hezbollah is in Lebanon--if they were in fact involved, I didn't appear in any news articles that I searched. So, your misconflation of 'Iranian Hezbollah' appears to be a FOX News-style 'accident.'

Don Key,

Ms. Mort is basically implying that Israel is a progressive democracy as witnessed by its liberal labor system without even mentioning treatment of Palestinians. That strikes me as odd.

Maybe you should bother reading the whole piece before strutting around with chips on your shoulder.  Check it out...

Once the strike is settled, this fact should weigh even more heavily on the Israeli government to search for a negotiated settlement with the Palestinians--and with the Syrians--so that Israel can continue its quest for global integration and normalization.

Don Key,

You can say my reading is off or my criticism of her assertion is hyperbolic, in your opinion, but it isn't a straw man.

You are wrong.  Asserting that a labor strike "proves" a country to be "a light unto the world" when no one makes any such claim is the definition of a hyperbolic strawman, and in exactly the same way my conservative friends assert that any references to the positively effective policies of the Clinton era somehow "proves" that Clinton is some manner of untarnished saint.

I have no problem if Ms. Mort or MJ or anyone wants to write a valentine to Israel. But this is a discussion board where commenters might question it. You're right that this post is not offensive in that sense and I admit my original language was too harsh. Still, any post extolling Israel justifies hearing from the other side.

I am watching the news eagerly, but in the meantime, I am also using this time to reflect on how a strike says something about where Israel is in today's world.

She was not restricting this subject to labor movements.

In Israel, there is a legal system that includes special labor courts and the labor court here ruled that this is a legal strike and that the government must negotiate with the workers. That is something for which US unions would yearn.

That sounds like she is holding the Israeli system out as a shining example of worker's rights, hence democracy. Excluding the Palestinian question makes it a suspicious case in point.

So, in today's global economy,upon which Israel is so dependent, a strike will not only inconvience the citizens of the quaint Tel Aviv neighborhood where I am staying, but will also mean that millions of dollars will be lost just in one day with shipments unable to enter or leave Israel's ports and border crossings. Additionally, the Israeli yearning for travel will be sorely inconvienced.

Surely, you're aware that Israel has imprisoned Gaza from without and closed off its exports crippling the economy there? I was just making that point.

to the reader who is extolling me to criticize Israel's occupation of the Palestinians, I suggest that you look at my earlier posts-the most recent before this one was written after I had several meetings in Ramallah.

Hi Joann,

Could you assure us that Histadrut equally represents non-Jewish workers in Israel?  And how does Histadrut approach Israel's guest worker policy?  TIA

I haven't read any posts by you in some time and I admit I was a little harsh in my comments. I think this just struck me the wrong way:

Moreover, if airport action takes hold, the very constituency that will still support this government--those affluent enough to leave the country for August vacation--will be furious at the government, not just at the workers.But, additionally, this shows something else--Israel's connectivity to the outside world. It is a peculiarity of Israeli labor arrangements that the public sector can shut down the borders, too.

This, when the military shuts down the borders in the OPT and builds new borders and "fences." It just seems wrong to complain about inconveniences and economic deprivations when the OPT are being cut off and hemmed in.

i'm honored to have the opportunity to educate you. If you ever travel to Iran, you will see green Hezbollah flags all over the mosques of that country. They have a very active Iranian chapter. The regime can call on 3 different groups at any time to impose their will: Hezbollah, the Basijj volunteers, or the Revolutionary guards. Using civilian volunteer groups helps give the government some level of deniability, although everyone knows who really sent the thugs to their door.

How does Histadrut approach Israel's guest worker policy?
???

You sound excatly like the rightwingers who are hissing like ornery cats because Michael Moore saidsomething good about Cuba's health system.

Egypt has closed it's border with Gaza as well. Why are you only blaming Israel?

After completely trampling the deal they made with Fatah in Saudi Arabia nobody, and I mean NOBODY trusts Hamas inside or outside the region.

Brook Dataski,

Egypt has closed it's border with Gaza as well. Why are you only blaming Israel?

Don Key's sentiments reflect the narrative that Israel is the only party to the overall conflict that has any effect on its circumstances. 

I'm not the one hissing here. I don't think you can praise Israel's labor system and democracy without even discussing discrimination against Palestinians in and out of Israel.I just made an off-the-cuff, three sentence comment saying I thought part of the post was tacky.  Everything else was just a reply to questions. Why are you even replying to this? You and Zionista just say I sound like a right wing nut (ouch!), so who is building straw men here?

JPF made an excellent analogy. Those who hate Cuba cannot admit that they have a health care system that the U.S. would die for. Likewise those who hate Israel cannot admit that Israel gives labor power that the unions in the U.S. would die for.

Likewise those who hate Israel cannot admit that Israel gives labor power that the unions in the U.S. would die for.

Do you even read the bullshit you write? I only ask because you obviously do not read the comments that you mischaracterize. I responded to a post called Closed Borders that I think the areas closed to Palestinians, including labor, should be included in the discussion. You can argue that it's irrelevant, though I think that's foolish, but your ad hominem attacks are childish.

Israel can afford to give the workers the raises they wanted because the Israel lobby will be able to get American taxpayers to provide the Israeli government with the additional money to pay for it.

From the Guardian last week:

Although Israel withdrew its settlers from Gaza two years ago, it maintains control of the sea, the airspace and all the crossings for people and goods with Israel and with Egypt.

And, in the same article, this might be germane to our labor discussion:

At least 68,000 Palestinians have lost their jobs in the past month since Israel closed the crossings...
Around 85% of Gaza's private-sector employees are out of work, according to Nasser el-Helou, a prominent business leader. Thousands of factories have closed as imports and exports have halted.
And NOBODY really believes it was Hamas that trampled the Mecca agreement.

Nobody? Here's a quote from the Saudi foreign minister after the Hamas coup: "Palestinians are pounding the last nail in their own coffin".

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