The Occupation of Cockatoo Island 1989 by Frances Kelly & John Tognolini

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  • Опубликовано: 16 окт 2024
  • The Cockatoo Island Dockyard strike-occupation of 1989
    On May 10, 1989 the Cockatoo Island Dockyard shop committee, representing 13 unions, announced the occupation of the island in response to a decision by the Hawke Labor government to sell off the site. The dispute would last for 14 weeks.
    Fifteen years after the strike was defeated, it is worth looking at this struggle against the background of the ALP-ACTU Accord years.
    In the 1983 federal election, federal Labor leader and former ACTU president Bob Hawke campaigned against Malcolm Fraser's Coalition government at Cockatoo Island. Within a few months of Labor's election win, a thousand dockyard workers marched on the Australian Parliament in Canberra because Hawke had broken his promise to have a second 18,000-tonne naval supply ship built at Cockatoo after constuction of HMAS Success was completed in 1984.
    Bob Galleghan, the federal secretary of the Ship Painters and Dockers Union said at this rally: "There won't be a second ship built unless you're going to do something about it." Hawke's decision would cost 1600 workers their jobs.
    Galleghan was again in the thick of it during the 1989 strike-occupation. His leadership of the painters and dockers was in sharp contrast to most of the other union officials, including Pat Johnson, the organiser from the metalworkers' union, now part of Australian Manufacturing Workers Union. Galleghan was committed to saving the jobs and the dockyard, Johnson just wanted a decent redundancy package, which to me has always appeared to be a contradiction in terms.
    A key factor in our ability to maintain the occupation for the length of time we did was that a large number of shipyard workers lived on the island for three months. They were from all the jobs in the dockyard - painters and dockers, electricians, riggers, metalworkers, clerks, firefighters. Some were fifth generation shipyard workers.
    Support from the ACTU and the NSW Labor Council was token for a couple of weeks, and then turned into outright opposition to the struggle of the Cockatoo Island Dockyard workers to save their jobs.
    Dockyard workers stormed a Labor Council meeting that voted down a motion for a 24-hour general strike to save the dockyard.
    During a protest by the Cockatoo Island workers toward the end of the dispute the Labor Council officials locked themselves on the top floor of their building in Sussex Street. The dockyard workers had gathered outside. After hearing speakers condemning Hawke, defence minister Kim Beazley, the ACTU and the Labor Council, the workers found an open door up the firestairs and marched up to the floor below the Labor Council officials. While this was going on, the police attacked those remaining in Sussex Street, arresting six people who later faced trial.
    After this, there was the last mass meeting, which had union leaders telling strikers on their 93rd day "on the grass" that they would be open to fines under section 45D of the Trade Practices Act. Bob Galleghan said: "Anyone with a 45D fine could stand on the end of the line with the other creditors to the union."
    Isolated and ignored by the broader union movement, largely as a result of the hostility of the ACTU and the NSW Labor Council to the strike, the dockyard workers were forced to return to work. In June 1990, the federal Labor government reaffirmed its decision to sell the island.
    The ALP and the ACTU don't like this historical period being discussed - it takes the spin-doctor gloss off the Hawke-Keating years. The bulk of the trade union leaderships preferred working against their memberships as Hawke and Keating Labor governments decimated large traditional blue-collar workplaces in the name of opening up the Australian economy to the rigours of the global marketplace.
    Britain had Margaret Thatcher and the United States had Ronald Reagan do this to its workers. We had the ALP. With the prospect of another business-friendly federal Labor government being elected under Mark Latham, we should never forget this.
    John Tognolini
    From Green Left Weekly, August 11, 2004.
    Check out my film on the BLF, The BLF Deregistration, the Victorian Story. The film made in 1992 features interviews with BLF unionists including John Cummins, telling the story of the ALP's attacks on workers in the construction industry from 1986 to 1991. If you go to my blog TOGS'S PLACE.COM. togsplace.blogs...
    you can find more of my work I do, including my books.
    John Tognolini

Комментарии • 21

  • @alaspooryorick9946
    @alaspooryorick9946 6 лет назад +4

    This is inspiring and envigorating. Thanks John. Timelessly relevant

  • @starman8623
    @starman8623 7 лет назад +5

    I grew up in Balmain and remember the huge influx of workers to cockatoo.....little did we know that Australian industry would die a slow death....... Cockatoos closure was the beginning in my mind......

  • @eshtrak
    @eshtrak 8 лет назад +3

    Today, nothing is left from an industry that once employed more than 1500 workers!

  • @MarcusB-o3t
    @MarcusB-o3t Месяц назад

    Thanks for uploading this, archival footage is endlessly important to show later generations just how it difficult it was and what people had to fight for. Does anyone know the song at 51:30 - 53:30 big thieves? thanks

  • @ivomac416
    @ivomac416 8 лет назад +4

    Surprising & disappointing all this happened under a Fed Labour Govourment

    • @johntognolini31
      @johntognolini31  8 лет назад +1

      +IvoMac For me looking back on it. This was the turning point where Australia's rise of the Billionaires was created by the birth of this nation's Working Poor. It was also the start of destruction of our manufacturing industry. Hawke was our Thatcher.

    • @darcymunro8930
      @darcymunro8930 5 лет назад

      Sold out by the Rightwing labour/DLP had taken over and white anted the left wing unions.

  • @edboyd4783
    @edboyd4783 4 года назад +2

    I was there from 79 to 87 , Engineering boys town class of 79.

  • @elbobo1290
    @elbobo1290 7 месяцев назад +1

    I was outside the hall a number of times during this strike. The only thing that kept it going was the Socialist Labour League (Australian Trotskists, today SEP) who had a member in the island. Were it not for them, the occupation would have been sold off a long time before as the union were pushing for at best, a few crumbs like a small percentage of redundancies (the rest of the workers would be outright sacked). The union leadership put posters out ridiculing this worker as a "pizza face trot [Trotskist]", 'warning' the rank and file against him, at one point they organized their thugs to beat him up.
    In the end, the union called the police to guard the hall as they announced they had made a backdoor deal with management

  • @ИосифСталин-ь3т
    @ИосифСталин-ь3т 2 года назад +1

    maybe someone should have started a workers party?

  • @petertancred3507
    @petertancred3507 6 лет назад +1

    The hungry mile all over again?

    • @johntognolini31
      @johntognolini31  6 лет назад +1

      That's so true a comparison Peter. I've never been back to Cockatoo since I was laid off two before my daughter's birth nearly 28 years ago in 1990

  • @ChrisSkinnerrn
    @ChrisSkinnerrn 9 лет назад

    *Phase, not faze