One of the most significant battles in recent working class history was remembered at the annual May Day dinner to support Green Left at Geelong Trades Hall on May 6.
Twenty five years ago, on the May 7, 1998, Maritime Union of Australia members around the country marched back to work, chanting “MUA! Here to Stay!” They had just won one of the most significant battles against Patrick Stevedores, supported by the union-busting John Howard Coalition government.
Seventy people heard stories from the dispute at the May Day dinner from six Socialist Alliance members, who were either MUA members, or picket line participants and Green Left journalists, at the Melbourne and Sydney pickets.
The Patrick’s dispute began at Webb dock in Melbourne in January 1998 when the National Farmers Federation leased the port and trained strike breaking scabs to do the work of the port workers who had gone on strike in protest.
In a rapid escalation, Patrick Stevedores on April 7 locked out 2000 waterside workers: they were “escorted” from their work place by balaclava-wearing thugs and dogs.
The MUA, with the support of other unions and community members in Brisbane, Sydney, Melbourne and Fremantle set up picket lines: some were savagely attacked by police.
Thousands of people, horrified by Howard and Patricks’ tactics, went and supported the pickets. Some like Sue Bolton, now a Merri-bek Councillor, and Tim Gooden, formerly Geelong Trades Hall secretary, recalled their time on the Sydney picket lines.
Perhaps the most famous picket was at the East Swanston Dock. MUA member Ross Smith explained how, on April 17, 4000 picketers linked arms all night facing down 1000 police.
Mick Bull, a member of the Construction, Forestry, Mining and Energy Union at the time, recalled how 2000 building workers, led by the legendary John Cummins surrounded police, forcing them to make a hasty retreat.
This broke the back of the boss’s campaign.
Eventually Justice North of the Federal Court ruled on April 21 that Patricks had deliberately restructured with the sole intention of dismissing its unionised work force. This was illegal, and the ruling was upheld by the High Court after Patricks challenged it.
The MUA had won but, in the ensuing months, there was much disquiet about the industrial outcomes as some 1000 jobs were lost and casualisation led to reductions in maritime workers’ working conditions and pay.
Dave Ball, Assistant Secretary of the Victorian Branch of the MUA, told the dinner that despite everything, the struggle was a magnificent display of solidarity by thousands of brave supporters — across Australia and internationally — and that this is why the MUA is, victoriously, here to stay.
The dinner marked the wonderful role Green Left played throughout the dispute, when dozens of comrades wrote from every picket line or solidarity event.
Bronwyn Jennings, who was a Melbourne University student at the time, recalled how the 750-strong Asia Pacific Solidarity Conference, which was meeting in Glebe at the time, marched down to the Darling Harbour picket on April 13. The sacked workers welcomed the international solidarity with their struggle.