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Starry Messenger

(32,342 posts)
Wed Oct 17, 2012, 07:01 PM Oct 2012

Mexico's labor law reform sparks massive protests

http://www.peoplesworld.org/mexico-s-labor-law-reform-sparks-massive-protests/





MEXICO CITY - As the Mexican Senate tried to convene last week, unionists, youth protesters from the #YoSoy132 movement and social activists of every stripe blocked the chamber's doors, trying to prevent legislators from meeting to consider the reforma laboral. On October 2, tens of thousands marched from the Tlatelolco (Plaza of Three Cultures), where hundreds of students were shot down by Mexican Army troops on the same date in 1968, to the Zocalo at the city center. Reverberating chants signaled an equally massive rejection of this deeply unpopular proposal.

The Mexican Senate has begun its 30-day consideration of a proposed reform of the country's labor laws. Its provisions will have a profound effect on Mexico's workers, changing the way they are hired, their rights at work, and their wages. Benedicto Martinez Orozco, co-president of one of the country's most democratic unions, the Authentic Labor Front (FAT), calls it "a monstrous law."

The basic thrust of the reforma laboral is greater flexibility for employers. It would replace pay per day with pay by the hour. At Mexico's current minimum wage of about 60 pesos per day, this would produce an hourly wage of 7.5 pesos, less than 60 cents. Employers would gain the legal right to hire workers indirectly through labor contractors. If workers are fired for protesting or organizing against the new regime, or for any other illegitimate reason, employers' liability for back pay would end after a year.

In the ears of U.S. workers, the wages may sound low, but the kind of flexibility the reform envisions has been the norm in workplaces north of the border for decades. Not so in Mexico, however. In the wake of the Mexican Revolution, and then in the radical upsurge that followed in the '30s and '40s, Mexican workers won a broad set of rights and protections. On paper, the rights of Mexican workers are far more extensive than those of their U.S. counterparts.

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Starry Messenger

(32,342 posts)
2. Part of the gains of their Revolution was to get workers rights put into their Constitution.
Wed Oct 17, 2012, 09:19 PM
Oct 2012

It was actually pretty radical. I wish we had that. Instead of Taft-Hartley.

white_wolf

(6,238 posts)
4. This is Murca' we're the greatest country on earth, if you think Mexico is better then move there.
Sat Oct 20, 2012, 02:54 PM
Oct 2012

Do I really need a sarcasm tag?

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