
罢丑别听Construction, Forestry, Mining and Energy Union (CFMEU)聽offices were attacked by about 500聽conspiracy theorist anti-vaxxers,聽some CFMEU members聽and far-right activists on September 20.
Reporter for SBS鈥檚 The Feed Eden Gillespie tweeted from the protest that it 鈥渄idn鈥檛 get violent until a few hours in and it continued to escalate when anti-lockdown 鈥榗elebs鈥 showed up鈥.
After trying, but failing, to talk to the protesters about their concerns, the CFMEU officers were forced to take cover as the mob threw crates and other objects.
罢丑别听聽that the protesters were influenced by neo-Nazis and other extremists.
There are several reasons for the attack.
First, the Labor government is under pressure from big business to reopen the state as fast as possible.
Second, the government decided on September 16聽that all construction workers had to聽prove that they had their聽first vaccination shot, or evidence of a vaccination booking or medical exemption, by September 23 or lose their job.聽This was done without consulting the union.
It also declared that all聽lunch聽sheds on building sites would close at midnight the following day because it was deemed that the virus on building sites was spreading this way. Protests erupted on September 17 against the arbitrary聽shut-down of lunch sheds,聽a hard-fought gain for construction workers and which the union said had been made safe on the big sites by measures including聽staggered聽lunch聽and tea breaks.
罢丑别听government released updated figures on September 21 stating there were 443 active COVID-19 cases spread across 186 building sites and that聽50% of sites failed聽to meet COVID-19-safety requirements.
罢丑别听聽the government鈥檚 鈥渉eavy-handed mandate鈥, saying the industry would have 鈥渧oluntarily reached high levels of vaccination鈥 without it. 鈥淭his heavy-handed mandate by the Chief Health Officer, which was implemented with no notice, has only served to drive many people towards the Anti-Vax Movement.鈥
Daniel Andrews' government may have been of the view that if it could force the most militant union to accept mandatory vaccination, other industries would do the same.
But given the mixed messaging on vaccinations, the bungled roll-out and lockdown exhaustion, such an approach simply hands an opportunity to the far-right anti-vaxxers.
Most construction workers are itinerant and have an insecure income. They regularly work 50鈥60-hour weeks to make up for down times. The industry is dangerous. They are stressed and have the highest suicide rates in the country.
It is little wonder that聽in聽a period of great insecurity some fall prey to conspiracy theories.
Given that the protest outside the CFMEU office was first announced on September 1, the number taking part from a union membership of 30,000 is small. This does not make it insignificant, however, because it indicates that far-right, anti-working class ideas are growing in the union鈥檚 ranks.
Meanwhile, the聽CFMEU聽is under constant attack by the federal government and the big business media.
This is because the Victorian construction unions have made the industry one of the safest in the world. They have driven fatality rates down from an average of about 20 a year in the late 1990s to around five or six today. This is despite a big growth in the number of construction workers. In addition, the聽CFMEU聽has continued to fight for wage rises.
罢丑别听CFMEU鈥檚 strength lies in its militancy and its network of shop stewards and Health and Safety Representatives. They are its backbone because they hold profit-driven construction companies to account. Trained first aiders, COVID-19 marshals and peggies (cleaners, especially of toilets and lunch sheds) have saved or improved the lives of many thousands of people.
They would have been angry at the September 20 right-wing protest.
The union will have to reflect on these and other issues, including its relationship with the construction bosses who pushed hard to keep the industry open during last year's lockdowns.
Critical will be the union's聽orientation to members who have been suckered into conspiracy theories about the virus, or who are persuaded by other right-wing, anti-working class ideas. It will require a collective approach, including mass delegates' meetings, where diverse critical voices are seen as part of charting a way forward.