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dinsdag 5 maart 2024

WORLD WORLDWIDE SPAIN CATALONIË news journal UPDATE - (en) Catalunya, EMBAT: Who's who in the Catalan field? (ca, de, it, pt, tr)[machine translation]

 When we see the convocations in the field, we can't help but notice the

convening organizations. In certain territories of the Spanish state,the mobilizations are called by platforms linked to the extreme right.In other places they are convened by farmers' organizations of a moreemployer nature and in others they have a more popular and trade unionnature. It is clear that the correlations are very different in eachplace, depending on the previous organization present in the ruralworld. ---- So one of our militants, Jose C., has made a map that willhelp us to place ourselves in the articulation of this primary sector soabandoned by the urban leftists that is now between the sword and thewall As we shall see, there is a considerable handful of agrarianorganizations to consider.To begin with, in the field there are entrepreneurs, self-employed andsalaried women. The agricultural associations or unions are theorganizations that bring together employers and self-employed workers,officially called Professional Agricultural Organizations (OPA). Theemployees are in the union organizations known to everyone: SAT (SOC),CCOO, UGT, CNT, CGT...Context and recent historyWith the Transition, the vertical union, in which both employers andworkers were integrated, falls and emerges both the historical laborunions (UGT, CNT) and the newly created ones (CCOO, USOC, SOC, CSUT,SU...). In the countryside, the verticalist entrepreneurs created theirorganizations controlled by the UCD (CNJA and UFADE) and the PopularAlliance (CNAG), which would later be unified in 1989 creating ASAJA(Agrarian Association - Young Farmers). Apart from these, the so-calleddemocratic "unions" emerged.Of these democratic unions (or agrarian associations), some had alreadybeen operating underground since 1973, such as the Galician Farmers'Commissions, but the rest were established in later years; Union ofFarmers in 1974; ENHE in Euskal Herria in 1976; Union of Farmers andCattlemen of the Valencian Country in 1977; UPA in 1982 etc.Union of Peasants is considered a continuation of the Union of Robbersof the Second Republic. It should be added that the Catalan agriculturalemployers' association "for life" was and is the Catalan AgriculturalInstitute of Sant Isidre founded in 1851 and a member organization ofthe employers' association Foment Nacional del Treball.In 1977, the Coordinator of Farmers' and Ranchers' Organizations (COAG)was created at state level, bringing together the Union of Farmers andother provincial and/or regional associations. At the beginning the COAGwas a confederation of organizations considered progressive andleft-wing that acted independently, maintaining their autonomy orterritorial sovereignty and some of these were attached to ViaCampesina. Cayo Lara, from IU, was one of the founders. The COAG wasconsidered a "class union" and maintained very fluid relations with PSOEand PCE, as did its Unions with the nationalist parties of theirrespective territories.In 2008, the COAG made a centralist turn that some associations wouldnot accept to understand that their sovereignty was ending and theywould abandon it. Among these associations that left the COAG were theUnion of Farmers, the Union of Farmers of the Valencian Country and theUnion of Campesinos of Castilla y León. These three Unions will lead tothe creation of the Union of Farmers and Ranchers Unions, with otherunions such as Extremadura, Canary Islands, Madrid, Baix Guadalquivir,Asturias, Santander, Castilla-La Mancha... In Catalonia , when the UPleft the COAG, the JARC (Young Farmers and Cattlemen of Catalonia) whichwas previously affiliated to ASAJA, would take its place.In the agricultural sector, as in transport or hospitality and catering,small entrepreneurs and self-employed people are intermingled in thesame associations, to the point that in Catalonia faced with theimpotence of the "class" unions to negotiate a collective agreement ofthe countryside, the Union of Farmers was spoken to and it agreed tosign one. But the employer contested it, since the UP was a"self-employed union" and not a business organization, and the operationwent bankrupt.who is whoNormally UP has been an ally of CCOO and UGT, but this also createsinternal problems for example due to the fruit harvest in Lleida. UP haslost a lot of influence in Lleida and between ASAJA and JARC theyalready surpass UP.Unió de Pagesos already operates as an OPA (Professional AgriculturalOrganization) and therefore represents both the self-employed and smallentrepreneurs, and signs collective agreements together with ASAJA andSant Isidre. And it has become a company at the same time, by creating afarming services company called Agroxarxa, a company with which the CGTTrade Union Section has had several conflicts.Separate mention should be made of the ever-rare relationship betweenself-employed and salaried employees. As we have seen previously, inagricultural associations entrepreneurs and self-employed people aremixed. Faced with this, in 1982 the UGT decided to try to organize thesmall owners and self-employed in the countryside and created the Unionof Small Farmers and Ranchers (UPA), which would try to be acontinuation of the Federation of Land Workers (FTT) before the war From1987, following the transfer of the Agrarian Chambers to the autonomies,the UPA began to function as an "independent" OPA, to be able to standin the elections to the Agrarian Chambers, but it remains linked to theUGT through the its structure of self-employed workers of which theUnion of Professionals and Self-employed Workers (UPTA) is also a part.In Catalonia, the majority organization would be the UP, although insome territories it has been overtaken in representation by JARC andASAJA. The results in the 2021 elections were, with a census of 20,609and a participation of 35.58%, 4061 votes in the Union of Farmers; JARC,2168; ASAJA, 821; and 190 the UPA.Currently the signatories for the business part of the AgriculturalSector Agreement are the Union of Farmers of Catalonia, Young Farmersand Ranchers of Catalonia (JARC) and the Catalan Agricultural Instituteof Sant Isidre (IACSI)Speaking of agricultural associations, these, like the rest of society,since the Transition, have been abandoning left-wing positions and havefocused more on the provision of services to their members,professionalism and training and business competence. Even so, excludingthe low representativeness of the UPA-UGT, the more to the right or themore entrepreneurial the association is, the less representative therural world in Catalonia gives it. The most representative is the Unionof Farmers with 56.09% of the votes (4,061), followed by the JARC (COAG)with 29.94% (2,168), ASAJA 11.34% (821) and UPA the 2.62% (190)In the last decade of the last century and the first of this one, theemergence of the Anti-Globalization Movement and the emergence of ViaCampesina (1993), as an international movement that promotes ecological,sustainable agriculture and in favor of local production of food,adhering to the Spanish State the COAG, Unió de Pagesos, SindicatLabrego Galego, Syndicat d'Obrers del Camp (SOC) and Euskal HerrikoNekazarien Elkartea (EHNE), and internationally the best known would bethe Movement of Landless Rural Workers (MST) of Brazil and theConfédération Paysanne of France, with José Bové as General Secretaryand his spectacular actions against globalization and in defense ofFrench agricultural products.In Catalonia, this anti-globalization wave is reflected in the EuropeanMarches against Unemployment, the mobilizations against the visit of theWorld Bank and the fight against GMOs and for food sovereignty. This ishow the Assemblea Pagesa was born in Catalonia as a grassroots tradeunion and social movement, assembly and through it We are what we sow.The Peasant Assembly arose in moments of great social unrest that alsocoincide with a process in the Peasants' Union, which is evolving from acombative trade unionism to a management trade unionism, represented byJoan Caball who succeeds the activist Pep Riera as Secretary General From Som el que Sembrem, accompanied by a hundred organizations, beginsa fight against the cultivation of transgenic products and for foodsovereignty, which with more or less activity reaches our days.The Peasant Assembly is critical of the current mobilizations, as itconsiders that they seek to camouflage the inequalities and asymmetrybetween large agribusiness and farming by transmitting ultra-liberal andanti-ecological ideas. According to the Farmers' Assembly, theindebtedness of the peasantry comes from mutual competition and theconstant growth overturned in a global capitalist market, the result ofa model promoted by the EU, the states and the autonomous regions, andaccepted by the majority unions.In conclusionThe field is a complex contested space, just like the world of work ingeneral. The current demands are still the result of the hardships ofthe moment, of the ultra-liberal offensive that invades us and thepowerlessness of the left to fight it. The calls do not go to the rootof the problem, but seek simple and quick solutions but with a veryclose expiry date. It is like asking for a salary increase of 2.5against a CPI that will rise by 5%.But despite all its flaws, as in many, if not the vast majority, oflabor mobilizations, the left must be present, support them and providesolutions. As Miquel Ramos said in an article in publico.es, "theabsence of the left, which often invests more in analysis from theoffice than in feet on the street and in the field, is always takenadvantage of by the right. Especially when there is fear anduncertainty." And "in the end, a legitimate protest against neoliberalmeasures that increasingly impoverish the working class ends up being anopportunity for the far-right, who are waiting for a misstep from theleft, an ambiguous narrative or a distancing from the cause to present-se with magic formulas. These, far from solving the problem, alwaysoffer poisoned balms well wrapped in flags."The countryside and the food system are key to society. We cannot turnour backs on the problem. Libertarian organizations have always beenpresent in the field giving alternatives. Now more than ever ourpresence is needed.https://embat.info/qui-es-qui-al-camp-catala/_________________________________________A - I N F O S  N E W S  S E R V I C EBy, For, and About AnarchistsSend news reports to A-infos-en mailing listA-infos-en@ainfos.ca

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