- 1951 New Zealand waterfront dispute
The 1951 New Zealand waterfront dispute is the largest and most widespread industrial dispute in
New Zealand history. Twenty thousand workers went on strike in support of the waterfront workers. Thousands more refused to handle "scab" goods. The dispute, sometimes referred to as the "waterfront lockout" or "waterfront strike", lasted 151 days—from15 February to15 July 1951 .The distance of New Zealand and
Australia from their traditional markets, meant that ports played a pivotal role in the economies of the countries. The waterfront inevitably became point of conflict between workers and their unions on one side, and capital (the employers) and the state on the other.During the
Second World War due to labour shortages, watersiders and other workers worked long hours, often as much as 15-hour days. Following the war, wages fell far behind the cost of living, and working hours continued to be high.The waterside employers, the
Waterfront Industry Commission , failed to abide by anArbitration Court general wage order, saying the watersiders could live off overtime. The watersiders then refused to work overtime, and the employers locked them out.The watersiders’ union had strong leadership. President
Jock Barnes and secretaryToby Hill spearheadedtrade unionism in New Zealand, by starting the Trade Union Congress in a breakaway from the Federation of Labour (which was allied to the Labour Party). The government and employers hated them because of it. The employers, through the newspapers which they owned, carried out long campaigns against the watersiders trying to isolate them from other workers. The employers were determined to smash the watersiders' union and set out to provoke a dispute which they thought they could win.The strike was a major political issue of the time. The National government, led by
Sidney Holland and the Minister of Labour William Sullivan, introduced Emergency Regulations, and brought in the army to work the wharves. Holland condemned the action as "industrial anarchy", and explicitly sought a mandate to deal with the strike in the 1951 elections. The government was re-elected with an increased majority. The opposition Labour Party, led byWalter Nash , attempted to take a moderate position in the dispute, with Nash saying that "we are not for the waterside workers, and we are not against them". Labour's neutral position merely ended up displeasing both sides, however, and Nash was widely accused of indecision and lack of courage.According to writer Tony Simpson the dispute is "a key element in the mythologies of the industrial left in this country [New Zealand] ". [cite web | title = Never a White Flag: The Memoirs of Jock Barnes (review) | work = Kōtare 1998, Vol.1 , No. 1 | url = http://www.nzetc.org/tm/scholarly/tei-Whi011Kota-t1-g1-t11.html]
References
Further reading
* "151 Days" Dick Scott, published the New Zealand Waterside Workers Union.
* "Never a White Flag" Jock Barnes (edited by Tom Bramble), published by Victoria University Press.External links
* [http://www.nzhistory.net.nz/node/3246 The 1951 waterfront dispute] NZHistory.net.nz
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