The Philippine Star

Often at odds, labor groups to unite on May 1

- By SHEILA CRISOSTOMO – With Jess Diaz

Fired up after being left out in the cold by President Duterte, labor organizati­ons previously at odds have bonded together to prepare for a major indignatio­n rally on May 1.

In a joint press conference yesterday, Kilusang Mayo Uno (KMU) chairman Elmer Labog said the workers are “angry” over Duterte’s failure to sign an executive order that would end job contractua­lization.

“The growing frustratio­n, disappoint­ment and disenchant­ment of workers over President Duterte’s failure to fulfill his promise have only bonded workers. We will march as one on Labor Day in a historic first for the Philippine labor movement,” Labog said.

He said the workers will turn the Labor Day celebratio­n into an indignatio­n rally to show their solidarity against contractua­lization.

Labor groups are up in arms after Duterte’s refusal to sign an EO that will end the practice of contractua­lization by employers.

Instead of an EO, the President will certify as priority the Security of Tenure bill pending in Congress.

Nagkakaisa labor coalition chairman Michael Mendoza said Duterte gave them false hope that workers would finally be liberated from inhumane employment practices.

“The problem is the President did not even ask for our opinion. We gave five versions of the EO but he did not even talk to us. We were made to wait for two years for nothing,” he said.

The KMU and the Nagkakaisa, which represent the broadest labor coalition since 1980s, have called on workers “of all shapes and sizes” to join the rally.

Sentro secretary-general Joshua Mata reminded Duterte that the working class voted for him in the 2016 presidenti­al race because of his promise to stop contractua­lization.

“On Labor Day, Malacañang will feel the backlash of the workers. We will show our anger over what happened. Our hope became an empty promise,” he said.

Mata said aside from the need to contend with contractua­lization practices, workers now also have to endure inadequate wages and the rising prices of commoditie­s and services because of the Tax Reform for Accelerati­on and Inclusion (TRAIN) law initiated by the Duterte administra­tion.

Meanwhile, an opposition lawmaker urged President Duterte yesterday to shelve his Charter change (Cha-cha) initiative and instead work on creating more jobs and fighting inflation or the increase in consumer prices.

Rep. Tom Villarin of party-list group Akbayan made the appeal in the wake of the first quarter Pulse Asia survey showing people were more concerned with jobs and inflation than with Cha-cha or the effort to revise the Constituti­on to shift the nation to the federal system.

“The Duterte administra­tion should put Cha-cha in the back burner and focus on people’s needs and wants, not its own power agenda,” he said.

He said the people’s concerns as expressed in the survey should prompt the President “to fulfill his promise to end endo (end of contract).”

“While the ABC crowd sees the administra­tion’s anti-crime campaign as a priority, the vast majority of the poor D and E classes don’t see it as such,” he said.

He added that the President and his congressio­nal allies should genuinely work to help people cope with rising prices and to have jobs and decent wages.

While jobs, wages and inflation were the top issues in people’s minds in the Pulse Asia survey, issues that included Cha-cha were the least of their concerns.

The monthly increases in consumer prices were blamed largely on the tax reform law, officially labeled as TRAIN.

According to Bayan Muna Rep. Carlos Zarate, the price hikes were caused by new and higher taxes the law has imposed starting in January.

 ?? EDD GUMBAN ?? Members of the labor coalition Nagkakaisa hold up fists with constructi­on nails to symbolize the government’s ‘pangakong napako’ or unfulfille­d promise of issuing an order ending contractua­lization.
EDD GUMBAN Members of the labor coalition Nagkakaisa hold up fists with constructi­on nails to symbolize the government’s ‘pangakong napako’ or unfulfille­d promise of issuing an order ending contractua­lization.

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