Connect with us

Jobs

Germany: IG Metall union organizes job cuts

Published

on

Germany: IG Metall union organizes job cuts

On Tuesday, several thousand steelworkers demonstrated in front of the main Thyssenkrupp plant in the north of Duisburg, Germany. Their union, IG Metall, brought them there from all Thyssenkrupp sites in North Rhine-Westphalia, and from Hüttenwerke Krupp Mannesmann (HKM) in the south of the city of Duisburg.

Protest in front of the ThyssenKrupp headquarters in Duisburg

IG Metall and its works councils, supported by the federal and state governments, made it unmistakably clear to the workers that they support the destruction of thousands of jobs. This is the real meaning of the motto “Future instead of layoffs,” the slogan for the event.

When Supervisory Board Chairman Sigmar Gabriel and the management hinted in February and March that up to 5,000 jobs could be cut, IG Metall and the works council reacted immediately. They agreed to the job cuts; they merely wanted to have a say in how it was done. Tekin Nasikkol, the former head of the Steel Works Council and now head of the Group General Works Council, reiterated that he would “not allow” the exclusion of compulsory redundancies to be changed until March 2026.

More than half of the 179,000 jobs in the German steel industry have been destroyed with this mechanism since German reunification in 1990. Not a single job has been lost through compulsory redundancies. On the contrary, every decision to close plants and cut jobs was signed by IG Metall.

Detlef Wetzel, the former IG Metall boss and deputy chairman of the supervisory board of Thyssenkrupp Stahl, has already announced plans to ultimately agree a further waiver of compulsory redundancies, when another “future agreement” has assured the reduction of thousands of jobs. IG Metall and its works councils wish to sell this as another success.

Many workers the Socialist Equality Party (SGP) spoke to at the rally were worried about their jobs.

Mehmet and Emin

Mehmet from Thyssenkrupp in Hohenlimburg wants to keep his job. “We all have to stick together,” said the process engineer, who came with other young colleagues. “No one can do this on his own.”

Continue Reading