South Korea trucker strike poses early test for new president
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[June 10, 2022]
By Hyonhee Shin
SEOUL (Reuters) - A strike by South Korean
truckers poses an early test for President Yoon Suk-yeol after a month
in office, with the dispute threatening to distract from his agenda
while raising the risk of long-term antagonism with powerful trade
unions.
Thousands of truckers went on strike for a fourth day on Friday in a
protest over pay as fuel costs surge, disrupting industrial production,
slowing port operations and posing new risks to a strained global supply
chain.
A political novice and former prosecutor-general, the conservative Yoon
criticised trade unions he sees as hardline during the campaign for his
May election victory, calling them "front-line guards" for his political
opponents and instigators of trouble despite the generous salaries their
members earn.
Yoon has kept his distance from this week's strike, saying it was up to
the unions and management to solve it, but Shin Yul, a political science
professor at Myongji University in Seoul, said a prolonged strike could
undermine support for Yoon and distract him from his economic and
security agenda.
"Labour strikes tend to hurt the popularity of any administration," Shin
said.
Yoon's focus is on tackling surging inflation at home and working with
the United States and other allies on responding to North Korea's
intensifying weapons tests, amid expectations it is about to conduct its
seventh nuclear test.
Try as Yoon might to steer clear of the industrial dispute, it has a
political element at its core that he will find hard to ignore the
longer the strike goes on.
The truckers, largely self-employed, are demanding pay increases and an
extension of a "safe rates" system, introduced during the COVID-19
pandemic to guarantee minimum freight rates, which is due to expire in
December.
Legislation to extend the system was introduced in parliament last year,
under the administration of a liberal president who enjoyed the backing
of the trade unions.
Now the bill is bogged down in the legislature with no sign of a
compromise.
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Members of the Cargo Truckers Solidarity union take part in a
protest in front of Kia Motor's factory tin Gwangju, South Korea,
June 10, 2022. Yonhap via REUTERS
'DILEMMA'
The liberal Democrats, who hold a majority in parliament, accuse
Yoon's conservative party of blocking the bill. Yoon's supporters
deny that, accusing the Democrats of dodging their responsibility
for the deadlock.
South Korea has a long record of activist trade unions taking on
governments, especially conservative ones.
"It poses a thorny dilemma," Kim Dong-won, a management professor at
Korea University's business school, said of Yoon's options. "If he
decides to crack down on the strikers, it might lead to criticism of
labour repression and the sort of severe conflicts that past
conservative leaderships have faced."
"But the new government won't want to look too soft and let this
become a source of future, potentially more intensive, labour rows,"
Kim said.
Critics of the striking truckers say giving in to them would put a
big burden on industry just as the country is grappling with
inflation at near 14-year high and after the previous liberal
government raised the minimum wage by a record amount.
Yoon is trying to remain aloof, calling for the union and management
to resolve the dispute on the basis of law and principles.
"If the government intervenes all the time and gets too involved
according to public sentiment, it doesn't help either side at all to
build their own capability and environment to smoothly resolve the
problem," he told reporters this week.
Yoon brushed off his campaign-trail criticism of the unions.
"How can a person who is hostile toward labour become a politician?"
he said.
(Reporting by Hyonhee Shin; Additional reporting by Heekyong Yang;
Editing by Robert Birsel)
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