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VAXHOLM

Sweden ‘violates the rights’ of guest workers

A European human rights body slammed Sweden on Wednesday for failing to guarantee equal rights for foreign guest workers, in a rebuke of reforms stemming from a case involving Latvian construction workers.

Sweden 'violates the rights' of guest workers

Unions have now called for the government to respond.

"It's high time the government acts to reassure any concerns about jobs, salary competition, and employment conditions on the Swedish labour force," Swedish Trade Union Confederation (LO) Karl-Petter Thorwaldsson said in a statement following the ruling.

Wednesday's finding by the Council of Europe's European Committee on Social Rights (ECSR) addresses the fallout from a 2004 case in which construction workers' union Byggnads set up a blockade in Vaxholm, in the Stockholm archipelago, where a construction team from Latvian company Laval was building a school.

The Latvian workers were not being paid the Swedish minimum wage, and the Swedish Electricians' Union (Elektrikerna) even joined in the blockade.

The incident prompted a precedent-setting ruling from the European Court of Justice, which in 2007 found that the trade unions' actions restricted the freedom to provide services within the EU. The incident is also nicknamed "The Vaxholm Conflict". In 2010, the Swedish government changed the law in a manner that made it harder for unions to enforce collective action in the defence of foreign workers' rights.

The unions were told to pay 2.7 million kronor ($392,000) for the Latvian company's subsequent court cases and "general damages" in what is also referred to as the "Vaxholm Conflict". Sweden also implemented a number of changes to its laws to comply with the ruling. However, unions have alleged that the reforms, known as the 'Laval law', restrict the rights to freedom of association and collective bargaining.

On Wednesday, ECSR issued a ruling supporting the union's position, finding that foreign workers in Sweden should have the same rights as other workers. 

The council noted that, among other things, there was an absence of accessibility to voluntary negotiations between employers and worker organizations, and disproportionate restrictions on the right of trade unions to take collective action in order to regulate employment terms of posted workers.

The mostly blue-collar Swedish Trade Union Confederation (LO) and its white-collar colleagues at TCO jad reported the ruling to the International Labour Organization (ILO) in 2010, claiming it did not respect international treaties on the freedom of association (föreningsrätten).

Spokespersons for the two unions were pleased the issue had been taken further, and urged the Swedish government to take further measures.

"The Council of Europe's criticism is directly aimed to the Laval law that the government approved in 2010 and which contributes to makes LO members anxious," said LO chairman Thorwaldsson. 

TCO chairwoman Eva Nordmark added that the statement from the council "further increased the pressure on Sweden" to change the Laval legislation.

"The Swedish government must now get back to the committee with a report of which measures they will take on the committee's recommendations," their joint statement read.

Wednesday's statement from the council was not the first occasion that Sweden has been in the spotlight for the Laval law. In February, the UN also took aim at Sweden, claiming the law contradicted workers right to free association.

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VAXHOLM

Foreign workers at centre of Swedish election battle

Promises by the Social Democrats to roll back reforms to Swedish laws affecting migrant workers has put the rights of foreign workers and the power of Sweden's unions front and centre in upcoming parliamentary elections, argues liberal contributor Nima Sanandaji.

Foreign workers at centre of Swedish election battle
A scene from the Vaxholm union blockade in 2004. File photo: TT
The question of foreign workers' situation in Sweden is on its way to becoming an important topic in the upcoming election
 
Social Democrat leader Stefan Löfven recently promised to change legislation to ensure that “Swedish collective bargaining agreements apply in Sweden”.  
 
The issue is centered on a fairly complicated story of how a Latvian construction company won the bid to rebuild a school in the Stockholm suburb of Vaxholm back in 2004, and in so doing had a significant impact on Swedish labour law and the country's relationship with the European Union.
 
At the time, Swedish labour union Byggnads, which organizes construction workers, demanded that the Latvian company follow a Swedish collective bargaining deal stipulating relatively high wages. When these demands were not met, the union blockaded the building site. 
 
Construction was stopped and the Swedish branch of the Latvian construction company was forced into bankruptcy. Shouts of “Go home, go home!” from a Byggnads representative came to symbolize a perceived intolerance for foreign competition among Swedish blue-collar workers.
 
Nearly ten years have passed since the conflict started. Since the initial conflict, two Swedish unions Byggnads and Elektrikerna (which organizes electricians and joined in a sympathy action) have been forced to pay a fine for waging an illegal strike. 
 
Sweden also passed new legislation on the rights of foreign workers, dubbed Lex Laval, reforms that unions argue made it harder to enforce collective action in the defence of foreign workers' rights.
 
Two weeks ago, the reforms were condemned by a European human rights body, and last week Löfven appeared with the head of Sweden's largest blue-collar trade union group, LO, promising to overturn the Lex Laval reforms should the Social Democrats assume power after the next election.
 
So where do the government and the opposition differ in their opinions on the subject? Lex Laval was introduced by the center-right Alliance government to bring Sweden in compliance with a 2007 European Court of Justice ruling against the unions' actions in the Vaxholm conflict. 
 
The reforms prevent unions in Sweden from starting conflicts against foreign companies, as they did to Laval in 2004, unless foreign firms fail to adhere to minimum wags and benefit requirements set by collective agreements in Sweden.
 
The Social Democrats and the labour unions, on the other hand, want to give unions the right to demand higher wages than those stipulated by minimum requirements, and to start conflicts if these are not met. The International Labour Organization (ILO) as well as the European Committee on Social Rights (ECSR) have come out in favour of the latter idea. 
 
A third perspective might be for unions to stop blockading or otherwise attacking firms that do not follow collective agreements – an option open even if the employees in the firms in question do not themselves wish to be included in such agreements. But this third perspective is hardly voiced in the Swedish debate.
 
The debate about the rights of foreign workers and Swedish unions has been given new life in the context of electoral politics which finds the Social Democrats fighting for the affections of blue-collar workers, many of whom are also attracted to the populist, anti-immigration rhetoric of the far-right Sweden Democrats. Indeed, nearly one in five LO members would vote for the Sweden Democrats, a November 2013 poll revealed.
 
However, Sweden's blue-collar workers are likely to support the Social Democrats' stance on Lex Laval. Thus restricting downward foreign pressure Swedish wages might well be an election-year promise that will move workers who have begun supporting the Sweden Democrats back into the Social Democrats. 
 
Of course, the more free-market oriented government has criticized the Social Democrats position as being too protectionist. But protectionism on the labour market is not always unpopular politically; not least in the current situation where Sweden, like many other modern economies, is suffering from a lack of job opportunities for workers who lack higher education.
 
Nima Sanandaji, a Swedish writer of Kurdish origin with a PhD in polymer technology, has written numerous books and reports about subjects such as integration, entrepreneurship, and women's career opportunities. His recent book, published by Sweden's Reforminstitutet think tank, is entitled Krympande eller växande städer ('Shrinking or growing cities'). He is a regular contributor to The Local.
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