Before the big day of warning strikes in public transport in Germany, Germany’s employers accuse the unions of excessive action. “Anyone who acts like this is disproportionate and jeopardizes acceptance of the right to strike,” said the chief executive of the Confederation of German Employers’ Associations (BDA), Steffen Kampeter, of the German Press Agency in Berlin.

This Monday, the traffic will be comprehensively struck. The unprecedented warning strike includes long-distance, regional and S-Bahn traffic on the rails, many German airports, waterways and ports as well as motorways. The railway and transport union (EVG) and Verdi are fighting for more income in different collective bargaining rounds.

The President of the Association of Municipal Employers’ Associations (VKA), Karin Welge, finds the massive strike “not ok”, as she said in Berlin. She called on the unions to give constructive signals for the third round of collective bargaining for the municipal and federal public sector, which begins on Monday – in addition to the collective bargaining talks at the railways, the decisive background for the warning strikes. “The unions should be careful not to overdo it,” said Welge.

Kampeter warns of strikes like in France

Kampeter warned that the fight for members should not radicalize collective bargaining in Germany. “A look at France shows where it leads when you go down the incline.” In France, strikes are comparatively frequent – most recently particularly violently against President Emmanuel Macron’s pension reform.

The airline association Barig, to which most German providers belong as well as international providers, criticized the actions of the unions as “irresponsible”. “The disproportionately severely restricted mobility makes national and international traffic flows, the transport of goods, possibly important humanitarian aid deliveries and social coexistence more difficult,” said Barig boss Michael Hoppe.

The previous day, Bahn HR Director Martin Seiler had asked the EVG to return to the negotiating table immediately. Kampeter also emphasized: “We call on Verdi and the EVG to return to the negotiating table without any ifs or buts.”

Public transport is brought to a standstill

What is unusual about the planned warning strike is that it overlaps with the negotiations – namely the third round beginning in Potsdam for the 2.5 million federal and local employees. However, the procedure is legally possible, as the collective bargaining expert Thorsten Schulten from the WSI institute of the Hans Böckler Foundation, which is close to the trade union, told the German Press Agency.

Because the peace obligation ended when the previous collective agreement expired. According to Schulten, nothing stands in the way of a large-scale warning strike with an overlap of two tariff areas. The employers see the legal limits at least exhausted in the massive strike.

Kampeter criticized: “Large strikes that are supposed to paralyze a country are not warning strikes.” The head of the Federal Association of Medium-Sized Businesses (BVMW), Markus Jerger, told the German Press Agency: “Companies and the population must not be taken hostage for demands that are not expedient in the current economic situation.”

Standstill should prevail almost everywhere in public transport as a result of the comprehensive warning strike on Monday. The railway stops all long-distance traffic. Also in regional traffic “mostly no trains will run”. Many airports are affected – including Frankfurt and Munich airports. Local transport is to stand still in seven federal states. Locks on important waterways and the port of Hamburg, for example, are also to be struck.