In this article, we aim to examine how class as a category of conflict and struggle is understood and shaped discursively in mainstream media today. We do this by studying the case of the Swedish news media's representation of the long-lasting conflict in the Swedish labour market between the Swedish Dockworkers’ Union [Svenska Hamnarbetarförbundet] and the employer's organisation, Sweden's Ports [Sveriges Hamnar]. Departing from critical theory, we view exploitation as the core of the social relationship between capital and labour and argue that the structure of class is defined by conflicts of interest (Marx, 1996; Wright, 2005). Using critical discourse analysis as a method, we analyse how the named labour market conflict is constructed via editorial and journalistic choices.
Studying the news media's representation of class relations is central to understanding how the media reinforces or challenges reigning neoliberal politics and the post-political condition that has characterised Western democracy under neoliberal rule. We argue that today's societies are largely defined by neoliberal politics and the ideals of market logic, implemented on a large scale in the form of increased deregulation and privatisation (Harvey, 2010). Neoliberal capitalism has widened the gaps between the capitalist class and the working class in terms of economic inequality (Therborn, 2018). This is also the case in Sweden, a country that historically has had a strong labour movement and low levels of inequality, where the distance between rich and poor is rising faster than in any other OECD country (OECD, 2017). In the labour market specifically, neoliberalism has brought a change in labour relations and has weakened unions, with the power balance between labour and capital shifting to an increased advantage for the employer (Lindberg & Neergard, 2013; Rehmann, 2013). This has been identified as a development (in Sweden and internationally) where the workers’ power to influence their working conditions is fading (Allvin & Sverke, 2000; Furåker, 2005; Kjellberg, 2011). It has been noted that the implementation of neoliberal politics with an increase in insecure employment and decreased workers’ power is a rather silent process that does not involve thorough debate (Bengtsson, 2008; Grönlund, 2004). The acceptance of neoliberal capitalism as common sense among those in the political mainstream in the West, a general positioning towards the political centre, and the lack of thorough ideological debate are what scholars have characterised as a post-political condition (Mouffe, 2005).
The above indicates changed power relations between actors in the labour market in a neoliberal and post-political context. In this article, we address these issues and discuss how the union's and business representatives’ sides are represented in media discourse and how the way problems are defined in the port conflict can be understood from a class perspective.
Previous research about the representation of class in the media, especially that of (reality) television, has focused on questions of voice and morality and exposed some sort of middle-class gaze characterising class representations, leading to the underrepresentation of the working class and the construction of the working class as morally problematic (Bennett, 2013; Eriksson, 2015; Jakobsson & Stiernstedt, 2018a, 2018b; Lawler, 2005; Lyle, 2008; Skeggs, 2004; Skeggs & Wood, 2011; Stiernstedt & Jakobsson, 2019). Studies focusing on international journalism (Abalo, 2017; Lugo-Ocando, 2015) have highlighted how the objectivistic nature of journalism serves to reify class relations and accept the politics behind inequality.
Closer to this study, analyses of the representation of class and labour relations in news journalism identify a more subtle form of weakening the power of the working class. The seminal work by the Glasgow Media Group (1976, 1980) shows how the British news coverage of the coal miners’ strike in the 1980s promotes society's dominant ideology, where workers’ voices are backgrounded and considered less important than management voices. A more recent study (Hart, 2017) shows that the same strike is framed as a war – a type of framing used to push an anti-trade-union agenda in the media. Kumar (2007), in a study of the coverage of the UPS strike in American corporate media, shows how class conflict to some extent is neutralised by the use of a nationalist perspective, where the interests of the capitalists are perceived as the interests of the nation. Research has also found the mainstream media to conceal corporations’ responsibility when reporting on poor working conditions in the Global South (Cotal San Martin, 2019). Scholars have also noted a decline in the labour beat (Martin, 2007; Nerone 2009) In the Swedish context, studies of news journalism during a labour-market crisis point to how the working class is dismantled as a collective due to the journalistic focus on individualised problem descriptions (Jacobsson & Ekström, 2016) and the way the main journalistic story is centred around the business elite and market logic (Jacobsson, 2018).
It has been argued that workers in today's capitalist society are rarely a class for themselves (in terms of class consciousness or collective organisation to change their conditions), as the neoliberal neglect of structural inequalities does not acknowledge class as an important category (Harvey, 2010; Lawler, 2005; Savage et al., 2001). The study of discourses in conjunction with conflicts in the labour market is therefore particularly important, as these events represent critical situations where the power balance between labour and capital inevitably becomes visible. With this study, we contribute to the understanding of class and the media by focusing on class as a relation of struggle and conflict in capitalism, which lets us scrutinise how the media recontextualises that sort of antagonism, and how such representations, in the end, serve to challenge or reinforce class rule.
The next section presents our theoretical framework. We then present our methods and materials. Subsequently, the results of the study are presented, followed by the study's conclusions.
We understand the representation of class in the media as situated in a larger context of political power struggles in society, especially the reinforcement and contestation of capitalist hegemony. Before discussing the media's role in such struggles, we begin by outlining our understanding of class, class struggle, and class interests.
Class is here understood from a Marxist perspective, emphasising the power relations between different groups in a specific locus of capitalist production. The emphasis on relations and structure in this approach makes “class” an adjective rather than a noun (Wright, 2005). Thus, rather than exploring specific clusters, groups, or individuals as a class – which is commonly done in sociology – this perspective lets us analyse the class character of specific relations, involving groups and individuals. Central to this understanding of class is the concept of exploitation, which considers, in a class relationship, the material deprivation of one group relative to another, where the exploited is excluded from specific production resources and the exploiter is provided material advantages (Wright, 2005). In capitalism, exploitation is tied to the capitalist's subtraction of surplus value from the worker's labour, which provides the former with material advantages over the latter. This uneven power relationship puts conflict at the core of class relations, making class interests and class struggle pivotal for the understanding of class agency (Wright, 2005). Class interests constitute “the material interests of people derived from their location-within-class-relations” and explain the actions of groups and individuals in relation to class (Wright, 2005: 21). The capitalist and the worker have opposing class interests because, in general, what enhances the power of one group restricts the power of the other. This takes us to class struggle, which is the “conflicts between the practices of individuals and collectivities in pursuit of opposing class interests” (Wright, 2005: 21). As Wright (2005) notes, the forms of class struggle can vary from strategies undertaken by individual workers to reduce the workload, to the organised struggle between worker and capitalist collectivities.
This understanding of class helps us conceptualise the analysed port conflict as an articulation of class struggle, where the opposed class interests of the dockworkers and the employer's organisation are expressed through the conflict at hand. This does not mean that other conceptualisations of class are not useful for understanding the complex character of class, or that gender or ethnicity are not important as relations of domination; however, the conceptualisation outlined above puts the focus on the antagonism inherent in class relationships such as the one between the dockworkers and their employers. By centring on class as a relationship of conflict, it is then possible to understand how the news media, by reporting on the port strike, also represent questions of class.
The relationship between class and the news media is multifaceted, and it is here approached through the concept of hegemony, which in brief means the rule of a social group by consent and under moral and intellectual leadership (Gramsci, 1971). At the core of this leadership is ideology, or the worldviews that are disseminated and established in such arenas as the political system, the school system, and the media. Hegemony is always challenged and in motion, and in order to achieve consent, the ruling social groups must compromise without compromising the core of hegemony – the material basis of the leadership itself. In capitalism, this core is class rule and the mode of production that makes class relations inevitable.
The news media's role in building hegemony has partly to do with being, for the most part, profit-oriented enterprises that are sites of class relations themselves. Market logics have led to ownership concentration and the naturalisation of a corporate business model (Herman & McChesney, 1997), to an increased rationalisation in newsrooms (Davis, 2010; Freedman, 2010), and to fostering elite-centred and state-protecting perspectives (Herman & Chomsky, 2002). Moreover, understanding the production process, which is heavily routinised (Tuchman, 1978), is key. Allan (1999) argues that journalism takes a bureaucratic understanding of society for granted, which leads to a hierarchy of credibility, where actors at society's top are more likely to become sources in the media. Such sources become what Hall and colleagues (1978) call primary definers and are given the power to establish the problem to be addressed, at the same time as they delimit the perspectives that fit the story. Furthermore, Hallin (1989) points to the relationship between the values in newsrooms and the dominant values in society. Things that are generally perceived as consensual in society will face little or no debate in the media, whereas what are considered legitimate controversies are treated as objectively and neutrally as possible. Hallin's reasoning helps explain the limits of debate in the news media and implies that norms and dominant perspectives in society serve to constrain media production and limit the manoeuvring space for media actors. In the context of a seemingly economically and ideologically unchallenged capitalism, editorial choices can, in this sense, serve the reproduction of market-friendly and class-dominant perspectives by adhering to norms and dominant values in society. However, this is not to say that the media are free from critique. The hegemonic workings of the media are to integrate deviant perspectives, which, however, are absorbed by the dominant view (Allan, 1998; Gitlin, 2003). Media research on the representation of class issues has shown that a nationalist framework in the media can absorb class-related problems by pointing to national well-being, which is made to cohere with the interests of the elite (Kumar, 2007; Salter & Weltman, 2011). In this way, the media can take a “neutral” stance, include critical voices, and in the end, promote the status quo.
The conflict between the Swedish Dockworkers’ Union and Sweden's Ports has roots in the 1970s, when the Dockworkers’ Union broke away from the Transport Workers’ Union (Transport), which in turn is part of the Swedish Trade Union Confederation (LO). Since then, the Dockworkers’ Union has lacked a collective bargaining deal, which instead has been signed by the employers and the LO-affiliated union, despite the Dockworkers’ Union being the biggest union in some of the ports. The conflict at hand has therefore been about the rights to sign a bargaining deal and to take part in local negotiations, rather than being about salaries.
The analysed conflict erupted in 2017 in the port of Gothenburg, which, since 2012, has been run by Maersk-owned APM Terminals. According to the Dockworkers’ Union, in April 2018, the port management did not recognise the union as the workers’ representatives, because the bargaining agreement had been signed with Transport. Among other things, this denied the Dockworkers’ Union the right to have their own safety officials and to be part of local negotiations (Hamnarbetarförbundet, 2019). This escalated the conflict, which then led to lockouts called for by the employers, as well as national point strikes called for by the Dockworkers’ Union. After several months of conflict, a second-hand bargaining agreement was signed by the Dockworkers’ Union and Sweden's Ports.
The conflict was also used as an argument for restricting the strike law in Sweden, with the industry claiming it to be unreasonable for workers to be allowed to strike if the workplace already has a bargaining agreement with a union. In June 2019, a restricted strike law – drafted by LO, the white-collar confederation Tjänstemännens Centralorganisation (TCO), and the Confederation of Swedish Enterprise – was passed (Bengtsson, 2019).
In this study, we analyse material from the print versions of three Swedish newspapers:
The studied material covers the period between 1 January 2017 and 30 November 2019, making it possible to follow the different stages of the conflict. The material was retrieved through the database Retriever Mediearkivet in December 2019 by searching with the keywords “Hamnarbetarförbundet” [the Dockworkers’ Union] and “Sveriges hamnar” [Sweden's ports]. With these keywords, it was possible to retrieve material that mentions any of the key actors in the conflict. In total, 91 items were analysed (see Table 1). Items exclusively addressing online-only articles were excluded, as were the web articles these blurbs referred to.
Overview of the material
News, general | 2 | 1 | 2 | 5 |
Economy news | 0 | 31 | 23 | 54 |
Editorials | 4 | 1 | 3 | 9 |
Debate | 3 | 3 | 8 | 14 |
Cultural columns | 5 | 1 | 0 | 6 |
Blurbs | 0 | 0 | 4 | 4 |
Total | 14 | 37 | 40 | 91 |
Critical discourse analysis (CDA) is utlised to identify the assumptions and ideas that underpin the media discourses. This choice is based on CDA's being a form of discourse analysis with a specific focus on how language use interrelates with power and ideology (see Wodak & Meyer, 2009). According to CDA, discourse is a form of social practice which is central in the reproduction and transformation of the social status quo. This pairs discourse with ideology. Genre – how a particular social activity is categorised and placed within a language-specific interpretational frame – is of central importance (Fairclough, 1993).
The first step of the analysis was an initial mapping of the content in the news coverage to get an overview of what the story is about and how the conflict is understood. This was followed by a more detailed reading of how the conflict is recontextualised (Machin & Mayr, 2012) – how meaning is created, what is made salient, and what is obscured. In the more detailed reading, we looked for the following in the discourse:
Surface elements: article type, section, source, and visual elements (Carvalho, 2008). Objects: the broad and narrow topics that are constructed (Carvalho, 2008). Salience/suppression: what actors, voices, events, and perspectives are being foregrounded and backgrounded (Machin & Mayr, 2012). Presuppositions: concepts and worldviews that are taken for granted, and underlying assumptions (Machin & Mayr, 2012). Discursive strategies: the ways in which actors shape reality in a certain direction. Two strategies are looked for in the journalistic voice and the quoted actors, respectively: framing strategies (choice of angles), and legitimation (justification of actions) (Carvalho, 2008). Lexical choices: what words are used and how they convey different levels of authority (Machin & Mayr, 2012).
There are some differences between the newspapers in terms of genre and discourse types.
In the following, we present two discursive patterns identified from the analysis of how class relations are constructed, based on how problems, solutions, and responsibilities are constructed; what is presupposed, made salient, and suppressed; and what lexical choices are made. The first, which appears more generally in the materials, concerns the naturalisation of capitalist class interests, where the construction emphasises the port workers’ struggle as destructive to the nation. The second, mainly present in the few cultural columns and expressed by individual worker or leftist voices, is the critique against class relations, recontextualised as subjective opinion. These two discursive patterns serve important hegemonic roles: the first by naturalising a hegemonic corporate perspective, and the second by absorbing and neutralising critique.
One way in which class relations are constructed is by naturalising corporate interests. Through this frame, the conflict becomes a disruptive element within a context characterised by a seeming consensus regarding the priority of market rationales and corporate and national interests. Central here is the construction of the conflict as hurting business and Swedish society rather than business logics being the cause of the conflict.
The context of neoliberal hegemony and the firm establishment of genre – as noted in the decision of the liberal and conservative morning papers to report much of the conflict as economic news – constructs a hierarchical order between the capitalist and labour perspective. In terms of presuppositions, it becomes clear that the imaginable society is one where capitalism goes on without disturbances. Headlines such as “The port conflict a threat to the export giants” (Cederblad, SvD, 19 May 2017), and “Total strike makes the business world hold its breath” (SvD, 5 March 2019) are examples of a recurring theme where the conflict is framed as hurting business. All excerpts are translated from Swedish by the authors. The business world is holding its breath and now planning for how to keep production going and clients safe. There is great uncertainty about how the Dockworkers’ Union's announced strike will hit Swedish businesses. Anna Lööf at Teknikföretagen says the strike will hit society hard. Sweden is one of the world's most export-dependent nations. There will surely be effects that are dangerous to society.
The lexical choices centred around uncertainty and danger construct an image of working-class interests as damaging to society. This discursive construction of the conflict corresponds to a hegemonic frame within which recurring opinion pieces, as well as journalistic news articles and editorial interpretations of the conflict, are situated.
In line with this, there are examples where pro-business opinions function as the voice of reason, and the market is legitimised, which can be seen in quotations of business actors and in opinion materials by pro-market voices. Moreover, one can find the capitalist class interests being put forward as central to the interests of the nation and the public good, as in a debate article by the economic-political spokesperson of the Liberal Party:
The conflict is accordingly about what a reasonable conflict action is in relation to public interest. To the Swedish export industry, access to the Gothenburg port is crucial for competitive power.
The establishment of the port conflict as something threatening business, the nation, and the common good is accompanied by arguments claiming workers’ power must be restricted. A common corporate expectation or demand for how to end the conflict is political intervention through legislation. In a debate article in The government has taken responsibility for the serious situation and launched an investigation, with the assignment to revise the right-to-conflict action to protect the collective agreement. But there are critical voices against this. Do those who criticise the investigation not understand what is at stake?
This reasoning implies that those raising pro-worker opinions have not understood the consequences of the conflict, and implicitly, how paving the way for capital is in everyone's best interest. This way of looking at the conflict, where the capitalist interests are made synonymous with the common good, and the dockworkers are identified as the threat, is also echoed in economy news articles. The need for political intervention to protect capitalist class interests is, in different ways, discursively shaped as being synonymous with protecting the industry and Swedish society:
Johan Trouvé, CEO of the West Swedish chamber of commerce thinks it is good the government acts and emphasises how the conflict not only affects Gothenburg but the whole Swedish industry. “This is a national concern and we are right now on the verge of a situation that is dangerous for society”, says Trouvé.
Moreover, in the economy news article “’The Dockworkers’ Union abuses the conflict weapon’” (Nandorf, DN, 21 January 2018), the vice CEO of the Confederation of Swedish Enterprise is the only actor quoted. He voices distrust of the workers’ willingness to end the conflict, by saying that,
“The Dockworkers’ Union is abusing the conflict weapon. They say they use conflict actions to sign a collective agreement, but in reality, they want to affect how APM Terminals organise the work, the forms of compensation upon employment termination, and a lot of strange demands”. […] “I cannot see the parties solving this situation. A change in the law is needed”.
Here, the actions and demands of the Dockworkers’ Union are delegitimised in an “explanation” of what they
In the analysed material, voice is given to various business representatives and liberal and conservative voices pushing for a change to the strike law. Analysis reveals how the social democratic minister of labour is constructed as agreeing with a change in legislation, for example, in an interview in Ylva Johansson underlined that it isn’t the government's place to interfere directly in a conflict. “As minister of labour, I am, however, responsible for the legislations. I think we have a need to strengthen the laws in order for the successful Swedish model to function”, says Johansson.
A change in legislation is shaped here as a condition to protect the interests of the nation and the Swedish model. An unexpected result is the representation of social democratic voices as being sceptical about workers using the conflict weapon, as implicitly expressed in the quotation of Johansson above, and voiced in the editorial of the social democratic Take the negotiations of 2017 as an example. The national mediation office notes that nearly 500 agreements were signed. Only in 15 cases were state mediators needed, and not one single negotiation about a national agreement ended with a strike or lockout.
The lack of conflict is highlighted as a positive side of the agreement model, although the editorial also criticises an employee organisation that is claimed to have forced external mediation in some instances. These standpoints coming from social democratic voices serve to legitimise the role of LO-affiliated unions as the negotiators with the industry, something that is at the heart of the Swedish model, and something that is challenged by the Dockworker's Union's struggle. Against the seeming agreement between social democratic voices and business representatives, stressing the urgency to protect the interests of the nation, the Swedish model, and the public good, the actions and standpoints of the Dockworkers Union come across as hard to understand, sometimes as unreasonable actions disrupting the social order. This implies that attempts to protect working-class interests through conflict become something irresponsible and are framed as actions opposing the best interests of the nation – that is, they are constructed as the problem, which indicates a kind of class compromise where one-sided capitulations from the working class are expected (see Wright, 2000).
In conclusion, this corporate framing about the port conflict turns class conflict into a battle where the nation's interests and the public good are at stake, and where protecting working-class interests through conflict becomes synonymous with disrupting vital societal functions. This naturalises capitalist class interests as common sense and serves to further legitimise neoliberal hegemony.
The hegemonic workings of the media do not normally imply the complete omission of deviant or critical perspectives, but rather the absorption of these into the hegemonic framework, which in turn neutralises these positions (Allan, 1999; Gitlin, 2003). In the analysed material, the corporate viewpoints that guide much of the representation of the port conflict are complemented by constructions that in one way or another point to antagonistic interests between employers and workers. These constructions, however, are mainly portrayed as the subjective opinions of specific social actors, primarily by being set forth in opinion materials or by being attributed in news articles to a specific actor. We argue that this leads to the creation of a view where the existence of class struggle and antagonistic class interests – especially in relation to employers – are a subjective opinion rather than a central mechanism within capitalism. This, in turn, serves to foster the naturalisation of a corporate worldview, as observed in the previous section.
On one level, critique can be seen in quotations from and opinion materials by representatives from the Dockworker's Union, which centre their arguments around the need to sign a collective agreement and the dockworkers’ democratic rights. When cited in news articles, these representatives comment or justify specific measures in the conflict. For example, a union representative states that “it is of course sad that they [businesses] suffer in this way”, while also stressing the need to defend their union members (Littorin, DN, 18 August 2017). Moreover, in debate articles, the Dockworkers’ Union argues for labour peace and good working conditions, and in one instance, defends their conflict measures by pointing to the employers’ organisation and claiming, “It is you who threaten the Swedish model” (Berg, AB, 5 March 2019).
On another level, there are examples from opinion pieces where class struggle – in the form of a discursive emphasis on antagonistic interests between capitalists and workers – is constructed more directly. This discourse is embedded in a pro-worker critique against neoliberalism, the corporate class's attempts to increase their power vis-à-vis the workers, and the traditional workers’ movement's compliance with this. Such discourse can, mainly, be found in the cultural pages of […] and in Gothenburg social democrats and bourgeois politicians have, by common accord, put the port in the hands of Danish Maersk, a major group that has resolved to decrease the number of permanent employees to a fifth and paralysed great portions of the terminal tasks in its strive to crush the Dockworkers’ Union. The government answers with a review of new restrictions to the right to strike. We should be thankful that garbage men, dockworkers, and others are trying to clean up the mess. It is time to help out.
This framing positions the interests of Maersk as antagonistic to the dockworkers’ interests, which leads to a struggle between them. Similarly, in another cultural piece for
Moreover, a debate article written by three local-level LO representatives and signed by over 100 people makes references to the “incentives” of corporations to sign bargaining agreements (Bäckman et al., SvD, 31 January 2019). According to the authors, the proposed restrictions on the right to strike – which is what they argue against in the article – would take away corporations’ incentives to sign bargaining agreements with the biggest unions. In this argument lies a presupposition that pairs incentives with conflict, which in turn reveals a view of antagonistic interests and struggle between workers and their employers.
Examples of this kind of discourse are rare in news articles, although there are a couple of examples from
With the aim of examining how class as a category of conflict and struggle is understood and shaped discursively in mainstream media today, this study has examined the Swedish news media's coverage and (re)presentation of various opinions related to the recent port conflict in Sweden. Our analysis reveals two ways in which class relations are recontextualised in a post-political context. The first discursive pattern shows market interpretations as the legitimised point of departure in the ways in which the conflict is constructed, which obscures the class nature of the conflict. Central to this perspective is the nationalist-oriented discourse that equates corporate interests with what is best for the nation, a view also found in other studies (Cotal San Martin, 2019; Kumar, 2007 Salter & Weltman, 2011). Central here is also the question of genre. By placing much of the news material in the economy section, as done by
In contrast to the corporate approach guiding much of the coverage, explicit critique of class and exploitation, when it appears at all, is mainly reduced to opinion materials. The genre categorisation of the critique is significant also here because a framework emphasising class antagonism is made into an opinion rather than being a framework to structure news around. In this sense, class antagonism falls outside what newsrooms perceive as a legitimate controversy (Hallin, 1989) to frame news about the port conflict around. By opinionising class, critique against class relations is marginalised and absorbed by the hegemonic framework (see Allan, 1998; Gitlin, 2003).
The media discourse about the port conflict ought to be perceived as an indication of how the question of class is treated in the Swedish public sphere, and how it is ideologically limited. One must bear in mind that the scant explicit debate on class in the analysed material is not only because of the dominance of bourgeois voices, for whom uneven class relations are “business as usual”, or the acceptance of a bourgeois ideology in newsrooms. The scant explicit debate about class is to a certain degree also explained by the lack of explicit critique of class relations among labour movement representatives. This is most evident in the ways in which social democratic politicians and labour movement representatives defend restrictions on the right to strike. This illuminates the ideological shift that has taken place in the Swedish political mainstream after the establishment of neoliberalism. Such a political climate, we argue, serves to limit the debate on class in the media and reinforces a post-political condition.
The seeming lack of interest in class among the labour movement is a high-risk project. In a time when neo-fascism is on the rise in Europe, and when members of the working class are migrating from the left to the far right, it becomes a kind of political suicide not to make class a central signifier in the political project of the left. By legitimising corporate interests and making them national interests, the left and the labour movement are blurring the ideological differences between them and the right, making it easier for working-class people, who are severely affected by neoliberalism, to embrace the far right, and making it less difficult for far-right parties to gain momentum.