Bud Schulte – 1947 to 2022
Bud Schulte, long time labor
and socialist activist, did not wake from his sleep on February 12, 2022. He was nearly 75 years old. At the time he was living with comrade David
Riehle in St. Paul. Bud died as a member
of Socialist Action (SA). He had been
involved with socialist groups and labor issues since the 1980s – beginning as
a meat-cutter in South St. Paul with the UFCW, then with Hormel P-9 strike
supporters here in the Cities and lastly as a friend of May Day Books.
Bud at a Recent Rally |
Bud leaves behind his beloved
dog Lena, 3 children, 3 grand-children and two brothers, along with many
cheerful and activist memories for his friends, but not many material goods. He was overly generous, a compulsive story
teller, a car fan, a former hockey goalie and hockey fan, a good cook and baker. And he was said to have the best hair on the
left!
In his Catholic elementary school Bud had physical fights
with nuns - winning a few and losing a few. Once was when his Elvis ‘do’ got
shaved by a nun, which also enraged his mother.
He graduated from West St. Paul's Sibley High, after which he went to
St. Cloud U. for a year. He then worked as a meat-cutter in South St.
Paul at several companies, which paid well as union jobs. He was able to buy muscle cars and a house
with those earnings.
At 19 he began working at the Swift Plant until 1967 when
it closed. Then he got hired at the
Armour plant, which closed 10 years later.
This is when he went to work for Iowa Pork. He met his first leftists at the Iowa Pork
strike in January 1984 in South St. Paul.
He met Harry DeBoer and Jake Cooper, participants in the 1934 Teamster
strike, who inspired him and aided the strike.
He joined the Fourth Internationalist Tendency (FIT) within a month or
two of the start of the strike, as they were part of the community’s support
group. Melanie Benson was important in
winning him over to Marxism and Trotskyism.
The owner of Iowa Pork, Harry Weinstein, brought in scabs
on the first day of the Iowa Pork strike, and police beat up the strikers who
tried to stop the scabs. Bud was elected
picket captain and accepted lefties who came to defend the picket line the next
day. The local had a march from its
union hall, did outreach and distributed pro-strike propaganda with advice from
the labor left. They won the strike
after at least 6 months on strike. After
the strike, Bud was the central leader in the plant, calling in-house meetings
before work. After the strike, they would stop the line for safety or other
issues, when before they would not. It
was a relief for him and the rest of the workers.
This intense event, like so many experiences of those on
the left, turned Bud into a socialist.
Within a year Weinstein closed the plant. Bud joined the Federal 'dislocated worker
program' due to that layoff. In that
capacity he testified to Congress about the program, along with a UAW officer
who ran it. As part of his visit to D.C.
he was escorted around the AFL-CIO building.
In the process he was accidentally shown a secret meeting between union
bureaucrats and military generals, who were pouring over a map of Central
America in a room. That door was shut
quickly! On that same trip he met a
haggard Edward Kennedy in the Capitol.
After the meat industry layoffs, Bud worked at a machine
shop. After the machine shop, he drove a
truck delivering pet food all over the central states. He then became a limo driver. Bud transported many people around the Twin
Cities – one of his favorites being Liza Minelli. He dropped off Denis Rodman at strip clubs
with a roll of cash. He was at Rodman’s
beck and call for a few days and got stiffed on the tip. Crosby, Stills, Nash and Young were hauled
around by Bud too. Bud spent time with
Neil Young’s child while Neil was busy.
He felt many of the famous people he met were actually lonely.
During the Hormel strike, Bud spoke at several large P-9
rallies and worked on the food caravans.
Bud also met Joe Hansen, one of the top bureaucrats in the region who strangled
the P-9 strike. For his services Hansen
was made head of the national meat-cutters union. After the P-9 strike Bud continued to
participate in Meeting the Challenge, which had done strike support for P-9
from its base in the Twin Cities. It organized
educationals and actions involving national labor figures, led by Peter
Rachleff, a professor at Macalester at the time.
Bud spoke on the labor movement at FIT's national meetings
in New York. Locally the FIT had an
office within the old May Day bookstore on 32nd and Chicago, which
is where Bud first met the volunteers, including Craig Palmer. In 1991 FIT
'faded away' and some of the people in FIT joined Socialist Action (SA), as did
Bud. For
SA he
was a good public speaker and fund raiser and spoke at several May Day events.
Lisa L of SA will be organizing a memorial for Bud at May
Day.
Memories contributed by Dave Riehle, Craig Palmer, John Schraufnagel and CG Gibbs.
Red Frog / April 21, 2022
No comments:
Post a Comment