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The Right to Unionize: Key to Democracy
For the last quarter century, corporate America has been at war against the labor movement. After a long period in which unions were an accepted part of the economic and political landscape, most corporations adopted a much more hostile attitude toward unions. Where unions already were present, employers sought to weaken or break them. In workplaces without unions, employers were prepared to do whatever was necessary to prevent workers from organizing.
This anti-union drive has largely enjoyed the support of the government. For example, it is now a standard practice for employers to fire workers engaged in an organizing drive. A study by John Schmitt and Ben Zipperer, of the Center for Economic and Policy Research, found one in five organizers will be fired during an average organizing drive. Such firings are illegal, but enforcement is sufficiently slow, and the penalties sufficiently small, that most employees eagerly embrace this effective anti-union tactic.
Government policies have also supported anti-union practices in other ways. A main purpose of trade agreements like NAFTA was to make it as easy as possible to relocate factories overseas. The high dollar policy Robert Rubin initiated in the Clinton era also put US manufacturing, and its unionized workers, at a huge disadvantage. A 30 percent over-valued dollar effectively imposes a 30 percent tariff on goods exported from the United States, while providing a subsidy of 30 percent on goods imported into the United States.
As a result of these policies, much manufacturing has, in fact, been moved overseas in the last quarter century, giving the country a trade deficit of more than $700 billion annually. And the jobs lost in manufacturing have been disproportionately union jobs. While the unionization rate in manufacturing was more than 40 percent in the sixties, in 2006 it was just 11.6 percent, less than the 12 percent average for all workers, although still somewhat higher than the 7.4 percent average for the private sector as a whole.
The weakening of the labor movement is not just bad news for the workers who lose union jobs. According to polling data, there are tens of millions of workers who would like to be represented by a union at their workplace, but don't currently have the option. The best way to get a guide as to how many workers would be in unions if they could opt to do so, in the absence of employer threats and harassment, is to look at the unionization rate in the public sector.
While public sector managers are not generally friendly to unions, they can't fire union organizers or use the other harsh anti-union tactics that are now standard practice in the private sector. As a result, more than 36 percent of public sector employees are members of unions. Given the freedom to choose, it is likely a comparable share of private sector workers would also be in unions. This would imply an additional 30 million workers in unions.
In addition to directly benefiting the workers they represent, unions also benefit the larger workforce and society as a whole. In an industry with a strong union presence, non-union firms know they must maintain comparable wages and benefits if they are want to keep their workers from joining a union. The decline of unions has undoubtedly been an important factor in the growth of inequality in the last quarter century.
Unions have also been essential to a wide range of political initiatives over the post-war period. Programs like Medicare, Medicaid and Head Start would not have been possible without the strong support of the labor movement. The same is true of the key civil rights legislation of the sixties. More recently, the labor movement was at the center of the effort to prevent President Bush from privatizing Social Security. It will be difficult to make much progress on a wide range of social and economic issues without the support of a strong labor movement.
Congress is currently debating a bill that would take an important step toward re-establishing the right of workers to join a union. The Employee Free Choice Act (EFCA) would require a company to recognize a union once a majority of workers have signed a card indicating they want to be represented by a union. This gets around the election process, which gives employers a chance to intimidate workers and fire the leaders of an organizing effort. (Under the EFCA, workers can still request an election supervised by the National Labor Relations Board.)
The EFCA would restore some meaning to the right to organize. The bill that has been passed by the House by is currently being blocked by a Republican filibuster in the Senate. While the EFCA is not likely to become law under this Congress (President Bush would almost certainly veto the bill even if it did pass), progressives should recognize the importance of legislation. The right to organize is not the concern of just a small special interest group; it is a basic right that should concern us all. In the same vein, all progressives have an interest in seeing a strong labor movement. For this reason, the EFCA and other measures that level the playing field between labor and management should be top items on the progressive agenda.
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13 Comments so far
Show AllJedediah,
Well, the rank and file also has their share of blame. My experience in that last place of union strength, the building trades, is that the media-dumbed, right-wing radio/fox propagandized, rank and file could care less if the union folded the day they retire, and thay routinely engage in overt racial discrimination to boot.
But yes, the leaders are useless as well, Even the SEIU seems to only be interested in getting involved in tapping the cash cow of community activism rather than engaging in the hard work of organizing workplaces like Wal-Mart.
baker is right on, but you can also put tons of blame on union management itslef. when was the last time a major strike occurred? union management at this point exists mainly to enrich themselves and make the corporate-management agenda more acceptable to the average worker. kind of like the democratic party, which the major unions are wed to.
i knew unions were in trouble when i saw teamster concrete trucks blow through a carpenter's picket line---and this was 3 years before reagan fired the patco workers.
the trouble with unions is the trouble with democracy in general: you can't just hand over the keys. our representatives have got to be watched and questioned and held to account, all of which takes time and effort. self-government is not for the lazy.
Corporate Labor
Is there a possibility of turning the workforce of a corporation into a seperate corporation itself?
A new kind of outsourcing.
Those with similar interest in the workforce of a company, form a corporation, and the company can only hire through it.
Or simply incorporate yourslef as a company, and every transaction that occurs, occurs through the company.
I am no economists, so for someone with more knowledge, can this be done?
The right to unionize is essential to a democracy, but it's not the "Key to Democracy." CAMPAIGN SPENDING LIMITS is the key to democracy! And don't give me that Public Financing nonsense.
This piece is awfully weak.
1) Labor and management have not been at odds for the last quarter century. We are always at odds. Our interests and purposes (creating and using power for our economic, political and social interests) are diametrically opposed. You don't have to be a Marxist to understand that. Just work for awhile in almost any workplace in the US, public or private.
2) Public sector organizers and activists get fired, disciplined, harassed and blacklisted all the time. Public sector union density is rapidly declining under various outsourcing and "labor-management cooperation" schemes.
3) EFCA, while useful, is being highly oversold by union leaders and neo-liberal politicians. While it will somewhat alleviate the worst abuses in the workplace, it will not alleviate the fundamental imbalance of power in the workplace and society. If its proponents were serious, they would be working to repeal the Taft-Hartley Amendment and other perversions of the Wagner Act, the basic labor law in the US.
4) Much labor law in the US is determined state-by-state. In Texas, where I live, it is ILLEGAL for the vast majority of public sector employers and workers to negotiate collective bargaining agreements.
5) The piece does not even raise the most fundamental issue in workplace politics. Labor laws, like any other laws must be enforced. There is virtually nobody willing or able to do that in the US, including unions. Class warfare is raging and most workers' "leaders," can't even recognize or articulate that reality.
It is truly sad to see the diet of milque toast and weak tea that this article offers up as analysis. It is representative of the extremely low level of discussion of labor politics that exists in this country. The fact that it is posted on a progressive website demonstrates what bad shape we are in as a country and a movement.
Mother Jones, help us.
Isn't it strange that both 'striking' and 'impeachment' are off the table?
Is anyone on this thread paid to BLOG? How `bout you tj?
The key to democracy is direct democracy.
I am all in favor of unions as a method to help workers, but I think an even better way would be to found workers cooperatives and the like and end the reliance on capitalist employers altogether, rather than just trying to get a better deal from them.
News & Views for Anarchists & Activists:
http://groups.yahoo.com/group/smygo
MAJABR:
NOPE
The needs of 3000 corporations destroyed Chile for a generation when on September 11, 1973, they began the war against the democracy of Salvador Allende's government. Families lost 30,000-40,000 killed and torture ruled the day.
The needs of 3000 corporations are biting the hands that feed them by destroying the American worker and the American family.
This September 11th, let us come together to denounce again the actions of American exploitation at home and abroad. Let's end poverty in the USA by supporting workers and worker's rights
tj: Excellent comments! Your first paragraph fits in with what I wrote on Robert Reich's article on 'Whatever Happened To Labor Day?.
EFCA was defeated in the Senate, and why didn't Mr. Baker mention it? For that matter, ask your co-workers about that legislation and see how many have never heard of it. Sports and entertainment are much to important to the average American worker than their jobs, benefit package, pension or working conditions that are diminishing in front of them.
jedediah, pjd, good points!
exeflyer: Absolutely! It's the way to go.
hazmat: I agree with you. Eternal vigilence is the key along with worker participation in the union movement.
Crossing that picket line...was/is disgusting, and comparable to stabbing somebody in the back.
starislon2: Not at all strange. While we working class people sleep, the ruling class burns the midnight oil figuring more ways to reduce us to serfs and indentured servants. But like 'AEF says, "what, me worry?"
clore: FREESPEECH TV had a very good program on what you said, not to long ago. Good point.
Dr, Zimmerman: Perfectly stated. On this September 11th, I'm not going to work or make purchases. Imagine if tens of millions of people did the same thing? And the movement builds until WE,THE WORKERS, get our fair share of our LABOR.
ZeroPointField: I think it is possible. Correct me if I misunderstood you, but 'co-operatives are sort of organized in that way.
Have any of you read the book,'GLOBAL REACH' by Richard Barnett and Ronald Mueller? It was published in 1974 and seems like it was written this morning.
Since Common Dreams started offering readers of this outstanding internet website a "letters to the editor" section, I notice that the least amount of comments are on labor subjects, except for the Barbara Ehrenreich article several weeks ago. I wonder why?