Go to Admin » Appearance » Widgets » and move Gabfire Widget: Social into that MastheadOverlay zone
Republicans Won’t Stop Their Assault on Unions Until Every State is Right-to-Work
By: Deborah FosterSep. 2nd, 2012more from Deborah Foster
It’s been a rough year for unions. Depending on how this year’s elections go, things could get even worse. On this Labor Day weekend, it seems like a good time to consider one of the biggest threats to unions. From the sound of it, it’s almost communist: “Right to Work.” It really has the ring of something the old State regimes promised the people as a benefit of citizenship, a guaranteed job. The appropriating of this language for precisely the opposite intent is part of the cynical manipulation of leaders of right wing populism. Of course, “Right to Work” laws not only fail to guarantee employment, they reduce the organizing power of laborers to put in place contracts that actually prevent unreasonable terminations. They essentially contribute to the downfall of the very organizations that give workers power, and in the process, they wipe out protections that workers struggled for over a century to establish. By allowing workers to become parasites to unions—allowing them to reap the benefits of union efforts such as collecting bargaining while exempting them from having to pay for the privilege—unions are weakened. For example, since Oklahoma implemented their “Right to Work” laws in 2001, 4.7% of the state’s workers are covered by unions, but only 3.5% are dues-paying members. These unions are still forced to represent their non-paying members. In fact, one stunning reality according to the Minnesota AFL-CIO website is, “Amazingly, nonmembers who are represented by a union can even sue the union if they think it has not represented them well enough!”
Corporations and big business have always hated unions. From the times they hired Pinkerton guards to infiltrate them, protect strikebreakers, and sometimes battle them, to the times when they locked out workers, owners have been against their workers organizing. They have not wanted to concede to terms ranging from 8-hour workdays to 40-hour work weeks, minimum wages, ensuring health and safety measures, and providing fringe benefits. They’ve been reluctant to give up practices like paying workers in company script that had to be used at company stores. As noble as their causes have been, unions themselves have not enjoyed a pristine history, including episodes of violence and corruption, thereby allowing big business to exploit negative incidents to turn public opinion against unions.
But, in the modern era, unions have been run honorably with collective bargaining and the occasional, but rare, strike as the only methods they employ. Still, big business manages to label organized labor as “union thugs.” They are bolstered in their negative portrayal of unions by the media. Research by William Puette examined media from a range of sources, and across the board, he found that media supports big business by characterizing unions poorly. For example, he writes that Hollywood’s portrayal of unions in the media “has been both unrepresentative and virulently negative.” Newspapers and television news programming are no different, offering continuous depictions of unions as corrupt, violent, unreasonable, and exploitative of members to the benefit of union leaders. The messages that people hear from all over are that unions coerce people into becoming members, that they are unnecessary in the modern era, and that they are too prone to go on strike.
The bad press has taken its toll. In 2011, only 11.8% of the nation’s workers were members of unions. In 1983, that percentage was 20.1%. This was down from a peak in the mid-1950s of 35%. The recent attack on public-sector union members is not surprising, because their union membership rate of 37% is five times higher than that of private-sector workers, with a 6.9% rate. If you truly want to break the backs of unions, it is good strategy to start by taking down the public sector unions. Souring public opinion toward public workers who are perceived to earn “more than they should by way of taxpayer dollars” is not just an excellent method of asserting right-wing austerity measures, it also undermines public favorability toward unions themselves. Despite the fact that the US Chamber of Commerce and its many subdivisions has no direct relationship with public union workers, they still work to implement policies like those in Wisconsin that bar public workers from collective bargaining. Their tactic couldn’t be more obvious even if Scott Walker himself hadn’t uttered the words, “Divide and conquer.” They want to squelch private sector unions, and if that means killing off public sector unions first, then by all means, they’ll do it.
The pro-union and anti-union sides battle each other with research findings to try and prove that “Right to Work” laws either benefit or harm workers. The unions and labor studies academics (such as the Economic Policy Institute) provide strong statistical evidence that shows being in a union means having higher wages than not being in a union (median weekly earnings of $938 union versus $729 nonunion). Not only that, wages in the 23 states with “Right to Work” laws are approximately 3.2% lower for workers and healthcare coverage by employers is 2.6% lower overall, regardless of union membership, than they are in states without such laws. From the Minnesota AFL-CIO website, we learn, “According to data from the Bureau of Labor Statistics, the rate of workplace deaths is 52.9% higher in states with Right-to-Work laws.”
The U.S. Chamber of Commerce counters with studies that it interprets in questionable ways. For example, research shows that “Right to Work” states have done better than others in economic growth. However, there are actually explanations for these differences that have nothing to do with “Right to Work” laws. In fact, according to an article in USA Today, “In Oklahoma, the job gains after the law passed… were not unusual in the region. Three neighboring states without a right-to-work law — Missouri, New Mexico and Colorado — experienced similar job growth, in some cases even exceeding Oklahoma’s.” In addition, those states, particularly in the Rust Belt, that remain free of such laws are heavily dependent on the manufacturing sector which has seen massive declines across the nation. States that have “Right to Work” laws are concentrated in the Sun Belt, are not heavily dependent on manufacturing and they have seen large population influxes that affect consumer demand in their state.
Unions have had to face many harsh obstacles over the past few decades ranging from steep declines in the manufacturing sector to increases in the number of “Right to Work” states, and it shows in the declines in membership and loss of collective bargaining rights for public employees. The recent decision by the Supreme Court in Knox vs. SEIU dealt another blow to unions. As a backdrop for these struggles, they face the negativity of the media constantly painting them in the worst possible light and the never-ending attacks from corporations and big business interests. Given the disheartening loss in Wisconsin, perceived by many as a blow to unions, that state remains at risk for becoming yet another “Right to Work” state. Unions represent middle class, but also working class Americans, a group with which liberals have consistently lost favor. It is in the best interests of liberals and of workers to regroup and continue the fight for fair representation of labor. Hopefully, the Democratic Party, in particular, will realize this and diligently step up to the plate.
Photo courtesy of Uprising Radio.org
The attack on unions is nothing new. Unions have been under assault since their inception, but the attac ...
The Tea Party backed Governor of Wisconsin Republican Scott Walker has set his sights on stripping ...
It was another sad day for the middle class yesterday as Republicans in Indiana passed a Right to Work f ...
Look who's running scared from their own extreme anti-union agenda. Yes, it's Republicans in Ohio. Ohio ...
Breaking Bad with Twitter to Celebrate Unions on Labor Day It’s a Union Tweetfest, peeps. Because no ...
Reynardine
Sep. 2nd, 2012 at 12:42 pm
It has been happening since the 1960′s. The “divide and conquer” tactic is to convince some stratum of society whose star has risen at least a little that they are now accepted into the upper crust, with whom they should now side against the upstart “others”. That is why, in the mid-’60′s, you saw the tradiitional unions keeping out miinorities, women, people from social service and non-traditional occupations and joining the bosses in attempting to break the new unions who were organizing them; it’s why, in the late ’60′s and early ’70′s, you saw hard hats beating up anti-war protesters; it’s why, in the 1980′s, you saw PATCO supporting Ronald Reagan…and then he broke them, and that was just the beginning. Mergers, buy-outs, off-shoring, and cleverly-arranged buy-outs did the rest. Yet the Wisconsin recall shows that there are still too many unions that buy the, “You’re one of us, so let’s keep out the icky ‘them’ ” line. Well, it’s time to face facts. We’ll never be one of “us”. We’ll always be the youpeople. Class warfare has already been declared against us, as long as forty-four years ago, and it’s not our class that’s winning. The only way we have a chance of surviving with human dignity is by uniting as youpeople and standing up for each other. We’re not temporarily embarassed millionaires. We’re youpeople, and if we are not loyal to our own class, we’ll be ewepeople to the slaughter.
Deborah Foster
Sep. 2nd, 2012 at 2:14 pm
Well said!
buckeyewill
Sep. 2nd, 2012 at 6:38 pm
In Ohio, we stood against Kasich, and won. We never back down. Kasich and the Tea Party Republicans were dealt a defeat in the Buckeye State.
Reynardine
Sep. 2nd, 2012 at 7:18 pm
I zonked out from exhaustion and dreamt as follows:
A view from a farmhouse window at night, and in the tinkerbell of light that fell into the dark below, great ranks of rams with curling horns could be seen, with firey eyes and steaming breaths, pawing the ground as if ready to charge. One voice said,”What is that?” and another replied, “It’s the ewepeople…”
Anne
Sep. 2nd, 2012 at 9:42 pm
I am sorry, but I fail to understand why allowing people to choose to join the union or not is bad. Maybe someone could enlighten me why the right to choose is so horrible.
Deborah Foster
Sep. 2nd, 2012 at 10:24 pm
Frankly, I’m not surprised you are yet another person to believe an outright lie about “right-to-work.” States without don’t force anyone to join a union. Federal law already prohibits people from being forced to join a union or pay dues to a union. I’ll just quote the Center for American Progress, since they say it as well as I could:
“In states where the law exists, “right-to-work” makes it illegal for workers and employers to negotiate a contract requiring everyone who benefits from a union contract to pay their fair share of the costs of administering it. Right-to-work has nothing to do with people being forced to be union members.”
In other words, these states force unions to get contracts for people without having those people help pay for the cost of the contract negotiation. It’s like having an attorney do work for you without you having to pay that person and having the law force that attorney to do the work without pay.
In many states with “right-to-work” they actually force unions to represent non-members who are working at companies where most of the employees are union in mediation or other legal proceedings. As I pointed out, *non-members* actually have the right to sue unions for not representing them well enough.
(more info is here: www.americanprogressactio...)
Anne
Sep. 3rd, 2012 at 2:12 am
You really have no idea what compulsory unionization is. My fiancee has a job where he is forced to pay union dues, not his choice, if he wishes to be employed. That is the issue, he is given no choice, the unions take from his wages their dues, or rather extortion money. Pay the unions and they will protect you from the bad guy corporations. The only problem is, the unions are corrupt, much like organized crime, they have bought the police, and they extort our money to keep us under their thumb.
Right to work is not about abolishing unions, it is about giving power back to the people and cleaning up the corruption of the unions and the politicians. The real corrupt politicians are the Democrats bought out by unions.
Marc
Sep. 3rd, 2012 at 9:04 am
I am curious how much your husband pays the union to make sure he has a job in a safe place with security in knowing that the union will help him if things go bad for him. The money you lament not having may be recouped in the next contract negotiation. With out the union, you serve at the pleasure of the corporation and take what is given to you…or move on. How much is stability and a secure future worth to you?
BodiJohn
Sep. 3rd, 2012 at 10:58 am
I totally understand the issue. If your future husband’s union is corrupt- whistleblow their butts. But, I think instead, that you have bought into the nonsense that republicans are feeding you. You claim that right to work gives ‘power’ back to the people..you couldn’t be more wrong- without a unifying labor structure, the individual is POWERLESS..and, you are doing the job for them! But, as the future wife of a union member, you need to think a lot more about what life was like before labor struggled to unionize for better working conditions, basic benefits, and the semblance of a secure future. Be very careful what you ask for…you are starting to get it!
sandy cunningham
Sep. 3rd, 2012 at 12:40 pm
BodiJohn – Don’t forget – It’s because of the unions that we celebrate Labor Day which is a national holiday. SHCCC
Paul
Sep. 3rd, 2012 at 12:40 pm
Anne,
Union dues / fair share can be equated to paying taxes. No one likes paying taxes, but most people feel that it is their obligation and duty to do so. For some reason, there are those that always want to get something for nothing. The Republicans like to call these people free loaders. I myself, being a recently converted Republican still like to call these people free loaders. The Republicans claim they are against free loaders, but are ok with free loading when it comes to unions. Why is that? The answer is simple, they know that without the finances that the union needs to survive, the union will collapse, and their goal will be reached. They don’t want every state to be Right to Work, they want to eliminate ALL UNIONS. That is their goal! And because of peoples ignorance, it is happening! In fact, there is ALEC legislation that calls for the end of minimum wage, the forty hour work week and many other laws that were created to protect workers. You don’t actually think Michelle Bachman came up with that idea on her own, do you!
The biggest problem with union membership today, is that the members of the union fail to recognize that there is work to be done by ALL to have a successful union. Too many people expect others to take care of the union business and don’t get involved (kind of like politics). Then they complain because the union is not doing what they think the union should be doing! Well the answer is simple! Get INVOLVED! Unions with a strong membership have a hard time doing anything that the majority of members don’t agree with.
Unions support Democrats, because it’s members vote to support them! More because of the Republican anti-union tactics, than any other reason. The Democrats tend to speak out more for people and people’s rights and issues than the Republican party.
Sorry for the rant ;)
Anne
Sep. 3rd, 2012 at 2:32 pm
Can someone please answer my original question, why is it so bad to allow the people the right to choose to be in a union or not. When your arguments degrade to Repubs are bad, Demos are good and ALEC and the Koch brothers are evil, you lose the argument. There is no thought of your own in those arguments, just talking points from the unions.
So can we please stay on topic, unions demand eternal fealty to them for the reforms they had a hand in, but you don’t see the Republicans demanding eternal fealty for the 14th and 15th amendments (which had a greater impact on the nation). The unions time has come and gone, they have become parasitic leeches and as corrupt as the corporations they claim to be fighting.
Shiva (Moderator)
Sep. 3rd, 2012 at 3:33 pm
Please see my post in this thread. And continue to support corrupt corporate practices
Reynardine
Sep. 3rd, 2012 at 2:53 pm
Little Miss Muffett, you have been answered several times over, and your playing dumb isn’t cute. Now, please go to the produce department and buy yourself a cucumber.
A Walkaway
Sep. 3rd, 2012 at 3:12 pm
“Anne”, I’d rather put up with a little “union corruption” than the present situation with the corporations and business owners in this area.
It’s easier to root out corruption than dealing with bosses that beat you up (physically), abuse you, find ways to cut your pay, deny you any time off or a break when you need it, and so on.
That’s the norm in this “Right to work” state (I agree – it means right to work for less, but it also means “business owners think they have the right to treat you however they wish”). I’ve experienced all of those things.
It’s so bad that one big homeless program literally teaches their “clients” to take whatever abuse comes their way in order to keep a job… no matter how you’re treated. They tell their “clients” that keeping a job is their responsibility, and if they quit “because of your pride” then you’re the cause of your own misery.
Oh, and business owners go to seminars where they’re taught things like “How to destroy unions” and “How to discriminate against minorities and get away with it”. They used to pester me (when I owned a small business) to attend those seminars, and I’m not joking or exaggerating about what is taught. The majority of business owners think “It’s my business therefore I should be able to tell you what to do, how to run your life, and treat you however I wish, because your pay comes from MY money”. Unions are the only barrier between your face and their fist (and I’m meaning that literally – I have the scar to show for it).
Deborah Foster
Sep. 3rd, 2012 at 1:08 pm
Paying a fee to the union is not forced unionization. It is also not dues. He is paying for the privilege of getting his wages negotiated at a higher rate, getting his health insurance benefits with lower premiums, and any other perks his job has like sick leave. 23% of Americans report they have lost a job or been threatened with job loss if they stayed home sick. If he were in a non-union shop, he is likely to be making far less and his fee for paying for the contract negotiation would not even be close to the loss in wages he would have if they didn’t have the contract. Do you know what some people are paying for their health benefits–the whole premium, sometimes as much as $3-5,000 per month. And that is on top of the $3,000 deductibles which many unions negotiate to be lower. Is that what he is paying? My brother works in a non-union, manufacturing shop and makes only two dollars over minimum wage. He can’t find a good union job in his city, because they are all taken and very hard to get. People know they pay well and they don’t leave those jobs.
The average union contract fee which is what your beloved is paying is less than $200 per month. *Exactly* how much is your future husband having to pay for his union contract? And don’t just claim they are corrupt and rattle off a spoon-fed Republican talking point. It sounds whiny. Give an actual example of *how* they are corrupt. What is it you think they are doing? There isn’t a union in this country that has “bought the police.” That just makes you sound like a hysterical dingbat. If you could even prove that they did such a thing, what difference would it make? What are the police doing that has anything to do with unions? Beating up non-union members? Get real. Furthermore, big business is outspending unions 15-1 on this election, so politicians are not corrupt because of union money, they are corrupt because of corporate money. To think otherwise would be really ignorant
Shiva (Moderator)
Sep. 3rd, 2012 at 1:18 pm
Being of retirement age, I can say its going to be funny for workers when the unions are gone. All the people who think unions are corrupt will suddenly find the laws that protected them will be gone. These are the same people who support corrupt corporations while bleating the RWNJ verses about how unions are evil.
No requirement to pay you overtime.
No requirement for vacations
no requirement for the hours they can make you work
No requirement for raises yearly so you can keep up with the cost of living
No requirement for healthcare. YOU pay if you can afford it on the raises your not getting.
No representation in a big factory. Boss doesnt like you? Yer Outa there!
And thats a tiny example of how your work life will be.
And I will forever feel for the people who understood what a union is.
hitherandyon
Sep. 2nd, 2012 at 10:52 pm
Its mostly the old freerider problem. If we were both being represented by a lawyer, but you were the only one paying him, and I was free to sue you both if I didn’t like the way I was represented, its too easy a situation for me. Everyone decides they would prefer to have someone else pay the lawyer, but can still sue if their interests are not represented. And that undermines the power of the lawyer to effectively represent those people who are shelling out to employ him or her. If you aren’t a member, you shouldn’t be getting the benefits.
Anne
Sep. 2nd, 2012 at 10:27 pm
The insanity of the continuing attacks on unions was recently summed up Weathervane Willard’s asinine and ignorant comments to the effect that America doesn’t need to hire more public sector employees like teachers and police officers. The GOP counts on the penchant for instant gratification when it comes to solutions for long-standing problems and the gullibility of a sizeable number of Americans. That’s why they can bamboozle some Americans into believing that unions are the enemy, despite the well-documented fact that unions are responsible for so many things that modern American workers take for granted–like paid leave, paid holidays, 5-day work weeks and weekends off from work. While it’s true that not all Americans enjoy these job benefits, there are non-union employees who still have benefited from these. Above all, unions enable employees to have a voice in the circumstances of their employment, and that is a right.
clarence swinney
Sep. 3rd, 2012 at 9:33 am
VOTE FOR PEACE AND SUCCESS
1945 to 1980 were Great years for growth of the Middle Class.
Affordable Housing via local Savings and Loans
Affordable Health Care via company insurance coverage
Affordable Education via Pell Grants and GI Bill
THEN—1980-2009
Three Republican Presidents for 20 years—A Republican Senate for 18 years and a Republican House for 12 years gave us Great Middle Class Success to Less Success:
Initiated our involvement in 10 foreign conflicts where hundreds of thousands of innocent people died.
Had 5 Stock Market crashes in 20 years
Took Carter 218,000 per month job creation down to 99,000
Took a 600 Budget to 3500 (less Clinton itsy bitsy)
Took a 1000 Debt to 11,900(9-30-09)
Took a Surplus to a 1400 Deficit(9-30-09)
Destroyed the Great Savings and Loan Industry that has financed locally millions of affordable homes
Destroyed the local banking system by Repeal of Glass Steagall whereby 10 Too Big To Fail Banks own 80% of all deposits in about 7000 banks. Return to that bill..
Destroyed our Great Housing Industry by allowing predator toxic mortgages to be created and sold world wide as AAA mortgages by profiteering banks. One of all time Disasters for America.
Created a Modernization of Commodities Bill that freed Wall Street to become Casino Derivative Of America or a bigger gambling house than Las Vegas.
How do we get back to 1945-1980 Success for the Middle Class when 10% not own 73% of net wealth, 83% of financial wealth and take 50% of individual income.
It will be tough for the rich will fight like electing two of their own in 2012 and promise by one to spend as much as 100 million to elect them to save all his benefits in the tax book plus get them to add more.
It can be done by the tax code, get money out of elections, elect those who promise to be Fair in protecting programs that aid the Middle Class, invest in growth and jobs in America not in
other nations. clarence swinney
BodiJohn
Sep. 3rd, 2012 at 10:49 am
Democrats must stand up for working people or this thing could take a backward slide that will take decades to arrest. Unions have become a dirty word to the Republicans and their ‘job creators’. I’ve owned business; worked as a union and non union laborer; been an administrator dealing with multiple unions; been a union official..in other words, I’ve been on all sides of this issue…bottom line: union contracts, when bargained creatively set a clear playing field…I never had a problem firing a poorly performing employee BUT I had to follow the process…but, that is only fair! It is a humane and enlightened way to do business. The current crop of neo-’conservatives’ don’t want to be bothered…and their stoogies- the Republicans will do whatever they can put to labor back to the beginning of the last century without a hint of conscience.
The Democrats, as flawed as they are, represent the last hope for unions and all of the things that have been won for labor.
When corporations cry foul…that they cannot afford US labor in a global marketplace, they are side stepping any patriotic duty to do everything possible to maintain a trained labor force here by avoiding the necessary, pragmatic dialogues with unions that have resulted in many creative contracts…labor has been giving back for decades now to meet the realities of globalization and automation…The key: if people cannot earn a living wage; if the average person has no disposable income; than, demand crashes…once greed supplants common sense and a sense of allegiance to fellow Americans, capitalism will fail. It is a privilege to own and operate a business and the efforts of hard working business people should be respected but, NOT DEIFIED. Owning and operating a business that supports workers and their families is a wonderful, rewarding experience- but it comes with an obligation to respect labor and the efforts labor puts forward to enrich the owner. And, labor must understand the same.
A Walkaway
Sep. 4th, 2012 at 12:33 pm
” an obligation to respect labor and the efforts labor puts forward to enrich the owner.”
The owner is entitled to a fair income and a decent (also fair) return on his or her investment, NOT “get rich”.
I first learned that I wasn’t as conservative as I thought (and had been told I should be by the churches) when I encountered business owners who closed down large corporations because they weren’t “getting rich”, even though they admitted that they were making a nice income (much greater than their employees) and getting a good return on their investment. The bastards “let go” dozens if not hundreds of employees from good jobs because of their damned greed.
They, of course, didn’t care about the harm their greed did to their employees.
Jim Faubel
Sep. 3rd, 2012 at 11:18 am
Always refer to these “laws” as “Right-to-work-for-less” laws. It’s “truthier”.
TigerLily
Sep. 4th, 2012 at 8:40 pm
Republicans know that unions keep the work place fair. THAT’S WHY THE GOP WANTS TO RID OF THEM. Uinons are what helped you get a decent salaray, they are the model that all companies have to follow in the work place. To be sure you have good working conditions, etc. My gawd shall we all go back to making the children work or our men and women work with their own tools too..so the company can make more of a profit by not providing your tools to work with? That’s how it was. What kind of people are you on the right that you want no protections for the people? The GOP is also going to make it hard for you to sue your employer for wrongful anything! You WILL NOT HAVE A VOICE those with or without unions. Because once there is NO UNIONS..there will be NO BENEFITS, YEARLY RAISES, no protection for sexual or any other kind of harassment ANYTHING YOU WERE USED TO IN OUR CIVILIZED SOCIETY BEFORE THE GOP CAME KNOCKING TO TAKE YOUR LAST DIEM away FOR THE RICH! The RW constituency is one mean greedy empty headed party who cares not even for themselves..but want to be sure their 1% representatives never ever have to suffer a day like themselves.IN FUKN CREDIBLE THOSE RW CONSTITUENTS! They live to die for their leaders!! Bunch of idiots all of them.