After co-sponsoring the original labor bill in 2005, and wholeheartedly
endorsing the Employee Free Choice Act in 2007 (the only Republican
senator to do so), Arlen Specter has now reneged and will vote against
it for what he wants us to believe are the
purest of reasons:
"On the merits [of voting against the bill], the issue which has emerged at the top of the list for me is the elimination of the secret ballot
which is the cornerstone of how contests are decided in a democratic
society. The bill's requirement for compulsory arbitration if an
agreement is not reached within 120 days may subject the employer to a
deal he or she cannot live with. Such arbitration runs contrary to the
basic tenet of the Wagner Act for collective bargaining which makes the
employer liable only for a deal he or she agrees to. The arbitration
provision could be substantially improved by the last best offer
procedure which would limit the arbitrator's discretion and prompt the
parties to move to more reasonable positions. "This
is phony. The secret ballot is the second step to voting in a union.
The first step is getting 50% of the workforce to agree to holding an
election. In most, if not all, instances that's done by
signing cards indicating you either want or don't want to have a vote on union representation.
Specter says,
"The
problems of the recession make this a particularly bad time to enact
Employees Free Choice legislation. Employers understandably complain
that adding a burden would result in further job losses."What
burden? According to Specter and all the others who oppose the EFCA,
it's not necessary anyway. Any employee group who wants a union is free
to hold secret ballot elections now. That's true, isn't it?
No,
it's not. Of course it's not. Employers can and do thwart any
inclination to bring in unions. Specter talks about "intimidation" by
those mythical union thugs who, if they knew your name, would come
pounding on your door at all hours to get you to sign, but barely
mentions the very real pressures employers put on their employees if
even a hint of the word "union" wafts through their doors.
So a
recession isn't a good time to be talking about forming unions. How
about when times were good and Big Business was raking in the dough?
When CEOs and COOS and stockholders were sitting on their satin
cushions singing the praises of Free Market capitalism? When American
jobs were being outsourced to third world countries, paying the lowest
possible wages so that profits could go toward living the lavish life
and not toward anything as mundane as sharing? Could they talk about
forming unions then?
Let's get some real numbers in here. According to the
Bureau of Labor Statistics, union membership in 2008 was a mere 12.4% of the workforce. Within that percentage,
the union membership rate for public sector workers (36.8 percent) was substantially higher than the rate for private industry workers (7.6 percent).So who is cheering the loudest now that Specter has caved? The
Chamber of Commerce is positively giddy over it. So is the National Association of Manufacturers. And this is where it gets personal for me.
John
Engler, former Republican governor of Michigan, is now the president of
the National Association of Manufacturers. (They must feel like the
Maytag repairman here in America)
This is what Engler said about Specter's decision:
"I
am very pleased that Senator Arlen Specter has decided to vote against
cloture on the EFCA. EFCA is a flawed piece of legislation that will
destroy jobs and prolong the current economic recession. Manufacturers
stand behind Senator Specter's decision to vote against EFCA and appreciate this decision to put working men and women, the economy and the nation first."
Now,
before you get all dewy-eyed about this, let me just warn you. I know
John Engler and he's no FDR. He's no Warren Buffett, either. Trust me. When John Engler was governor of
Michigan, my Michigan, darkness fell across the villages in
LiberalLand. We never had a chance. Reaganism, Big Business boosterism,
and the nonsense called "Trickle Down" were still very much in vogue.
The
governor's mission, at one point, (after he had already done away with
poverty programs) was to kill any state funding for the Arts. The Arts
are always the wretched stepchildren whenever belts need tightening
(after programs for the poor, of course), and we should have seen it
coming.
In the early 1990s I applied for and received a state
grant to work on a lengthy writing project. I was thrilled beyond
belief when my application was accepted, but foolish, foolish me. . .I
completely forgot who we were dealing with. Most of the grantees--the
smart ones--took their money and ran. Some of them chose to leave their
grant money in the state's coffers until the next year, but I was one
of those who chose to take half of the grant in one year and leave the
other half for the next.
Even before the next year rolled
around, Engler was already making noises about Arts excesses, and in
spite of petitions and marches to the Capitol steps and pleas to our
legislative and congressional leaders, any grant monies we were
supposed to receive were taken away. Gone. For good.
We had contracts. We had it in writing. It was promised to us. And the contracts were not honored.
Now,
that might not seem like such a sad story, given what is happening in
Michigan today, but I offer it here as an example of how easily The
Powers can ignore honorable contracts whenever they think they have the
right.
We should know by now that without watchdogs, without
binding equity, without the force of numbers, the masses in this
country will never come out ahead. If the past eight to 12 years
haven't shown us what happens when the Chamber of Commerce and all its
attendant abettors run the show, I don't know what it's going to take
to make it any clearer.
They'll get away with this phony attack
against the unions and the EFCA if we let them. Big Business in America
doesn't deserve even a moment of hesitation, of let-up now. Write your
congresspeople, write our president, blog this issue to death. Do
whatever it takes to send the message that American workers made this
country and American workers deserve to share in the riches. It's so
fundamental, it shouldn't even be an issue. So again I ask: How the
hell did we let this happen? And when are we going to do something
about it?
(crossposted at
Ramona's Voices)