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Wednesday, February 25, 2009

Card Check

Labor Unions, little more than partisan platoons of the Democratic Party, want to eliminate the secret ballot via "card check."

I like to hear a good argument from the other side, especially when it is attempting to defend the indefensible. More liberalism is an easy argument to make to the economic and constitutional illiterate. It's a feel-good fairness issue that really resonates with an entitlement culture.

What I can't understand is how one can defend the Orwellian-named Employee Free Choice Act, which actually snatches away an employee's free choice.

The Employee Free Choice Act would eliminate the private ballot method of voting up or down on unionization. Instead, it forces each employee to publicly sign a card stating her intentions. If you have a crowd of angry, intimidating men standing around you as you sign your card, is that choice really free?

Now, on to defending the indefensible. In These Times, an old-school lefty publication, has written the best defense of this bill I have seen so far. They start with the flawed premise that the decline in unions caused America's Decline. One only has to compare the unionized northeast's economic malaise to the relative prosperity of the non-union south. But nevermind that for now...
This great 30-year shift in wealth, power and public priorities coincided with—and was in large part caused by—the decline of a labor movement under assault from corporations and right-wing ideologues.
I like their innocuous explanation of Card Check:
Here’s how it would work: When a majority of workers sign union authorization cards, they would gain recognition for their union.
No goons knocking on your door at 3am inquiring about your family and "oh, by the way, where's your signed card?" No, the workers happily fill out the forms and put them in a brightly colored shoebox like on Valentines Day. They get counted every day until, BINGO! One day finally, it's 50% + 1, and we have a union!
EFCA would sharply increase penalties against employers who violate labor laws when workers organize. It would provide workers faster relief from violations, such as firing for union activity. And it would provide the option of mediation and arbitration if the employer and union fail to reach a first contract on their own.
So if a pain-in-the-ass pro-union agitator is caught haranguing the proletariat instead of driving his forklift like he's paid to, teams of bureaucrats from the liberal Department of Labor will swoop down to shield him from the wrath of his mean overseers. The Federal Government will intrude upon a privately owned business and hijack the HR process that normally kicks in when someone is being disruptive instead of doing what the boss is paying him for.

The most effective part of the article is it's emotional appeal using personal stories of innocent workers being harassed by the man and getting fired for fighting back with union tactics. The author hints darkly at shadowy groups and worker intimidation, filling in the factual voids with ominous tonal shading. (Cue the scary music)
Employer opposition takes its toll, as workers fear for their jobs or economic wellbeing. In the face of employer hostility and long, drawn-out campaigns for union recognition, workers grow cynical or disillusioned, persuaded that collective action is futile, even if they would like a union.
Here's the best piece of propaganda in the article. Nevermind the non-sequitur pretzel logic. It is a brilliant rhetorical flourish:
Further, the employer defense of secret ballots is a sham. “Workers without a union don’t vote on anything,” says Tom Woodruff, director of Change to Win’s strategic organizing center. “When was the last time non-union voters voted on a pay raise?” For that matter, when did corporations seek worker secret ballots on executive pay or offshoring jobs?
The fact is, employers almost always get the final vote

They move their operations when labor costs or taxes get too high or government regulations become too onerous. Where unions are strong enough to keep the employer from escaping, the consumer is the one administering the final thumbs-down. Just look at high tax, unionized Michigan. According to the Wall Street Journal, it has lost 83,000 manufacturing jobs in the past decade. Where did those jobs go? Mexico, China, Indonesia? No. They went to Texas, the Carolinas, Tennessee, Kentucky, Georgia and Alabama. While Michigan was bleeding out over the past decade, the south picked up 91,000 non-union manufacturing jobs.


I fail to see how unionizing the entire country will do anything other than drive American jobs to cheaper overseas locations.


http://inthesetimes.com/article/4191/ready_to_rumble
http://www.uschamber.com/issues/index/labor/cardchecksecrbal.htm
http://online.wsj.com/article/SB122126282034130461.html?mod=opinion_main_commentaries

8 comments:

Canadian Pragmatist said...

"So if a pain-in-the-ass pro-union agitator is caught haranguing the proletariat instead of driving his forklift like he's paid to, teams of bureaucrats from the liberal Department of Labor will swoop down to shield him from the wrath of his mean overseers. The Federal Government will intrude upon a privately owned business..."

I hope so. If a worker is organizing with other workers to raise their meager pay, unequal to their labour: "If the one species of labour should be more severe than the other, some allowance will naturally be made for this superior hardship... (Smith, TWON)"
I hope the employer is not able to get in the way of that.

"...and hijack the HR process that normally kicks in when someone is being disruptive instead of doing what the boss is paying him for."

I assume that HR stands for human resources, or more accurately laying the employee off. If so... no an employer should not be allowed to fire employees for wanting to start a union.

I actually agree with you that unions are not always a good thing, but your argument against allowing gov't interference could be made for not allowing gov't interference when sexual abuse, discrimination, safety issues, etc... occur in the workplace as well.

It could have been used to defend slavery as well. Will you look at that.

Silverfiddle said...

"If the one species of labour should be more severe than the other, some allowance will naturally be made for this superior hardship... (Smith, TWON)"

Note the word naturally. If a job is particularly crappy or back-breaking, you will have to pay someone more to do it, because people will naturally gravitate to something easier.

Human Resources handles work infractions. Sometimes it's just a warning. Depends on company rules. If someone is doing other than what the company is paying them, the company has a right to punish them. It's why I can't blog while I'm at work.

Government tries to act as an honest broker, and given the labor history in this country (abuses on both sides) I can see why we need them there, but it should be a police function, not taking sides. Like everything else in government, the Labor Department has become politicized.

Anonymous said...

My entire experience with closed-shop unions was with an IBEW unionization in Massachussetts. After the vote the union boss stood up and announced cheerfully that it was unanimous.

Until a guy in the back of the room stood up and asked how it was unanimous if he voted against the union...

whereupon, the union boss obviously annoyed, snapped...well, almost unanimous.

All the union ever did for me was send me letters that opened "Dear Brothers and Sisters"...

The one person I know of who got into a situation where they could have used the union (funny how when company did layoffs, they were all female)... was told that the union couldn't do anything, as we hadn't reached the breakeven point by being unionized long enough.

That was almost 20 years ago... and you can imagine my opinion on a group thugs siphoning off 2 percent of my wages and providing nothing in return.

Redneck Ron said...

Stay In Canada.

When person owns/runs a company no matter how bit they are the Captain of th Ship and the works for the Company-whether is is union or not. When your union you pay into one company and work for another.

We all know the source of Unions was lack of fair treatment and gread. This is how they were founded-no if or and about it.

Republicans has power base with non-union companies and Democrats has their power base with union members. So what is worse?

You are taught in mangement courses that these are the laws that govern unions and there is no need for the them these days or are there. I can't answer that and my father was union member. I grew decently and can't complain what they did for my family.

There is disregard for employers within my family because most feel they get treated like crap and slaves. To be frankly I really don't think it doesn't mean a whole alot of your in union or not when a whole factory shuts down. Everybody is screwed.

Finntann said...

I'm not a big fan of organized labor on the national scale, but support workers rights to organize locally.

I see more negatives out of the large national powerhouse unions than I see positive.

e.g. New York City's attempt a while back to put criminals to work eliminating their grafitti problem by putting prisoners to work painting the walls of tunnels, overpasses, etc. Unfortunately the painter's union took the city to court to block the action and succeeded in crippling the proposal by ensuring that if the city did this, they had to pay the prisoners union wages.

I too come from a background of blue-collar union workers, and while they were once essential in ensuring workers rights are now an large anachronistic beast gnawing at the ankles of a productive society... or maybe they've reached the knees by now, given the state of the Big Three and the UAW.

Canadian Pragmatist said...

I was going to comment on the word naturally in the quote and suggest that good jobs don't naturally pay more than crappy jobs.

This supposed natural discrimination between more arduous and less arduous work needs to be set into law, otherwise you'll find a new immigrant who needs work (whatever it may be) and an employer looking for someone to blacktop the driveway for minimum wage.

That sort of thing happens all the time. People don't naturally gravitate towards easy work, they gravitate naturally towards high-paying work. In the end the difficulty of the work is taken for granted because everyone wants to install insulation because they think it pays well. No one cares about breathing in little shards (chards?) of glass when it pays better than a less hazardous job.

Canadian Pragmatist said...

I meant the exact opposite in the first paragraph. That bad jobs don't naturally pay more than good jobs...

Silverfiddle said...

If I have a company that samples beer and you have a company that cleans toilets, which job do you thing pays more?

A programmer makes more than a street sweeper because there are fewer people qualified to write code than to sweep streets.

US laborers are being pushed out of the market by illegal aliens who will do the same work for much less.

Supply and demand explains all three cases.

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