UNIONS NEED UNITY, BUT MORE
By David Bacon
New America Media 1/12/09
http://news.newamericamedia.org/news/view_article.html?article_id=0c2996367123ca87ed33e99d42dc3f7a
OAKLAND, CA (1/10/09) -- Twelve unions met in Washington DC last
week, and announced they're considering rejoining the two labor
federations, the American Federation of Labor/Congress of Industrial
Organizations (AFL-CIO) and Change to Win (CTW), that split apart five
years ago. And one large independent union, the National
Education Association, is thinking of joining them. The
initiative came from the incoming Obama administration, which told
union leaders it didn't relish the idea of dealing with competing
union agendas.
Many progressive labor activists greeted the idea with a sigh of
relief. "Dividing the labor movement was never a good idea to
begin with," says Bill Fletcher, former education director for the
AFL-CIO, and past president of TransAfrica Forum. Fletcher
and many others believe that while U.S. unions have big problems, they
can't be cured by division, competing federations, or simple changes
in structure. Instead, they call for a reexamination of labor's
political direction.
Unions are at their lowest point in membership since the 1920s,
representing less than 12% of the workforce. Obama's election,
which they pulled out all the stops to achieve, promises some degree
of change from Federal policies that have accelerated that decline.
The president-elect has appointed potentially the most pro-union labor
secretary since the 1930s - Congresswoman Hilda Solis. A
potential Congressional majority could pass the Employee Free Choice
Act, which would make union organizing much easier and protect workers
from retaliatory firings while they unionize. Obama has promised
to sign the bill if Congress passes it.
In industry after industry, the impact of revived unions and growing
membership could be enormous. For the first time in U.S.
history, for example, unions have gained the strength to organize the
rest of the hospital and nursing home industries. That would
radically improve the jobs and raise the income of hundreds of
thousands of nurses, dietary workers and bed changers, in the same way
the CIO and the San Francisco General Strike turned longshoremen from
day laborers on the waterfront into some of the country's highest-paid
blue-collar workers. An organized healthcare industry, in
alliance with consumers, could finally convince Congress to establish
a single-payer system guaranteeing healthcare to every person in this
country.
Yet while the 12 leaders were sitting down in Washington to discuss
unity, the healthcare division of country's largest union, the Service
Employees, may be torn apart in a fight between the union's national
leaders and its largest local, United Healthcare West. Such a
fratricidal conflict could not only jeopardize hopes for organizing
healthcare workers, but even labor's larger political goals of the
Employee Free Choice Act and single-payer healthcare.
Decisions made by unions often affect workers far beyond their own
members. The labor upsurge of the 1930s and 40s led to national
contracts in the auto, steel, longshore and electrical industries,
establishing pension and medical benefits, raising wages, and forcing
the creation of the unemployment insurance and Social Security
systems. All workers benefited. And when many master
agreements were destroyed in the early 1980s, workers' middle-class
lifestyles began to erode everywhere.
Joining the AFL-CIO and CTW back together is a sensible step in
marshalling the resources needed to take advantage of the openings
presented by a new Obama administration, and begin rebuilding what was
lost. But that larger sense of responsibility should inspire
unions to face a basic question. They cannot rebuild their own
strength, much less improve life for all workers, by
themselves.
A new direction in labor requires linking unions with other social and
economic justice movements. Defending immigrants from
raids and helping them win legal status is just as important to the
growth of unions as passing the Employee Free Choice Act. U.S.
workers need a new trade policy, which stops using poverty to boost
corporate profits abroad, impoverishing and displacing millions of
people in the process. But that policy can't be won by unions
negotiating with the administration by themselves, outside of a much
broader coalition.
Health care reform requires an alliance between health care providers
and working class consumers. The communities in which all
workers live need real jobs programs and a full employment economy,
especially Black and Latino communities. People far beyond
unions will help win the Employee Free Choice Act and rebuild the
labor movement if the it is willing to fight for everyone.
Unions need not just more unity and better organizing techniques, but
a vision that will inspire workers. They need to speak directly
to their desperation over insecure jobs, home foreclosures and falling
income, and then lead them into action, even (or especially) if it
makes a Democratic administration and Congress uncomfortable. As
much as Obama has done labor a favor by forcing it to discuss
reunification, political calculations in Washington can't be the guide
to what is possible. Workers need a movement that fights for
what they really need, not what beltway lobbyists say legislators will
accept.
In the period of its greatest growth, labor proposed an alternative
social vision that inspired people to risk their jobs and homes, and
even lives - that society could be organized to ensure social and
economic justice for all people. Workers were united by the idea
that they could gain enough political power to end poverty,
unemployment, racism, and discrimination. "Workers are looking
for answers," Fletcher says. "Without them we'll get further
despair. What we need instead is to organize for an
alternative."
Just out from Beacon Press:
Illegal People -- How Globalization Creates Migration and
Criminalizes Immigrants
See also the photodocumentary on indigenous migration to the
US
Communities Without Borders (Cornell University/ILR Press,
2006)
See also The Children of NAFTA, Labor Wars on the U.S./Mexico
Border (University of California, 2004)
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David Bacon, Photographs and Stories
http://dbacon.igc.org
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