Labor needs a radical vision.For almost a year, a debate has been growing within the U.S. labor movement over its direction, structure, politics and vision. Previous attempts have been made to discuss the problems of labor in the post-McCarthy period, notably when the slate headed by current AFL-CIO AFL-CIO: see American Federation of Labor and Congress of Industrial Organizations. AFL-CIO in full American Federation of Labor-Congress of Industrial Organizations U.S. President John Sweeney John Sweeney is the name of:
[ILLUSTRATION OMITTED] This discussion was formally initiated at last summer's convention of the Service Employees International Union, when President Andy Stern For other people with this name, see . Andrew L. "Andy" Stern (born 1950) is the president of the Service Employees International Union, the largest and fastest-growing union in the United States and Canada. called for deep structural change in U.S. unions. Stern himself pushed that process along, when his union issued a 10-point proposal in December, called Unite To Win, which immediately stirred intense controversy. The set of proposals made by SEIU SEIU Service Employees International Union SEIU Special Education Intake Unit SEIU Secondary Education Interdisciplinary Unit SEIU Software Engineering Institute Union , and now by other unions from CWA CWA Clean Water Act (33 USC) CWA Communications Workers of America CWA Concerned Women for America CWA CEN Workshop Agreement (European pre-normative document) CWA County Warning Area CWA Clean Water Action to the Teamsters Teamsters large, powerful union of U. S. truckers. [Am. Hist.: NCE, 2703] See : Labor , has started a debate labor desperately needs. And they all put the issue of stopping the slide in members and power--the problem of organizing--in center stage where it belongs. Organizing large numbers of workers will not just help unions. Wages rise under the pressure of union drives, especially among non-union workers. Stronger unions will force politicians to recognize universal healthcare, secure jobs and free education after high school, not as pie-in-the-sky dreams, but as the legitimate demands of millions of people. This is a huge job. Raising the percentage of organized workers in the U.S. from just ten to 11 percent would mean organizing over a million people. Only a social movement can organize people on this scale. In addition to examining structural reforms that can make unions more effective and concentrate their power, the labor movement needs a program that can inspire people to organize on their own, one that is unafraid to put forward radical demands and rejects the constant argument that any proposal that can't get through Congress next year is not worth fighting for. As much as people need a raise, the promise of one is not enough to inspire them to face the certain dangers they know too well await them. Working families need the promise of a better world. Over and over, for more than a century, workers have shown that they will struggle for the future of their children and their communities, even when their own future seems in doubt. But only a new, radical social vision can inspire the wave of commitment, idealism and activity necessary to rebuild the labor movement. New Direction Needed While the percentage of organized workers has declined every year for the past decade, unions have made important progress in finding alternative strategic ideas to the business unionism of the old AFL-CIO. If these ideas are developed and extended, they will provide an important base for making unions stronger and embedding 1. (mathematics) embedding - One instance of some mathematical object contained with in another instance, e.g. a group which is a subgroup. 2. (theory) embedding - (domain theory) A complete partial order F in [X -> Y] is an embedding if them more deeply in working-class communities. [ILLUSTRATION OMITTED] The two proposals at the end of SEIU's ten points begin to address these strategic ideas, but they fall short of providing a new direction. They are the proposals on diversity, civil rights and building a global labor movement. Labor's change in immigration policy An immigration policy is any policy of a state that affects the transit of persons across its borders, but especially those that intend to work and to remain in the country. was a watershed development that put unions on the side of immigrants, rather than against them. The change provided the basis for an alliance between labor and immigrant communities based on mutual interest and asked union members, and workers in general, to fight for a society based on inclusion, rather than exclusion. But this policy was usually implemented to win support for union organizing campaigns and only rarely to defend immigrant communities as they were attacked in the post-9/11 hysteria. When 40,000 airport screeners lost their jobs because of their citizenship status, there was hardly any labor outcry or protest. For unions who want workers outside their ranks to feel they represent their interests, this was a terrible mistake. But it was compounded when Bush banned unions for the new screener workforce. Once again, an attack on the rights of immigrants led to attacks on the rights of workers generally--a move that called for mass opposition and was met instead with more silence. Labor needs an outspoken policy that defends the civil rights of all sections of U.S. society and is willing to take on the Bush administration in an open fight to protect them. If the war on terror This article is about U.S. actions, and those of other states, after September 11, 2001. For other conflicts, see Terrorism. The War on Terror (also known as the War on Terrorism scares labor into silence, few workers will feel confident in risking their jobs (and freedom) to join unions. Yet people far beyond unions will defend labor rights Labor rights or workers' rights are a group of legal rights and claimed human rights having to do with labor relations between workers and their employers, usually obtained under labor and employment law. if they are part of a broader civil rights agenda and if the labor movement is willing to go to bat with community organizations for it. Political calculations in Washington shouldn't be the guide to labor's policy on immigration immigration, entrance of a person (an alien) into a new country for the purpose of establishing permanent residence. Motives for immigration, like those for migration generally, are often economic, although religious or political factors may be very important. and civil rights. Workers need a movement that fights for what they really need, not what lobbyists say a Republican administration and Congress will accept. The position won at the AFL-CIO's Los Angeles Los Angeles (lôs ăn`jələs, lŏs, ăn`jəlēz'), city (1990 pop. 3,485,398), seat of Los Angeles co., S Calif.; inc. 1850. convention in 2000--calling for immigration amnesty, the repeal of employer sanctions and a halt to corporate guest worker proposals--has yet to be achieved in real life. A new direction on civil rights requires linking immigrant rights to a real jobs program and full employment economy. It demands affirmative action affirmative action, in the United States, programs to overcome the effects of past societal discrimination by allocating jobs and resources to members of specific groups, such as minorities and women. that can come to grips with the devastation in communities of color not of the white race; - commonly meaning, esp. in the United States, of negro blood, pure or mixed. See also: Color , especially African-American communities. Some unions, particularly HERE, have moved from rhetoric to actual contract proposals linking immigrant rights and jobs for underrepresented un·der·rep·re·sent·ed adj. Insufficiently or inadequately represented: the underrepresented minority groups, ignored by the government. communities. But this is just a step towards unity, and it is already endangered by proposals for new guest worker programs that will pit immigrants against the unemployed. As employer lobbyists continually point out, jobs and immigration are tied together. Corporations will either pit people against each other at the bottom of the workforce, or labor will unite them in a struggle for their mutual interest. From the Cold War to the War on Terror When Tom Donahue Tom "Big Daddy" Donahue (May 21, 1928 – April 28, 1975), was a pioneering rock and roll radio disc jockey. Donahue's career started 1949 on the east coast of the U.S. and the old administration of Lane Kirkland Joseph Lane Kirkland (March 12 1922 – August 14 1999) was a US labor union leader who served as President of the AFL-CIO for over sixteen years. Biography were defeated in 1995, activists on all levels of the labor movement expected that the AFL-CIO would take down the cold war barriers. Labor's cold war foreign policy separated U.S. unions from workers around the world and often betrayed them in the interest of U.S. foreign policy. The demand to change this policy was partly driven by the impact of NAFTA NAFTA in full North American Free Trade Agreement Trade pact signed by Canada, the U.S., and Mexico in 1992, which took effect in 1994. Inspired by the success of the European Community in reducing trade barriers among its members, NAFTA created the world's on the consciousness of millions of U.S. workers. For the first time in decades, pressure came from below, from local unions and rank-and-filers, demanding that the labor movement seek alliances with workers abroad based on common interest. In an era when the fate of millions of U.S. workers is tied to the international system of production and markets, this is a survival question. A growing number of workers, both inside and outside unions, today understand that an effective response to globalization globalization Process by which the experience of everyday life, marked by the diffusion of commodities and ideas, is becoming standardized around the world. Factors that have contributed to globalization include increasingly sophisticated communications and transportation will affect their own welfare. For the first time since the 1940s, millions of U.S. workers can be, and have been, drawn into the fight against the global free market economy, from Seattle to Miami. The neoliberal ne·o·lib·er·al·ism n. A political movement beginning in the 1960s that blends traditional liberal concerns for social justice with an emphasis on economic growth. ne policies imposed by the U.S. and other wealthy countries attack living standards living standards npl → nivel msg de vida living standards living npl → niveau m de vie living standards living npl , workers' rights and the public sector everywhere. Increasingly, they are imposed at the point of a gun, using the war on terror as a pretext PRETEXT. The reasons assigned to justify an act, which have only the appearance of truth, and which are without foundation; or which if true are not the true reasons for such act. Vattel, liv. 3, c. 3, 32. to suppress opposition. The U.S. labor movement should be, and can be, the most outspoken advocate for peace, since eroded standards and privatization privatization: see nationalization. privatization Transfer of government services or assets to the private sector. State-owned assets may be sold to private owners, or statutory restrictions on competition between privately and publicly owned are used to attract corporate investment and increase the export of jobs and production. Instead, after expressing doubts before the invasion of Iraq, the AFL-CIO stood silent once it began. Some unions made opposition to the war part of their election campaign, but the official AFL-CIO apparatus accepted the false logic that speaking out on the war was the "kiss of death kiss of death gangsters’ farewell ritual before murdering victim. [Am. Cult.: Misc.] See : Farewell ." The opposite proved true. Some 10.5 million voters from union households said the war was the most important issue to them. To the 51 percent who voted for Kerry, the campaign had nothing to say. As for the 49 percent who voted for Bush--families with children in the service, or reservists, or honest people affected by national security hysteria--no effort was made to convince them that the war was as bad for working families at home as it was for the Iraqis whose country is being destroyed. Silence on the war had a high price. The AFL-CIO needs a program that opposes the effort to implement neoliberal policies internationally, taking a consistent approach from Mexico to China, from Baghdad to Bogota. Moving away from the cold war past was a watershed development as important as the change on immigration, and related to it. But change in the labor movement's international activity has been incomplete. A new direction in international relations international relations, study of the relations among states and other political and economic units in the international system. Particular areas of study within the field of international relations include diplomacy and diplomatic history, international law, should be based on solidarity, and solidarity is a two-way street. The end of labor's cold war policy has to be made explicit, as part of finding a new set of principles for our relations with unions and workers in other countries. While some of those principles are embodied in ILO ILO abbr. International Labor Organization Noun 1. ILO - the United Nations agency concerned with the interests of labor International Labor Organization, International Labour Organization labor standards calling for the right to organize, an end to child labor child labor, use of the young as workers in factories, farms, and mines. Child labor was first recognized as a social problem with the introduction of the factory system in late 18th-century Great Britain. and other protections, unions in developing countries increasingly demand a broader agenda. In particular they want greater help in defending the public sector under attack from privatization and an international system for defending the rights of migrants. New international relationships need to be based on the ability of U.S. unions to listen to the concerns of labor in the developing world, not just impose its own agenda, however well intentioned. A new, more radical political program runs counter to the prevailing wisdom of our times, which holds the profit motive sacred and believes that market forces solve all social problems. If labor's leaders move in this direction, they won't get invited for coffee with the President or included in meetings of the Democratic Leadership Council. At the beginning of the cold war, the AFL-CIO built its headquarters right down the street from the White House, eloquent testimony to the desire of its old leaders for respectability in the eyes of the political elite. That dream may be difficult for some to give up. But labor can't speak convincingly to the working poor without, at the same time, directly opposing the common economic understanding shared by Republicans and many Democrats. A Real Social Vision The labor movement needs political independence. To organize by the millions, workers have to make hard decisions, putting their jobs on the line for the sake of their future. Unions of past decades won the loyalty of working people when joining one was even more dangerous and illegal than it is today. The left in labor then proposed an alternative social vision--that society could be organized to ensure social and economic justice for all people. While some workers believed that change could be made within the capitalist system and others argued for replacing it, they were united by the idea that working people could gain enough political power to end poverty, unemployment, racism and discrimination. The poor will not be always with us, they declared. Today our biggest problem is finding similar ways for unions to affect workers' consciousness--the way people think. A new commitment to organizing can't be simply a matter of more money and organizers, or more intelligent and innovative tactics, or structural change, as necessary as these things "These Things" is an EP by She Wants Revenge, released in 2005 by Perfect Kiss, a subsidiary of Geffen Records. Music Video The music video stars Shirley Manson, lead singer of the band Garbage. Track Listing 1. "These Things [Radio Edit]" - 3:17 2. are. During the periods in our history when unions grew by qualitative leaps, their activity relied on workers organizing themselves, not just acting as troops in campaigns masterminded by paid staff. For workers to act in this way today, they would have to have a much clearer sense of their own interests and a vision that large-scale social change is possible. Does the labor movement present such a vision of a more just society, capable of inspiring workers to struggle and sacrifice? Labor's radical vision of decades ago made it a stronger movement. Losing it in the red scares Throughout much of the twentieth century, the United States worried about Communist activities within its borders. This concern led to sweeping federal action against Aliens and citizens alike during periods known today as Red scares. of the 1950s deprived most unions of their ability to inspire. It's no accident that the years of McCarthyism marked the point when the percentage of union members began to decline. Our history should tell us that radical ideas have always had a transformative power--especially the idea that while you might not live to see a new world, your children might, if you fought for it. In the 1930s and '40s, these ideas were propagated within unions by leftwing political organizations. A general radical culture reinforced them. Today, most unions no longer have this left presence. Can the labor movement itself fulfill this role? At the very least, unions need a large core of activists at all levels who are unafraid of radical ideas of social justice and who can link them to immediate economic bread-and-butter issues. And since good ideas are worthless unless they reach people, the labor movement has to be able to communicate that vision to workers outside its own ranks. In an era when many unions have discontinued their own publications, or turned them into ones light on content, they need exactly the opposite. This is a very important moment, in which a national debate and discussion can have real-life consequences for the future. It can provide a powerful impetus to organizing an anti-Bush coalition in the short term and a more profound political realignment re·a·lign tr.v. re·a·ligned, re·a·lign·ing, re·a·ligns 1. To put back into proper order or alignment. 2. To make new groupings of or working arrangements between. in the longer term. The present period is not unlike the 1920s, which were also filled with company unions, the violence of strikebreakers and a lack of legal rights for workers. A decade later, those obstacles were swept away. An upsurge of millions in the 1930s, radicalized by the depression and leftwing activism, forced corporate acceptance of labor for the first time in the country's history. The current changes taking place in U.S. unions may be the beginning of something as large and profound. If they are, then the obstacles unions face today can become historical relics relics, part of the body of a saint or a thing closely connected with the saint in life. In traditional Christian belief they have had great importance, and miracles have often been associated with them. as quickly as did those of an earlier era. David Bacon is a Bay Area-based writer and photographer, and a former factory worker and union organizer A union organizer (sometimes spelled "organiser") is a specific type of trade union member (often elected) or an appointed union official. A majority of unions appoint rather than elect their organizers. . |
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