Big news for everyone in the union and progressive movements: The U.S. Senate begins debate on Employee Free Choice Act on Monday, with a cloture vote expected Wednesday, June 20. Unlike in the House, where the bill passed with a wide margin in March, the Senate fight will be tough. That’s why I need to make this post a call to action: Please take a moment to e-mail your senators and urge them to vote for the Employee Free Choice Act (S.1041)—and if you have a blog or other outlet, getting out the word in the next couple of days is critical.
Here’s why.
I’ve often described in this space how current labor laws make it extremely difficult for America’s workers to form unions without harassment and intimidation from their employers. Many employers want it both ways—workers who produce a lot but who are not paid enough for what they do. The union difference makes a big difference: When comparing wages alone, union workers on average make 30 percent more—that’s a median weekly wage of $833 for a union worker compared with $642 for a full-time nonunion worker in 2006. (The full picture of the union difference is here.)
Improving the wages and working conditions of workers—and in the process, salvaging our shrinking middle class—is a big reason why we in the union movement have fought for the Employee Free Choice Act. The act would give workers more options in forming unions and level the playing field that’s now tilted largely toward the boss.
Some 60 million workers say they would join a union if they could—but our labor laws, dating back to the 1930s, are skewed in favor of corporate giants who spend big bucks to harass and intimidate workers. And it works—after all, how many people want to lose their jobs? (Although it’s illegal to fire workers for forming unions, management does it anyway, counting on the fact that it often takes years for a worker’s appeal to wind its way through the regional and national labor boards and even the courts.)
But right now, we’re up against lawmakers like Sen. Norm Coleman in Minnesota who oppose the Employee Free Choice Act. In opposing the Employee Free Choice Act, Coleman and his cohorts might as well be saying they don’t care about saving America’s middle class. Unions were a key reason why the post-World War II generation saw an upsurge in home ownership, a guaranteed retirement security—everything we took for granted as part of the nation’s middle-class lifestyle—took for granted, that is, until recent years, when the ranks of the middle class started thinning.
Earlier this month, union members met up with Coleman as he headed for a speaking engagement at the University of Minnesota campus. When workers asked him to support the Employee Free Choice Act, the senator said he could not back the proposed law. (Check out video of the encounter here.)
In his exchange with union members, Coleman repeated the incorrect canard that:
This act takes away the right to a secret ballot.
Wrong. The Employee Free Choice Act does not take away the ballot-election process (which all-too often is controlled by the employer). The act would add another option, the majority sign-up process, in which workers seeking to form a union could sign cards indicating their desire to do so. Majority sign-up is much faster than the government-run balloting process and leaves less time for employers to harass and intimidate workers so they will back off from joining a union.
Here’s why U.S. workers need the Employee Free Choice Act.
- The freedom to form unions is a workplace rights issue. Ninety-two percent of private-sector employers, when faced with employees who want to join together in a union, force employees to attend closed-door meetings to hear anti-union propaganda; 80 percent require supervisors to attend training sessions on attacking unions; and 78 percent require that supervisors deliver anti-union messages to workers they oversee. (More stats here.)
- The freedom to form unions is a human rights issue. In the 1950s, workers who suffered reprisals for exercising the right to freedom of association numbered in the hundreds each year. In 1969, the number was more than 6,000. By the early 2000s, some 20,000 workers each year suffered a reprisal serious enough for the National Labor Relations Board to issue a “back pay” or other remedial order, according to Lance Compa. Compa is a senior lecturer at Cornell University and author of the 2000 Human Rights Watch report Unfair Advantage: Workers’ Freedom of Association in the United States under International Human Rights Standards.
- The freedom to form unions is a civil rights issue. Last month, the Leadership Conference on Civil Rights issued a report illustrating the connection between the freedom to form unions and civil rights. Quoting the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr., the report states that
today, the labor and civil rights movements confront another shared crisis—the systematic, often brutal denial of the right of American workers “to form, join, or assist labor organizations, to bargain collectively…and to engage in other concerted activities….”
- The freedom to form unions is a take-back-our-nation-from-corporate-thugs issue. Union-busting is a multimillion dollar business, and some employers who refuse to bump up workers wages by a few cents or a few dollars are more than willing to shell out big bucks to bring in so-called “union avoidance” firms. Chirag Mehta and Nik Theodore at the Center for Urban Economic Development share an example that illustrates how quickly support for unionization can erode when a management consultant is involved:
As soon as the employer found out the union was involved, they flew in their consultants. They had the consultant working in the nursing home for five straight weeks. We had 35 workers out of 43 who signed cards when we filed for an election. In the last week before the election, we had only 28 workers. Then, on the Monday night before the election, we had a meeting and no one showed up. We lost the election two days later by a landslide, 29 to 12.
- The freedom to form unions is an economic issue, a matter of restoring our nation’s priorities, the foundation of which is strengthening America’s middle class.
The freedom to form unions is an issue we all need to care about because it’s one of the most critical issues for the future of our nation.
Thanks for anything you do to send an e-mail to your senators, or post a blog, or talk to your co-workers, in support of passage of the Employee Free Choice Act.
Related posts:
- Chamber of Commerce’s “Buy an Economist” Health Care Strategy Identical to its Anti-Employee Free Choice Campaign
- Who are Union Members? New Study Shows “The Changing Face of Labor”
- Exclusive: New Poll Shows Clear Majorities Distrust Big Corporations, Favor Unions
- Name FDL’s Newest Blog about Labor, Workers, and Unions
- Reid, Wyden, Baucus Reach Agreement on Version of Free Choice Amendment






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Justice!
Libby is going to jail….
Tula, it looks like you’re going to take one for the team here. With Walton’s ruling just now, ordering Libby to jail while his appeal is considered, your fine post is going to get lost.
Keep the faith, and don’t be shy about pushing this again later!
Tula—
Thanks for the update. Much appreciated.
List of Senator’s phone #’s for anyone who needs them:
Senator’s Phone Numbers
Thanks Tula! I’ll be dialing my Senators.
Peterr @ 3
Post it on FB too!
What you all want to bet Paris Hilton going to jail will get more coverage than Libby going to jail?
Tula — Great post. I’ll link it up again in a bit so folks get a good, long read at it. So sorry the Libby decision hit at the same time for you today.
Peterr @ 3
Thanks for your support! Great news about Libby–but I do hope this post can get back up again at a non-urgent news time.
And thanks to everyone who’s taking action on Employee Free Choice! Solidarity!
Christy Hardin Smith @ 9
Thanks, Christy! Congrats to everyone you and everyone at FDL who really made the Libby coverage stick.
tula – thanks so much for this post and for the heads up on action needed.
do you think it would be better to email or to call? or should i just do both? *g*
Collectively America shares interests in becoming more perfect, in Union, as part of our Constitution.
In the same way our ability to choose leadership in Labor adheres this same cause, as we strive to maximize each individual’s standing as part of a collective purpose in our productivity and the fruits such efforts bear.
Heed the views of the Employee Free Choice Rally, as they represent the best hopes we have in restoring America to a role as leader in the world community.
Thanks,
-Chris Murphy
Tula, thanks for this post, will certainly email and call my Senators this am. Coming from a background of blue and white collars workers who belonged, and, belong, to unions, I know just how important they are to us all.
Great post Tula–I second (third?) the call for this to get some additional air time. As important as the Libby trial is, giving more people a fair shot at joining unions is way more important for the future of this country.
Just in time for the Frogmarch!
Latest FaBlog: Fan Mail From Some Flounders
Is there any chance the President signs this? Seems like 67 is a tough road to slog in the Senate, though passage this year is a good thing and would ease its enactment when we reclaim 1600 PA Ave.
selise @ 12
If you can do both, all the better! The e-mail is fast and easy–for anyone who can spend a few seconds on a few clicks.
Thanks for your support!
Simon @ 17
A few years ago, people told us were were crazy to push for this bill (we started the campaign around 2003), that we never had a chance, period. The fact that we’ve gotten this far is very inspiring for our movement. We will go as far as we can this year, with the goal to get a progressive president in 2008 and then take it to the finish line.
Help us with the targeting — please keep us up to date on which Dem Senators are wobbly — which Reps may have to vote for cloture if we make them. It would be great to win this one!
Tula:
We love you. Sorry for the slight number of visitors. But you know why.
(((Tula!))))
Hi Tula:
Sorry it took me so long to comment – I read, acted on your post, and then went and did a quick post on my own blog with a link back here.
THANKS for the heads up!
Tula Connell @ 11
Seconded – thanks to both Christy and Tula!
Re Norm Coleman:
Other MN FDLers and I will definitely work to get him out in ‘08. He’s a turncoat in the Lieberman tradition.
Tula — great job, will follow through although I’m pretty certain my Senators are all over this.
If this hasn’t been published in a diary at DailyKos, you might also want to post it there as well.
janinsanfran @ 20
List of Senate co-sponsors is here:
http://www.aflcio.org/joinauni…..rs_110.cfm
If they’re not co-sponsoring, don’t know for sure if they’ll vote for it!
Thanks for your support!
“Labor is not a commodity!”
From the Clayton Antitrust Act:
http://www.law.cornell.edu/usc…..-000-.html
The labor of a human being is not a commodity or article of commerce. Nothing contained in the antitrust laws shall be construed to forbid the existence and operation of labor, agricultural, or horticultural organizations, instituted for the purposes of mutual help, and not having capital stock or conducted for profit, or to forbid or restrain individual members of such organizations from lawfully carrying out the legitimate objects thereof; nor shall such organizations, or the members thereof, be held or construed to be illegal combinations or conspiracies in restraint of trade, under the antitrust laws.
I will do it definitely tommorow when I have a clear mind. Thanks for the heads up. You rock, Tula.
It amazes me that in America, you do not have the free choice to start up a union. We are going backwards, for sure.