Far from ameliorating the crisis afflicting what’s
left of organized labor in the United States, a number of “reforms” proposed
by some of the nation’s largest unions appear as attempted rollbacks
of historic gains won by Blacks, Latinos and women unionists a decade
ago. Simply put, the vast changes in AFL-CIO structures demanded by
the giant (and heavily minority) Service Employees International Union
(SEIU), the Teamsters and others, contain no formal mechanisms to ensure
that core labor constituencies have a voice remotely commensurate with
their numbers and strategic importance.
The “reformers” demands dominated this week’s just concluded winter
meeting of the labor federation’s Executive Council, in Las Vegas,
a “fierce” series of discussions in which SEIU chief Andy Stern and
his allies called for “streamlining” the AFL-CIO by paring down the
number of unions from 58 to 20, drastically shrinking the size of the
Executive Council, implicitly reducing the role of state and local
labor bodies and, most disastrous for Black unionists, eliminating
constituent group representatives on the Executive Committee.
“If the ten largest unions will comprise the Executive Committee,
no Black that I’m aware of, or woman that I’m aware of, heads up a
union of that size,” said William Lucy, President of the 33-year-old
Coalition of Black Trade Unionists (CBTU). “How does our voice
get in that decision making process? How do we talk about the value
of organizing as a community empowerment process? Who do we discuss
that with?”
The SEIU and Teamsters proposals include nothing resembling formal
institutional representation for Blacks, Latinos, other minorities
and women – groups that comprise nearly three out of five unionized
workers. It was specifically to include underrepresented groups that
the AFL-CIO expanded its Executive Council from 35 to 54 seats
in 1995, when John Sweeney was elected president. A decade later, “reformers” place
part of the blame for labor’s ongoing decline on the size of the Council,
and would centralize power in the hands of consolidated union chiefs.
The inevitable perception is that Stern, Hoffa & Co. believe that
the institutional inclusion of minority and female voices on the Council
is at least partially to blame for labor’s woes. Or is it a case of
the key constituents getting thrown out with the Executive Council
bathwater? The CBTU’s William Lucy would like to know, but he’s not
getting answers. “Given the fact that we’ve got millions of workers
to organize, how will our concerns be put on the table? How will our
views be shared in terms of our politicization and organizing in our
communities?” asked Lucy, who estimates that close to 30 percent of
organized labor is Black.
Black Power = Union Power
There was a time when union halls in many cities were centers of community
activity, inseparable from the social, cultural and political life
of the surrounding neighborhoods. Vital, active local union halls were
the pride of organized labor – but that was back when white union members
both lived and worked in the cities. Now that the cities and union
membership are largely Black and brown, Blacks are confronted with
demands for greater centralization of resources, authority, and planning
in the hands of white-dominated headquarters leadership.
Lucy thinks the “reformers” have it backwards: “Ultimately, our argument
is that the Central Labor Councils and state federations are the voice
and face of organized labor in the urban community, and therefore they
must be made more effective in articulating labor’s program, projects
and agenda.”
In order to free labor from its hard-hat white racist image in the
Black community – a stereotype that segments of labor earned,
to the movement’s great shame and detriment – local labor activists
and leaders must be perceived as community members who are empowered
to bring labor’s clout to bear on behalf of the community. Such relationships
cannot be forged from a distance, or shoe-horned into the local manifestation
of a national headquarters mandated campaign – certainly, they cannot
be switched on and off based on the needs of national strategists.
Let us be clear: Local Black unionists require a degree of autonomy
and discretionary resources so that they may demonstrate both their
desire and capability to respond to immediate community concerns – that
is, to serve and enhance the political power of the people. As the
most consistently progressive ethnic group in the United States, the
Black community’s empowerment redounds directly to the benefit of labor.
Historically, however, Big Labor has failed to act decisively on this
obvious equation.
It appears the past is about to be repeated.
The South and the South Side
Labor defended its failure to organize the South – a project that
would of necessity have required massive involvement in the southern
Black freedom struggle – on the grounds that massive white public and
private resistance to unionization of Dixie made the task prohibitively
expensive. The chickens that hatched from this historic blunder – rooted
in racism, not accounting – have long since come home to roost. Any
honest analysis of labor’s decline since the heyday of the Fifties
would conclude that the successful maintenance of a racist, anti-labor
southern sanctuary created an inherent bargaining weakness for workers,
nationwide. Indeed, we at believe that labor’s general acquiescence
to the white supremacist order in the South – a regime inseparable
from anti-unionism – effectively crippled the trade union movement
during this crucial, pre-globalist period.
What have they learned? A number of unions now invest in southern
organizing, the SEIU quite notable among them. However, with Blacks
the most eager “joiners” in the region (and nationwide), the overarching
imperative for unions should be to become embedded in the social, cultural
and political lives of Black communities – to achieve political density
in order to gain union membership density. Constituent organizations
like the Coalition of Black Trade Unionists are indispensable to this
task, yet they are shut out of the “reformer’s” proposed Grand Plan.
We are witnessing the unfolding of another historic blunder – this
time, possibly fatal.
Similarly, a great battle looms over the shape and governance of the
cities, a struggle that must politically organize Black and Latino
communities to make the cities into bulwarks of social democracy, an
environment in which unionism can thrive. Yet at just this juncture,
the “reformers” propose to neuter the constituent groups that represent
these populations, who would provide the political leadership to transform
urban America. Little more than lip service is paid to the role of
Central Labor Councils, the structures through which urban unionists
operate.
“The labor councils aren’t represented at the Executive Council. Their
issues will be interpreted by somebody else,” said Pat Ford, a former
executive vice president of SEIU, now assistant for civic affairs to
the president of the AFL-CIO Metropolitan Washington DC Central Labor
Council. “We applaud John Sweeney’s efforts [at this week’s Las Vegas
meeting], his asking for input from state labor councils and the constituencies.
But we need to be at the table, not someone else interpreting our position.”
If Black unionists are not demonstrably respected in the House of
Labor, they will not be viewed as functioning representatives of labor
on the streets of America’s cities. Labor will lose a credible “face
and voice” and, once again, weaken itself.
“I don’t think there is any malice in any of these international presidents,
or any intentional disrespect,” said Ford. “I don’t think they understand
the reason for our passion about this.”
‘We know best. Trust us.’
The 34 months of John Kennedy’s presidency (January 1961 – November
1963) were often quite frustrating to Blacks. The Kennedy brothers,
John and Bobby, offered African Americans words of solidarity, but
hedged and hesitated when it came to putting those sentiments into
legislative form. Trust us, they seemed to say, we’re on your side,
we’ll do the right thing from our executive posts. But it was left
to President Lyndon Johnson to pass the laws that truly transformed
the lives of African Americans, by creating real mechanisms for Black
empowerment.
We were reminded of this period when a letter/article arrived from
Gerald Hudson, the current Black executive vice president of SEIU,
in response to our February
3, 2005 critique of the proposed “reforms” titled, “Black
Unionists Warn: Don’t ‘Restructure Us Out.” Hudson’s message was gracious
(see “The SEIU responds to a article,” February
24, 2005),
but described our commentary as “not correct in its characterization
of that debate, nor its description of the role of the…SEIU, which
with 1.8 million members is the AFL-CIO’s largest and fastest growing
union.”
The veteran union activist and executive presented his personal (sterling)
bona fides, then proceeded to cover the same points outlined in Andrew
Stern’s Unite
to Win document: a critique of the current “balkanized
structure” that “often keeps workers from developing strategies that
match the corporations they deal with”; a general plan that would strengthen “the
role of local labor councils” by causing them to “develop and be held
accountable to a strategic plan for building community alliances and
coordinating political action to support national strategies to build
workers’ strength in each industry”; and “clear standards” – actually,
anything but clear – to establish “full participation at all levels
of the union movement regardless of the color of your skin, the language
that you speak, or your age, gender, ethnicity, sexual orientation,
disability, or immigration status.”
Absent from these general statements of intent, headquarters mandates,
and the requisite diversity statement, were any formal mechanisms that
would empower – or even give standing in the councils of power – to
the constituency groups and the Central Labor Councils they work through.
Hudson then points to his union’s executive board that “is 40 percent
female and 33 percent people of color” – a statistic that is irrelevant
to the monumental matter at hand: a full restructuring of the national
labor movement.
What Hudson and Stern and other “reformers” are actually saying to
Blacks is: Trust us. We’ll do the right thing on our own. The constituent
groups don’t need formal status, resources, or a voice at the table.
We’re on your side.
Just like the Kennedy brothers, more than four decades ago.
Such assurances are as unacceptable now, as they were then. It is
particularly disturbing to hear union leaders, of all people, resist
the formalization of processes and mechanisms through which constituents
exercise effective influence – a contract, if you will. Absent a contract,
all that remains is arbitrary use of power. Every good unionist knows
that.
A wall of silence on race
History – including very recent history – dictates that Blacks,
most of all, need and deserve a contract with organized labor. In few
places outside of Black circles are the racial ramifications of AFL-CIO
restructuring seriously discussed – including most of the position
papers and articles promulgated by the vaguely defined Left. One exception
is a letter circulated by a group that includes Bill Fletcher, President
of TransAfrica, former SEIU executive Pat Ford, AFRAM-SEIU National
President Marchel Smiley, and an impressive interracial list of academic
and activist colleagues. published the letter, titled “The
Future of Organized Labor in the US” on February
17, 2005:
In other words, Black and Brown Power equals Labor Power. However,
it is impossible to envision organizing drives in minority areas
reaching full potential when the constituent groups that reflect
the comprehensive aspirations of these populations are institutionally
shut out of the action – as they were in the 2004 election. While
unions spent more $100 million dollars on Democrats – much of it
outsourced to “527” organizations – constituent groups like the Coalition
of Black Trade Unionists, which had submitted detailed plans for
grassroots mobilization, were left out in an unfunded, arctic cold.
And that was under the current AFL-CIO leadership and structure,
in which minorities are represented as union leaders on the expanded
(since 1995) Executive
Council and as constituent groups. The
proposed “streamlining” portends an even deeper chill – a near-total
freeze-out at the heights of labor decision making.
“Constituency groups get very little money from international unions – they
get it from the AFL-CIO,” said Pat Ford. “What happens to them when
you cut the AFL-CIO budget by 50 percent, as the Teamsters are proposing.”
Neither SEIU’s Unite to Win document nor the Teamsters’ position
paper make a single reference to the unprecedented severity of the union workplace
massacres that African Americans are subjected to in today’s labor
market. “Fifty-five percent (or 168,000) of the union jobs lost in
2004 were held by black workers,” wrote Dwight Kirk, in the February
24, 2005 issue of . “More
stunningly, African American women accounted for 70 percent of the
union jobs lost by women in 2004.
Yes, 100,000
black union women – many the sole or primary breadwinner in their
households – lost their paychecks, their job security, medical insurance
for their families and their retirement nest eggs in just one year.”
Andrew Stern and James Hoffa see a structural crisis in the AFL-CIO,
but cannot seem to comprehend that the particular historical
and current reality for Black workers requires – demands – that
representatives of their choosing be systematically and institutionally
heard and heeded in every venue of power. Not at the whim of top
leadership, but through mechanisms (and financing) built into the
structure.
CBTU President William Lucy is compelled to engage in the repetition
that is born of non-responsiveness by the other party. “We need to
raise the question: How will minority influence be enhanced? What’s
the specific mechanism?”
To date, no credible answers have been forthcoming. Which means
that union “reformers” are adding yet another layer to the deep crisis
afflicting the most underdeveloped labor movement in the so-called “developed” world.
Race has always been the nexus of labor’s failures in the United
States. Today’s “reformers” may think they have a good reputation
and bedside manner, but the medicine they are prescribing only worsens
the ailment.
“We are the most loyal segment of the trade union vote and the Democratic
Party vote, yet our voices are not at the center of the discussion
about the reforms that are necessary,” said Lucy.
In Las Vegas this week AFL-CIO chief John Sweeny and the insurgents
locked
horns on every issue except those that matter most to
the organized Black labor constituency. The Coalition of Black Trade
Unionists holds its 34th annual International Convention
in Phoenix, May
25-30, 2005 – as critical a gathering as any
since the CBTU’s founding in 1972. Given the rollbacks of Black influence
in labor that will be on the table at the AFL-CIO convention in Chicago,
in July, the CBTU convention’s theme, “Forging a New Vision for Tough
Challenges Ahead,” seems almost understated.