Most
Americans have heard of the “bridge to nowhere” and its $390 million
price tag.
And,
most Americans have heard of the $750 billion of working peoples’
tax money that went to the “big bailout” of the no-product money
manipulators of Wall Street. Probably, though, not many Americans
can tell you where their money went.
The
peoples’ representative government—the Congress—doesn’t know where
it went, either. But that didn’t stop them from handing it over.
If
there was a question in anyone’s mind about why those same representatives
didn’t go for the $25 billion bailout of the American auto industry
(even with strings attached, such as getting rid of incompetent
management), it must be pretty clear by now that they want the arguably
last big manufacturing industry in America to be union-free.
When
they discussed a possible Big Three bailout, Senator Richard Shelby,
an Alabama Republican, and Senator Mitch McConnell, a Republican
from Kentucky, they said loudly and clearly from the floor of their
house and in press interviews that the auto makers could get the
money they needed from their workers, who are paid too much.
The
workers, members of the United Auto Workers (UAW), needed to get
their pay and benefits back down to where they were years ago, to
conform with those of non-union workers who make cars like Toyota,
Honda, Mercedes, and other brands.
There
are many other politicians who hold the same view, but what they
never pointed out was that plenty of money was given to those foreign
companies to get them to locate their car plants in their states—and
they usually were states with so-called right-to-work laws. People
who know what the laws do call them right-to-work-for-less laws.
See
if we can get this straight. They took taxpayer money in states
like Alabama and Kentucky and paid the foreign car companies to
put their factories there. Then, the companies came in, built their
factories, and immediately began paying wages and providing benefits
at a scale considerably below the standard set by UAW contracts.
Where
does some of that money come from? There are several states, mostly
southern, but which include states like Alaska, where they receive
more money from the federal government than they pay to the national
treasury.
In
the years when statistics were compiled, states such as these received
between one or two dollars from the federal government for every
dollar they sent to Washington in taxes. In some years, Mississippi
received about $2 for every dollar sent.
So,
one could consider that some of the money they gave to the foreign
car companies came from the “richer” states—the Northeast, Upper
Midwest, and the West Coast—all states that are still fairly unionized.
In effect, then, union wages and the higher standard of living of
those parts of the country tended to give a boost to the economies
of the non-union states. Whether that’s a form of welfare is up
for debate.
How
does this happen? Well, back to the “bridge to nowhere” in Alaska,
where a bridge that was pushing the Golden Gate Bridge for length
would have connected the mainland to an island that would have allowed
its 50 persons to drive, rather than take the ferry, which runs
every 30 minutes (in the busy season, every 15 minutes).
Ted
Stevens, a Republican, late of the U.S. Senate, spent nearly 40
years in Congress, so he accumulated lots of seniority and lots
of power and was able to direct much money back to Alaska, in public
works projects. It was a contractor’s work on his house that got
him indicted and convicted on felony charges, but he almost got
himself re-elected last month, even with seven felony convictions
to his credit. That’s how grateful the people were for his ability
to pull money from the federal treasury and put it into Alaska’s.
So
it goes with other states in similar circumstances—like Senator
Shelby’s state and Senator McConnell’s. If the people keep sending
them back to Washington enough times, they’ll accumulate seniority
and power and will get chairmanships that will allow them to direct
billions of dollars back to their own states and communities.
That’s
what gets their states defense plants, military bases, and foreign
car companies, to mention a few of the perks of long tenure.
The
money for this type of benefit comes from the states that have a
standard high enough to provide it to the national treasury—the
Northeast, the Midwest, and the West Coast. Some of those states
are lucky to get back a dollar for every dollar sent to Washington,
while the others get back much more than what they paid into the
treasury. For example, New York never did get a dollar back for
each dollar sent, from 1981 to 2005.
It’s
a bit disingenuous of Shelby and McConnell to say that unionized
workers in the American auto industry should give up even more than
they have given over the past two decades, as they do their stand-up
interviews and say on national television that their (foreign) auto
plants are “doing fine” and, if the unions would hang themselves,
the Big Three might make it back on their own.
The
flow of money has remained constant over the years. It still goes
from the more well-off states to the more needy.
The
funny thing about national economies, though: When the institution—organized
labor—that sets the living standard for the nation is destroyed,
it won’t be long before the rest of the nation follows.
That
shouldn’t be too hard a concept for the senators and their cohorts
to understand.
BlackCommentator.com Columnist, John Funiciello, is a labor organizer and former union
organizer. His union work started when he became a local president
of The Newspaper Guild in the early 1970s. He was a reporter for
14 years for newspapers in New York State. In addition to labor work, he is organizing family farmers
as they struggle to stay on the land under enormous pressure from
factory food producers and land developers. Click here
to contact Mr. Funiciello. |