The
livelihoods of America’s working men and women have been
under assault for a long time—measured in decades, not just
years—and the unions which have represented those workers
have been fighting a rear guard action to salvage something
of a decent life.
As
a bit of a retrospective of 2010 and a prognostication of
what is to come in the lives of working folks next year
and beyond, we can start with a few things that have become
very familiar to anyone who watches even television news
or reads a mainstream newspaper: the disparity in wealth
between the top 1-2 percent of Americans and the rest of
us is the greatest since the Robber Barons of a hundred
years ago; millions have been removed from their homes through
foreclosure or short sale because they can’t make the monthly
payment; there are five applicants for every available job
in the country; although education is touted as a way out
of misery, tuition and other costs of even public universities
are more and more out of reach for the children of workers;
Republicans and their ilk were willing to extend unemployment
benefits to the long-term unemployed millions only if the
Democrats were willing to extract hundreds of billions of
borrowed dollars to provide further tax cuts for the rich.
For
now, we’ll leave out the precarious condition of our environment—air
and water, the soil, and the oceans, themselves—and just
consider the conditions wage workers and their families
deal with everyday. And, we’ll leave out the truly dangerous
condition of America’s food system, which is controlled,
literally, by faceless corporate bureaucrats and their minions
in government. It’s a system that is doing great harm and,
often, killing us.
In
recent years, up to and including this waning year, the
union movement has struggled valiantly to protect workers—members
and non-members alike—from the worst behaviors of corporations
across the country. They have had to do this in the face
of a propaganda war that has even low wage workers speaking
out against unions, even though common sense tells them
that their employers have their own organizations, formed
to benefit a corporate agenda, while they have no protection
against arbitrary and capricious actions by their bosses.
As
the strength of the union movement has diminished, the economic
well being of working people, in general, has gone downhill
and the country’s economic malaise has become a feature
of daily life. If the people are not doing well, the nation
will not do well, no matter how much money the rich and
powerful gather to themselves.
One
bright spot in the declining condition of the American worker
and unions has been in public employment. The unions that
flourished in government service in the short time that
those workers have been allowed to organize has been a piece
of good news for everyone in the union movement. Providing
public services is one of the few areas that generally cannot
be farmed out to low wage countries.
The
once derided public worker—with her low wages and paltry
benefits—now has become in the eyes of the country’s right
wing the “elite” worker, that is, one who has decent pay
and benefits and a good pension. Therefore, according to
the Republicans and their right wing, such largesse must
be stamped out, even as they show themselves willing to
do just about anything to get more tax cuts for the rich
and to protect the power and wealth of Corporate America.
Workers
are in for an even rougher ride in the next year, or two,
if what the outgoing governor of Minnesota says about public
workers takes an even greater hold among the nation’s political
right wing. Let us be clear about this: over the past
several decades, while the Republicans and their managers
in Corporate America were doing their best to harm working
people, Democrats were missing in action on countless issues
vital to workers and the conditions of their lives.
Tim
Pawlenty, the Republican governor of Minnesota who many
believe is the great hope for the GOP presidential nomination
for 2012, wrote an op-ed piece in the Wall Street Journal
on Dec. 13, in which he repeated what has become a groundless
mantra of those who pray (along with paying their professional
union-busters) for the demise of the union movement: Unions
once had their place, but no more. In his op-ed, Pawlenty
claims to have been a union member in his younger years
(presumably, when he was smarter). But, he also wrote,
“The moral case for unions—protecting working families from
exploitation—does not apply to public employment.”
Now,
declared Pawlenty, “working families” need to be protected
from public sector workers and their unions. He added,
“First, we need to bring public employee compensation back
in line with the private sector and reduce the overall size
of the federal civilian work force.”
For
about 40 years, the real wages of American workers has been
declining and millions are earning about half of what they
made in industry and manufacturing in their new jobs in
the American “service economy.” And, those are the levels
to which Pawlenty wants to see public workers’ wages and
benefits fall. Remember, this is the guy who would be president
and he is one of those Republicans who is not a member of
the “know-nothing” wing of the party, although he often
talks like one. His talking points are straight out of
the policies of the U.S. Chamber of Commerce, the Business
Roundtable, and the National Association of Manufacturers,
among others.
The
state of working America is not healthy. And, with Pawlenty
and others, competing to drive workers to historic new lows
in living standards, unless they wake up and make their
demands known, there will be more of the same treatment
for the foreseeable future. Workers who are concerned about
the lives their children will live need to begin to speak
up, now.
One
can just about taste the irony: The environment is intentionally
being collapsed and we have a crisis of the collapsing health
of Americans. These twin collapses are occurring because
the Republicans and others have said that they will do nothing
to harm the ability of Corporate America to make their profits.
Therefore, there will be no, or few, regulations about the
poisoning of the planet, the demise of our fisheries, the
waste of our topsoil (the thin layer of earth on which our
future existence depends). And, little will be done to
mitigate the power of the handful of corporations, which
control our entire food system (with the exception of a
very small percentage of small, often organic, farms).
In
many cases, the only solution is well-ordered government
regulation, and the only ones to do that work are…surprise!…government
workers. So, Pawlenty and others are saying that we should
get rid of them and drop their pay and benefits to those
of your average retail store worker in your nearby mall.
Pawlenty and others like him, using Chamber of Commerce
figures, have said that government workers average $123,049
a year, or about twice the amount that the average private
sector worker earns. What mall worker, restaurant worker,
nursing home worker, or other service worker would not celebrate
the earning of $62,000 per year?
They
don’t earn anywhere near that much, so he is wrong on the
average pay and he is wrong on the ability of government
to provide vital services without them. Pawlenty is misleading
the people on basic issues. He never will say that
the rich and corporations are paid too much, even though
some CEOs are paid in a few hours what a worker earns in
an entire year. And, the governor never will demand that
the rich and corporations should pay their fair share of
taxes. That would be un-American!
Workers
all across the country, no matter what their jobs, will
face more difficulties in trying to keep their families
fed, sheltered, and healthy in the coming years. A positive
sign has come from polls that show the people know unions
are beneficial to them and 60 percent of them would join
unions if the labor laws were enforced and employers were
not able to fire them—without any real penalty—for organizing
and joining a union.
Politicians,
especially those like Pawlenty, are not going to help workers
and their families. They will do just the opposite. The
help will only come from unity and solidarity—workers helping
each other, organizing and joining unions. If this is done,
there may be some hope for a resurgence of the working class
and the middle class. Without this, there will be no recovery,
economic or otherwise.
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.
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