So, let�s
be clear: it�s not about the budget. As the facts have emerged
in the 2011 Wisconsin crisis with Governor Scott Walker�s
move against public service unions, it is not about Wisconsin lacking funds. There
is no credible way that Walker and his clique can argue
that eliminating a worker�s right to collective bargaining
saves the state a dime. Each time that this is raised it
becomes a laughable
moment.
What we are witnessing
is a well-orchestrated effort on the part of the Republicans
to cleanse the USA of viable labor unions. It is really that
simple. While those Democrats who have attacked public service
unions, such as New York Governor Cuomo, are little better,
they have a different objective, which is more about totally
subordinating the unions to their economic agenda and appeasing
many conservative voters. For the Republicans, who have
consolidated as a hard-line right-wing party-bloc, the aim
is to weaken labor unions into irrelevance and by doing
so, eliminate an institution they believe supports the Democratic
Party, as well as other liberal and progressive motions.
At the same time, there
is an economic element to what is unfolding. It is the latest,
and perhaps final, step begun by the Republicans, and those
Democrats that subscribe to a neo-liberal economic ideology,
to rob the public sector of resources in order to produce
gain for private contractors. In other words, this is nothing
more than modern day piracy with conservative forces eyeing
the public sector - as they have for more than thirty years
- as a location for economic expansion. The objective is
to seize potentially profitable segments of the public sector
in order to increase profits for private corporations. This,
then, has nothing to do with public service, increasing
efficiency, or saving the taxpayers a cent. It is nothing
short of highway robbery.
So, the political objective
is to eliminate unions and the economic agenda is to eliminate
public space, privatizing all that may be a potential source
of profits. To carry out a privatization agenda, perhaps
better understood as a piracy agenda, the Republicans must
eliminate all obstacles. The obstacles include but are not
limited to labor unions. Thus, central to their strategy
must be �divide and conquer,� an approach that we are witnessing
playing out in the realm of education.
What the Right has succeeded
in doing in education has been to demonize the teachers�
unions and to place themselves, and their privatization
allies, at the forefront of what they wish for the rest
of us to understand as �education reform.� The failure of
the teachers� unions and, for that matter, most public service
unions, to position themselves as legitimate champions of
the public, has led to a situation where the Right can argue
that the unions are representatives of special interests.
Thus, the public sector can be cannibalized while some of
the victims sit back and rest in some � temporary - comfort
that they have yet to have been thrown into the stew.
Regardless of the outcome
of the battle in Wisconsin, the good news is that segments of organized labor and their
allies are standing up and, indeed, learning from the courage
of the Arab democratic revolt thousands of miles away, that
people in motion can make an amazing difference. Yet stubborn
and courageous resistance will not be enough. To that resistance
must be introduced a new vision of public service that places
the unions as guardians of the public and the public�s interests
rather than as guardians of the interests of their members
alone. This means a different sort of unionism, a social justice unionism, but that
will be the only way that not only will we succeed in defending
the public space, but also in revitalizing a worker�s movement
for the 21st century.
BlackCommentator.com
Editorial Board member, Bill Fletcher,
Jr., is a Senior Scholar with the Institute
for Policy Studies, the immediate past president of TransAfricaForum and co-author of Solidarity Divided: The Crisis in Organized Labor and a New Path
toward Social Justice (University of California Press), which examines the crisis of organized labor
in the USA. Click here to contact Mr. Fletcher.
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