(Note:�
This Solidarity America column addresses one of the questions
that BlackCommentator.com has raised among its readers
and writers about the place of progressives or those on
the left in our modern politics.� The question:� What
will it take to bring Obama home?)
Nothing
that has happened in the last decade or two has illustrated
how far from its home the Democratic Party has strayed like
its response to the open assault on American workers and
their unions.
It
has been said over a long time that the first thing an authoritarian
government does when it assumes or seizes power is to marginalize
or eradicate trade unions.� The reason for that, simply,
is that the organization of unions (where they are allowed)
is one of the few mass movements that cuts across all segments
of a society and has the potential for very effective political
action, at least in the long run, if not in the short term.
Authoritarians
are not going to take a chance and allow such an organization
to realize its full potential, so usually they just go right
to the elimination option.� Over time in modern history,
that has been the case.� The best examples of the problems
of authoritarian-leaning governments with unions have been
Poland and England, along with the United States, during
the past three decades.
Poland
and the Solidarity union was a warning shot across the bow
of governments of the right.� Both Margaret Thatcher in
England and Reagan in the U.S. wasted no time in wearing
away what life remained in organized labor in their respective
countries.� Polish Solidarity had its stirrings in the 1970s
with militant unionists� taking actions that the government
would have put down immediately in an earlier time.� As
was pointed out at the time, governments in democratic countries
didn�t do their work with guns and artillery, they did it
with legalisms.
In
the U.S., aided by its close affiliation with the most powerful
corporations and their think tanks that were set up for
that purpose, government began its relentless attack on
the power of the people to organize through their unions.�
There
are many parts to any given society: class, religion, language,
race, region, and many others.� The one thing that nearly
all of them have in common is that they work for wages.�
Some, of course, think that, if they are paid a �salary,�
that they are in some kind of upper class (or ruling class)
and not workers, but if they depend on each paycheck for
their subsistence, they are essentially working for wages,
no matter how big the individual paycheck.
If
there ever has been a time in America when all of those
various segments had come together for their own collective
good, it was through the union movement.� If there had been
no union movement, one would have to have been invented.�
For the powers that be, the potential strength of the people
working together would have to be curtailed, prevented before
workers realized they actually had power.
There
was a time when American workers thought they had an ally
in the quest for equality, fairness, equity, and the opportunity
for a decent life in the Democratic Party.� After all, it
was the party that brought labor laws which allowed workers
to form unions, fought for fair labor standards in pay,
length of the work day and work week.� It fought for safe
and healthy working conditions and much more.� The one thing
that the party forgot, however, was that, once adopted,
those laws did not maintain themselves.� Rather, they had
to be defended every time a new Congress was seated and
a new president entered the Oval Office.
The
most recent changes which occurred in the elections of 2008
and 2010 have been no different, except that the Democratic
Party seems to have forgotten what was once the reason for
its being, working men and women and the unions that struggled
in their behalf.� Corporate America likes to point out that,
50 years ago, 35 percent of American workers were directly
represented by unions, while today, the total stands at
a mere 12 percent of the workers.
While
there are many reasons for this decline, it is due in no
small measure to the unceasing assault on the union movement
by the Republicans, the Right, and many right-wing Democrats
over several decades.� This was done through the press,
television, schools, colleges and universities, and even
movies.��� The propaganda has worked to the effect that
a considerable percentage of workers have come to blame
unions for the problems of the country.
Today,
the U.S. and the world are sitting on the brink of economic
collapse.� The unions are there to do what they can, but
they have been discredited in the minds of the masses of
workers and are unable to take the actions that need to
be taken.� To most workers, unions represented a way to
salvage a vestige of equity, fairness, opportunity, and
freedom that were the promise of concerted action through
the efforts of a strong union movement.� Instead, they thought
that the Democratic Party might be the answer, especially
the young people who never have had the opportunity to learn
what a union is or what they could do for themselves and
their brothers and sisters by joining a union.
People
young and old heard the call of a young senator from Illinois
to look ahead and believe that they could actually change
the way their society and economy operate and they could
make a difference.� Against the odds, the Democratic Party
prevailed in the 2008 election, giving the presidency to
Barack Obama and both houses of Congress to the same party.�
The country was set for change, one that would benefit the
people.
The
merging of the policies of the two major parties over decades
ensured that the change that would come would be little
(it was), and the new administration, filled with leftovers
of previous Democratic administrations ensured that change
for the better would continue to be an illusion dangled
in the air, out in the distance.� There was the health care
�reform,� which left the insurance industry and pharmaceutical
industry and the rest of the medical-industrial establishment
firmly in charge, just as it has been for decades.� Then
there was the failure to close the Bush-Cheney prison at
Guantanamo Bay, the failure to end the wars (worse, he ordered
the surge in Afghanistan), the drone missile strikes in
Pakistan, the continuation and expansion of �free trade�
agreements, his push for nuclear power, and the prospect
of continued drilling for oil in the Gulf of Mexico.� Those
are just a few of the issues that leave voters who are liberal,
left, progressive, or young wondering where to go.
The
single thing that would bring Obama �home� to the right
side of myriad issues would be a resurgent Democratic Party,
one in which the party members had everything to say about
the direction of the party, the government, and the nation.�
This is a condition that has not existed in the Democratic
Party for decades, so it may not even be possible.� One
of the telling events has been the arrogant attempt by the
Republican Wisconsin Governor Scott Walker to not only gut
union contracts of public workers, but to prohibit collective
bargaining.
If
the Democrats, as the purported party of working people,
refused to raise their voices over the attack by Republicans
against the very idea of unions, how can they be expected
to take a view different from the GOP in these perilous
economic times?� They didn�t raise their voices and neither
did Obama, although he made a tepid remark about attacks
on unionized workers, but there has not been much spoken
of it since a hundred thousand workers gathered in the Capitol
in Madison, Wisconsin.
Problem
is, as the years have gone by and the two parties have become
more alike, voters have either abandoned the parties and
become �independents� or they have dropped out of the process
altogether.� Either way, the vital element in any party,
the people, is missing in democratic politics.� Money and
advertising have taken over politics and that�s the way
Republicans and Corporate America like it.� Last year�s
Citizens United Supreme Court decision, which has
given corporations and other entities free rein to spend
as much money on politics as they wish, is all part of the
court�s view of free speech.� With money equated as speech
and corporations defined as �citizens� of the republic,
it�s easy to see which side of the fence winning politicians
will fall.
Short
of a renewed Democratic Party (rather, a reinvented party?),
Obama is not going to come to his senses and listen to the
people who put him in the White House.� Surely, there are
more liberal and progressive Americans than there are Tea
Partiers, yet they do not turn out to rally or demonstrate.�
They had their say at the polls in 2008, but the lack of
support by their party, even when it�s in power, caused
them to back off in the 2010 election.
Obama
failed them in the first two years and he�s failing them
now that the Republicans and their right wing supporters
have turned briefly from the destruction of organized labor
to destruction of any semblance of social programs that
provide for the poor, the disabled, the children, the elderly.�
The amoral nature of this latest manifestation of Republican
policy is appalling, but many Americans who benefit or stand
to benefit from government programs actually support the
slashing of those social programs in favor of more tax cuts
for the wealthy and the corporations.
Only
Americans of the old Democratic Party stripe, expressing
themselves in massive numbers, can bring Obama �home.��
But, they have to educate themselves about the issues and
they have to talk to people they ordinarily would not talk
with, to educate them.� Most American presidents in the
last half-century have ignored the protestors who have gone
to Washington to speak to them.� Obama may be convinced
to speak with them�just not now.� He wants a second term
and he is afraid to buck the power of zealotry exhibited
by the GOP and the right wing, lest the ensuing fight detract
from his reelection effort.
Perhaps,
the only thing that will bring Obama �home� is for him to
return to a party that remembers its roots.� To do that,
his party needs to make itself a home for him to return
to, and he needs to stand up to the powers that be and tell
the people the truth about what is actually happening to
their country.� He needs policies and a plan that will be
in direct opposition to the Republicans and, possibly, even
to his own advisors.�
Don�t
hold your breath, but it could be done.� Bigger hurdles
have been surmounted by peoples in the Middle East, just
in the last few months.� Those changes are not yet complete,
but it took people massing in the streets to make the changes.�
If the U.S. is to be prevented from becoming a nation of,
by, and for plutocrats, the people have to stand up and
be counted.� Obama will come �home� only when the people
demand it.
Click here to read any commentary in this BC series.
Click here to send a comment to all the participants in this BC series.
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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