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"The
essence of trade unionism is social
uplift. The labor movement has been the
haven for the dispossessed, the despised
the neglected, the downtrodden, the
poor."
--A. Philip Randolph
An important debate has
commenced within the ranks of organized
labor regarding the future of the
movement. From our experience we know
that the ‘top-to-bottom’ approach to
revitalizing workers’ organizations will
not foster meaningful membership
participation and support. The debate
must be joined by rank-and-file union
members and leaders, other labor
activists, scholars and the broad array
of supporters of trade unionism. It
must be open, frank and constructive,
recognizing that we all have a stake in
the outcome of these discussions.
The following represents the
collective opinion of several
individuals from different sections of
the labor movement who have joined
together to let our voices be heard as
the debate unfolds. Our intervention in
this debate is at least partly motivated
by our sense that the concerns and
perspectives of people of color and
women are all but absent in these
discussions about labor’s future. The
irony, of course, is that our respective
demographic groups represent the future
of organized labor in the USA, if
organized labor is to have a future at
all.
We look forward to your feedback.
******
The economic and political changes over
the last thirty years both in the USA as
well as globally, have resulted in a far
more hostile environment for labor
unions specifically and for working
people generally. In this context,
contrary to the spirit of A. Philip
Randolph’s notion that the essence of
trade unionism is social uplift, the
trade union movement is rarely looked to
today as a voice of progress and
innovation, or a consistent ally of
progressive social movements.
It is not just that
organized labor declined as a percentage
of the workforce since 1955; or that it
carried out unfocused growth, evolving
eventually into no growth; or that it
emphasized servicing its current members
rather than planting the seeds for
future growth. It is that organized
labor looks at itself as separate and
apart from the rest of the working
class, and, for that matter, does not
see itself as the champion of workers
and their communities, but rather a
mechanism for advancing the interests of
those it currently represents.
For organized labor in the USA, the path
away from oblivion must begin with the
recognition of the vastly different
situation that the working class faces
in the early 21st century
from what existed even twenty years
ago. Time and space do not permit an
exhaustive examination of all of these
changes. Much has been written about it
in various journals and books. Suffice
to say that the growth of
neo-liberal globalization
has represented a dramatic change in the
approach of capitalism toward both the
working class as well as towards society
as a whole. Multi-national corporations
and their allies have concluded that the
terms of any ‘social partnership’ must
be altered in their fundamentals at the
expense of working people. This
view—neo-liberalism—has grown in
importance, coming to dominate the
thinking of both major US political
parties and has guided the shift to the
political Right in the ruling circles of
the USA.
The current situation necessitates a new
approach to strategy, tactics, and
fundamentally, the vision of trade
unionism. This is more than the
production of new mission statements,
but instead rests on the necessity to
rethink the relationship of the union to
its members, to the employer(s), to
government, to US society as a whole,
and to the larger global village.
Can the union, we must ask, as an
institution and as a representative of a
larger movement, rise to the challenge
of being a means to confront injustice,
or is the union condemned to be solely
an institutional mechanism to lessen the
pain of contemporary capitalism on those
fortunate to be members of organized
labor?
In this context, we propose the
following:
1.
There is a need for a
vision that includes, but is not limited
to organizing the unorganized:
Missing from the current debate is a
clear statement as to what the trade
union movement actually believes. Of
course there must be massive organizing
of the unorganized. But a sole
focus demonstrates the same inflexibly
that reformers are attempting to root
out. In spite of the qualified success
of the organize-above-all-else approach,
it is still being touted as the panacea
to what ails the trade union movement.
As essential as is organizing, alone it
is not enough.
When the Congress of Industrial
Organizations began to come into
existence (with the formation, first, of
the AFL’s Committee on Industrial
Organization) in 1935, there was a very
different social, economic, and
political climate. Yet this situation
is frequently cited, ahistorically it
should be noted, as a parallel to the
moment in which we find ourselves.
While there are critical matters
relative to the structure of unions, the
AFL-CIO and organized labor as a whole
that must be settled, these are not the
issues which should be the starting
point for any debate.
Why, we must ask, should millions of
unorganized workers potentially
sacrifice so much in order to join or
form unions? Why should millions of
potential allies of organized labor
spend any amount of time away from their
own core issues, to unite with the
demands of organized labor? What does a
reconstructed, if not reborn, trade
union movement have to say to people of
color and women that goes beyond the
tried and true rhetoric of the past?
What are unions doing about the
increasing degradation of work, i.e.,
that even unionized workers are working
harder, faster and longer than in the
past, providing us less free time and
increasing the level of stress on
individuals, families and friendship
circles? If these questions are not
answered organized labor will not serve
as a beacon of attraction to the
millions of non-union workers in the
USA, and, in fact, the rebirth of
organized labor will be still-born.
2.
The union movement must be
unapologetically pro-public sector and
pro-public service: Over the
years, since the emergence of
neo-liberalism, with the corresponding
rejection of positive
government intervention in the economy
as the dominant philosophy
directing globalization, the US trade
union movement has addressed the
symptoms rather than the disease. Thus,
it has spoken out against privatization,
cuts in social services, and right-wing
tax proposals that reduce taxes on the
wealthy and deceive the rest of us.
This is all important, but organized
labor has not tied this all together
into a package. A clear example of this
was the failure of much of organized
labor to dissect the actual
politics and economics of the Clinton
administration, as it advanced
institutions like the World Trade
Organization, and supported notions of
free trade, all of which undermined (and
continues to undermine) the notion of
the public sphere.
Organized labor in the USA must study
the current economic and political
situation, and understand that there is
no space for a compromise with any view
that rejects positive government
intervention in the economy. Organized
labor must also refuse to support
individuals and/or organizations who
believe that progress and social justice
can be achieved by subordinating workers
interests to those of unregulated
businesses and financiers.
3.
The union movement must stand
for the expansion of democracy:
Organized labor must stand AND fight for
an expansion of democracy beyond the
limits of formal legality. It must be
the champion of the fight against
racism, sexism, hetero-sexism,
xenophobia, religious bias, and other
forms of intolerance.
In the current national and
international situation, democracy is
under attack. Intolerance and
irrationalism seem to be gaining the
upper hand in the relations among
people. Minorities are being excluded
if not exterminated as a growing
competition for diminishing resources
takes place at precisely the same moment
that immense amounts of wealth are being
accumulated by the few.
Civil liberties are under
assault. In the name of opposing
terrorism, governments, including our
own, are passing legislation that
restricts the right to organize and
protest. Those challenging the status
quo are often viewed with a jaundiced
eye, with the assumption being that they
are insufficiently loyal and patriotic.
Discussions are being shut down in the
name of fighting the common enemy,
depending on who that enemy happens to
be at any one point.
Elections are becoming a sham. In
the USA the Electoral College
effectively disenfranchises millions of
voters, particularly in the South, and
while the US demands the practice of
one-person/one-vote internationally, at
the federal level we have nothing
approximating this. Compounding this
problem is the evolution of
gerrymandering into the equivalent of a
science and the creation of so-called
‘safe electoral districts,’ where
opposition can be counted out. The
piece de resistance is election
fraud, always part of the US political
environment, but now upgraded with the
use of a combination of computer
technology and voter intimidation,
particularly directed at communities of
color. Furthermore, millions of felons
who are primarily people of color are
disenfranchised.
The union movement must engage in
struggles against these various
undemocratic practices and move us away
from a fortress-like society.
The future of the right to join or form
trade unions is integrally linked to the
future of democracy in the USA. In its
own obvious interests, the union
movement must unite the demand for the
right to form or join unions—the right
to organize—with the overall battle for
democracy.
To be credible champions of democracy
the union movement must fight for
democracy within its own ranks.
If our members believe that they
have no control over the future of their
own organizations, or are inadequately
represented in them then we have
failed. We will have created
paternalistic organizations rather than
organizations of the workers themselves.
4.
We must have a U.S. union
movement structure suited to advancing
organizing of the unorganized workers:
The question of the shape and structure
of the US union movement cannot be
driven by a concern about jobs for the
officers and staffs of the current
unions. It must be driven by the need
to organize into unions the millions of
unorganized workers who wish to join or
form unions. It must provide legitimate
representational structures for people
of color and women, and ensure that
these structures make-up a significant
segment of the leadership of the trade
union movement that reflects the
diversity and aspirations of its
membership. This means not only the
inclusion of AFL-CIO constituency
groups, but also an organized and active
process of recruiting new delegates and
leaders representative of the workforce
in their respective industries, and the
creation of opportunities for younger
trade unionists to learn and test their
own leadership abilities.
The structure of organized labor must
orient unions toward their core
jurisdictions-- i.e., toward their
regional, occupational or industrial
base. The logic of this is to be found
in the matter of expertise and
efficiency. Those unions that have
displayed a commitment to a particular
industry, occupation and/or region will
tend to be more studied in those arenas
and better situated to strengthen the
industrial power of the members.
Unions should only enter into new
industrial sectors, occupations or
regions if and when they are prepared to
make the LONG-TERM commitment to that
sector and have demonstrated a
willingness to work with other unions in
that same sector or region.
5.
The union movement must
reshape its political program to focus
on the needs of the working class:
The union movement has made the repeated
mistake of assuming that it can tell its
members how to vote, and that the
Democratic Party structure will
automatically represent their its
interest. What we promote as political
education is rarely more than campaign
publicity. The promise of the 1995
reform movement was for a different
political program. We need to develop
popular economic and political education
programs that speak to where our members
are socially and politically. Such a
program should aim to create a framework
through which they may begin to
understand the political, economic and
social issues of our times.
We must organize our
members—politically— into popular
organizations which are
community-centered, concerned with
politics, sensitive to different social
groupings, and able to branch out into
the community where they, their families
and friends can find a means to
participate in a relevant political
practice. This means the creation of
electoral political organizations at the
grassroots level that can engage in the
arduous but necessary fight for power
for working people. PACs and 527s
cannot replace popular, mass-based
organizations.
6.
The union movement must
organize in the South and Southwest:
The November 2004 elections demonstrate
two interesting things. First, there is
a direct (though not exclusive)
relationship between union membership
and one's tending to vote in one's own
economic interests. Two, the Black and
Latino vote in the South and the
Southwest while critical at the local,
regional and state level, has not had
the same effect in Presidential races
due to the undemocratic nature of the
Electoral College.
The union movement has put off
organizing the South and the Southwest
for too long. Successes in organizing
the South and the Southwest will serve
as a bridgehead for progressive politics
in those regions, and allow the union
movement to utilize these bases in order
to advance a progressive agenda and
build broader political support. Thus,
resources need to be put into organizing
that assumes that organizing is a
long-term, strategic process rather than
an event or action.
Any organizing in these regions must
appreciate that an inability to embrace
the African American and Chicano social
movements respectively will result in
disappointment, if not failure. Simply
focusing union attention on the South
and the Southwest, while an advance over
what most unions are doing today, is
insufficient. The unionizing of these
regions must be connected to the fight
for political power for traditionally
disenfranchised groups. During the 1988
Presidential campaign, the Rev. Jesse
Jackson put it best: In one hand,
you have a union card; in the other
hand, you have a voting card.
7.
State federations and central
labor councils must be democratic,
inclusive, young and audacious:
Too many central labor councils and
state federations, due to their lack of
representation, are disconnected from
the realities that their members face,
not to mention, the realities faced by
the bulk of the working class.
Central labor councils and state
federations must represent strategic
centers for local political action,
coalition-building, member education and
inter-union support. If any of
this is to work, then central labor
councils and state federations must look
more like their memberships. Just as
with the national AFL-CIO, the local and
state bodies must provide legitimate
representational structures for people
of color and women. The local and state
bodies must ensure that these structures
make-up a significant segment of the
leadership of the trade union movement
thereby reflecting the diversity and
aspirations of its membership.
This means not only the inclusion
of AFL-CIO constituency groups, but an
organized and active process of
recruiting new delegates and leaders
representative of the workforce in their
respective industries, and the creation
of opportunities for younger trade
unionists to learn and test their own
leadership abilities.
8.
The union movement
needs real membership education:
It is presumptuous to think that either
organized and unorganized workers will
blindly follow or adhere to a certain
point-of-view without providing them
with a coherent and up-to-scale
mechanism by which they can access
information. Without, however, the
necessary resources for a significant,
member-focused educational effort, it
will be impossible to provide union
members a different vision of trade
unionism, achieve their loyalty, or
motivate them.
Education not only means imparting
information, but dialogue and debate as
well. A
reinvigorated labor movement needs an
integrated education program that joins
together an examination of domestic and
international economics, as well as a
critical look at US foreign policy. In
addition, such education program must
foster the development of a framework
for advancing discussions about class,
race, gender, capitalism and the fight
for power for working people. As such,
the notion that organizing can take
place in the absence of education or
that education is somehow a distraction
or a draw away from organizing is
absurd. Paying attention to the
education of our base is a profound sign
of respect. Calls for mobilization in
the absence of a coherent and unified
framework are disempowering,
irrespective of the intentions, and will
not invoke worker militancy or support.
9.
The US union movement
must build both global union
partnerships and solidarity with others
fighting global injustice: The
US trade union movement has made great
advances away from the Cold War trade
unionism of the past. In spite of
these advances, the US trade union
movement continues to be eyed with some
level of suspicion by our friends beyond
our borders, in part because of a
frequent perception that we are engaged
in protectionism. Excellent steps at
union-to-union cooperation have,
however, been taking place, but these
must go much further. A platform for
the transformation of the International
Confederation of Free Trade Unions (ICFTU)
and the global union
federations/international trade union
secretariats must be advanced, and
should genuinely strengthen the role of
unions from the global South (Africa,
Asia, the Caribbean and Latin
America). The US union movement must
adopt an approach that encourages
union-to-union relationships and
worker-to-worker exchanges, up to and
including the reform and/or creation of
new international labor bodies that
support real solidarity. In addition,
the US union movement must develop means
and mechanisms for providing concrete
support to union movements and other
progressive movements involved in the
struggle for global justice. Such a
stand must represent resistance to the
race to the bottom being
conducted by global capitalism against
workers in all countries. We can not
engage in or be perceived to be engaging
in selective international solidarity,
i.e., solidarity only when it is in
defense of US workers and our issues.
Genuine international solidarity will
also necessarily involve a willingness,
on the part of the US trade union
movement, to challenge US foreign policy
when it undermines national
self-determination and human rights.
We, who sign this document, do so with
an interest in advancing discussion and
debate within the union movement.
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