Educating on Employee Free Choice, Part 2

Marie Cocco has an op-ed in Oregon’s Statesman Journal on how the Republican Party is using the United Auto Workers as a whipping post to defeat the Employee Free Choice Act. This is a very important dynamic to understand, but I think what’s also particularly relevant is Cocco’s discussion of how union busting business practices necessitate the passage of the Employee Free Choice Act.

When Reagan supplanted the striking controllers with “replacement workers” (previously known as strikebreakers or scabs), business got the message: It was perfectly acceptable, if not advantageous, to bust unions or to keep them from being organized. From there, it was a small step toward the widespread use of unethical, and sometimes illegal, tactics.

“When it comes to workers’ right to form unions, loophole-ridden laws, paralyzing delays and feeble enforcement have created a culture of impunity in many areas of U.S. labor law and practice,” according to a 2005 report by Human Rights Watch. In the 1950s, a few hundred workers each year suffered reprisals for union organizing. By the early part of this decade, according to the report, about 20,000 workers a year suffered a reprisal serious enough for the National Labor Relations Board to order back pay or take other steps.

Academic research has demonstrated that much of the illicit anti-union activity is conducted after employees have signed cards indicating they want a union, but before a formal election is held.

This is what the “free choice act” aims to eliminate: a waiting period during which three-quarters of companies hire consultants to thwart the organizing drive and engage in a variety of pressure tactics to keep employees from ultimately voting “yes.” About half of companies threaten to close the plant if the union wins the election, according to research by Kate Bronfenbrenner of Cornell University.

Go read all of Cocco’s piece. It’s a strong warning that the GOP will not back-off their attacks on America’s workers in an effort to defeat the Employee Free Choice Act and please their friends in Big Business.

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