Recently, former West Wing actors Martin Sheen and Bradley Whitford lobbied in favor of the woefully misnamed Employee Free Choice Act (better known as the Card Check Forced Unionism Bill) at a press conference with so-called American Rights at Work, the same militant lobbying group which Labor Secretary Hilda Solis played a formal role while a member of Congress.
CNS News asked the actors why they support a bill which would effectively eliminate the secret ballot in workplace unionization drives. Whitford responded (emphasis mine),
The notion that the labor movement is out to abolish their own members’ rights to a secret ballot just doesn’t pass the laugh test. And people who are propagating the rumor that it does, their sudden compassion for worker’s rights is just not believable.
There are so many problems with that one, incredibly misinformed sentence. As I explained last week, the card check bill makes the secret ballot a virtual dead letter. But Whitford’s comment shows he is willing to believe whatever union bosses tell him. Union bosses routinely work to undermine employee freedom — it’s nothing new, except to hardcore union partisans.
But Whitford also made another error. In a sense, he’s right that the labor movement is not "out to abolish their own members’ rights to a secret ballot" — but only because the Card Check Forced Unionism Bill doesn’t have anything to do with unions’ "own members." The bill would eliminate the secret ballot for prospective members as well as independent-minded workers who do not want the union’s "representation." Union bosses want to destroy the secret ballot in unionization campaigns so that they can intimidate and trick employees into signing cards.
Fortunately, Sheen and Whitford just play politicians on TV.