Does Obama’s Ethics Policy Apply to Labor?
Freedom@Work readers are aware that President Barack Obama has routinely paid back the one billion dollar debt he and other forced unionism proponents owe to union bosses for their record political spending spree in the 2008 election cycle. From blacklisting workers who exercise their right to refrain from union membership to rolling back union boss disclosure requirements, Obama has gladly used his executive power to return the favor.
As reported previously, several high-profile Obama nominees to key positions with the Department of Labor and National Labor Relations Board are longtime Big Labor lobbyists and compulsory unionism hardliners, most notably Secretary of Labor Hilda Solis (who was treasurer of the Big Labor lobby American Rights at Work while serving as a member of Congress) and NLRB member-nominee Craig Becker (whose views on union organizing are radical even by Big Labor’s standards).
Conveniently, and without irony, the AFL-CIO’s blog features an extensive list of other union bigwigs Obama has named to key labor positions, including:
Julia Clark, general counsel for the International Federation of Professional and Technical Engineers (IFPTE), and Ernie DuBester, a former AFL-CIO Legislative Affairs staff member, were nominated by President Obama last week to serve on the Federal Labor Relations Authority (FLRA)—the federal workers’ version of the National Labor Relations Board (NLRB).
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Ron Bloom, United Steelworkers’ (USW’s) director of corporate research, was appointed senior adviser on the auto bailout team.
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Mary Beth Maxwell, the former executive director of American Rights at Work, was appointed senior adviser to Solis at the Labor Department. In addition, the former Housing Investment Trust (HIT) lawyer, Helen Karnovsky, is now general counsel at the Department of Housing and Urban Development; former United Food and Commerical Workers attorney Carol Clifford is labor liaison at the Department of Agrictulture; and Naomi Walker, assistant director for Legislative Affairs, is now associate deputy secretary of labor.
What happened to Obama’s supposed strident ethics policy or keeping his appointees out of areas where they regulate or otherwise deal with their former employers? Another special privilege for union bosses.
Did Big Labor Break the Bank in the 2008 Elections?
To readers who followed Big Labor’s record-breaking political contributions last election, it should come as no surprise that the AFL-CIO and the SEIU officials are hinting at big union debts. Of course, so long as the union bossses have a basically unrestricted right to to collect (and jack up) forced union dues, they will not have trouble raising revenue until most American jobs are destroyed.
But don’t be surprised to see the union bosses lining up at the federal bailout trough (again) to exploit the situation. Here’s the Wall Street Journal:
Alarm is coming even from inside the AFL-CIO — specifically, from Tom Buffenbarger, president of the International Association of Machinists and Aerospace Workers, who sits on the AFL-CIO’s finance committee. Bloomberg News reports that he is circulating a report claiming the AFL-CIO engaged in "creative accounting" to conceal financial difficulties heading into last year’s Presidential election. As recently as 2000, the union consortium of 8.5 million members had a $45 million surplus. By June of last year it had $90.6 million in liabilities, or $2.3 million more than its $88.3 million in assets. "If we are not careful, insolvency may be right around the corner," Mr. Buffenbarger warned.
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As for the SEIU, as recently as 2002 total SEIU liabilities were about $8 million. According to its 2008 disclosure form, the union owed more than $156 million, a 30% increase over the $120 million it owed in 2007. Its liabilities now equal more than 80% of its $189 million in assets. Net assets fell by nearly half last year, to $34 million, from $64 million in 2007. The debt includes an $80 million loan the SEIU took out in 2003 to purchase a new headquarters in downtown Washington, D.C. But the liabilities also stem from political spending, including at least $67 million last year on political and lobbying expenses, twice what it spent in 2007.
Adding insult to injury, the SEIU is initiating another vicious "corporate campaign" to intimidate one of its biggest creditors:
By the end of 2008, the SEIU also owed Bank of America nearly $88 million, including its headquarters loan and another $10 million for unspecified purposes. This is the same BofA that the union as spent the past months attacking as the face of Wall Street excess. The SEIU has protested outside of Bank of America offices and demanded the resignation of CEO Ken Lewis.
Keep in mind that any union debt is paid off by rank-and-file workers across the country, many of whom are unwilling contributors to Big Labor’s massive political apparatus. No wonder unions are having more and more trouble convincing workers to join, which is why they’re going all-out to get Congress to pass "card check" instant-organizing legislation:
One irony here is that the SEIU’s Mr. Stern, the most powerful labor leader in America, loudly broke from the AFL-CIO in 2005 because he said it spent too much in Washington and not enough on organizing. But unions can’t resist the lure of the Beltway precisely because they fare so poorly in the private marketplace. The union red ink helps explain why Mr. Stern and AFL-CIO chief John Sweeney are lobbying so hard for Congress to rig the rules to make it easier for unions to gather more dues-paying members.
The Journal also notes that union bosses are working overtime to rollback basic transparency guidelines, something the Foundation sounded the alarm on back in March:
Unions have a long history of corruption in part because they mix large amounts of cash from dues with political purposes and little oversight. Yet the same union leaders who denounce failures of corporate governance bitterly resisted the Bush Administration’s expanded disclosure, and now they want the Obama Administration to water down those rules. The news about rising union debt shows why that transparency is more necessary than ever.
Keeping basic transparency regulations in place would be marginally beneficial, but the reality is that union bosses will continue to extort money from unwilling workers for a variety of activities as long as they enjoy exclusive monopoly bargaining and forced dues privileges. Making union membership and dues-payment strictly voluntary is the only effective way to combat union corruption and encourage financial restraint, which is why state Right to Work laws are so important.
New Right to Work Podcast: Part 3 of Mark Mix on the Jason Lewis Show
In the third and final installment of his interview with Jason Lewis, Foundation President Mark Mix discusses the implications of Big Labor’s Police and Firefighters Monopoly Bargaining Bill. Click here to listen or use the embedded player below:
Federal Labor Board Sanctions Union Boss Deception
As if there was ever any doubt about whether or not the federal government favors union bosses over individual employees (including union members and nonmembers alike), the National Labor Relations Board last week determined that union bosses may lie to employees about employers’ contract proposals.
In a Division of Advice memorandum, NLRB Associate General Counsel Barry Kearney ruled that union chiefs do not commit an unfair labor practice when they misstate the details of a contract proposed by the company.
In the NLRB’s twisted logic, union bosses can deceive the very employees it has the duty to fairly represent so long as the deception involves "wholly an internal union matter."
This is a textbook example showing just why Right to Work protections are so needed. In 22 states with Right to Work laws, employees cannot be forced to join or pay dues to a union to get or keep a job. When "representatives" deliberately lie to employees about contract negotiations, why should workers be forced to pay for this "service"?
National Union Boss Looks in Mirror, Sees “The Sopranos”
The Las Vegas Sun reports that internal disputes and struggles for power within some of the nation’s top union monopolies have played a role in Big Labor’s inability to force the Card Check Forced Unionism Bill through Congress.
This is largely untrue. While internal union disputes may be playing a small role, the real story is that the National Right to Work Committee has led mobilized grassroots America to lobby against this toxic union boss power grab. Of course, this bill would eliminate the secret ballot in union certification elections and empower federal bureaucrats to write and impose contracts on small businesses and workers.
But the current power struggle among UNITE HERE union chiefs is incredibly revealing:
Exhibit A: Unite Here General President Bruce Raynor resigned last week from the apparel and hotel workers union after six months of legal and verbal jousting with co-president John Wilhelm over union resources and the direction of Unite Here.
He said he decided to quit after Wilhelm’s allies, accompanied by nearly a dozen security guards, broke into his New York union office and stole personal files related to mediation sessions aimed at reconciling the two leaders’ differences. Raynor likened the incident to something one would see on the HBO mob series “The Sopranos.”
A bit of a thug himself, Raynor would know. Sadly, union violence and intimidation is nothing new and it is usually committed against independent-minded American workers. The Card Check Forced Unionism Bill would only increase union harassment of American workers.
Indeed, even comparing union operations to "The Sopranos" is common. And it’s no laughing matter, as we show in this Right to Work video report about an indictment of twelve Operating Engineers Local 17 union officials.
Research Institute Finds ‘Card-Check’ Forced Unionism Threatens Job-Based Private Health Insurance
The National Institute for Labor Relations Research (NILRR) recently published a fact sheet discussing U.S. Census Bureau data from 1999 to 2007 that shows the "Card Check" Forced Unionism Bill and similar legislative "compromises" actually endanger workers’ access to health insurance.
According to NILRR’s observations:
As of 1999, according to economists Barry Hirsch and David Macpherson, 10.2% of private-sector employees nationwide were under “exclusive” union representation. In 10 states — Alaska, Hawaii, Illinois, Indiana, Michigan, Nevada, New Jersey, New York, Ohio and Washington — 14% or more of private-sector employees were unionized. From 1999 to 2007, these states suffered an aggregate decline of 3.0%, or 1.44 million, in the number of people with private, job-based health insurance.
The 22 states with 1999 private-sector unionization of between 7.0% and 13.9% also experienced an overall decline in access to job-based insurance, but the decline was substantially less
severe. The employment-based insurance rolls in these states — Alabama, California, Connecticut, Delaware, Idaho, Iowa, Kansas, Kentucky, Louisiana, Maine, Maryland, Massachusetts, Minnesota,
Missouri, Montana, New Mexico, Oregon, Pennsylvania, Rhode Island, West Virginia, Wisconsin and Wyoming — fell by 843,000, or 1.2%, from 1999 to 2007.Meanwhile, the 18 states with 1999 private-sector unionization of no more than 6.9% — Arizona, Arkansas, Colorado, Florida, Georgia, Mississippi, Nebraska, New Hampshire, North Carolina, North
Dakota, Oklahoma, South Carolina, South Dakota, Tennessee, Texas, Utah, Vermont and Virginia — had a very different experience. These least-unionized states enjoyed an increase of 2.96 million, or 5.2%,
in the number of people with job-based private health insurance.
NILRR sums up their findings by stating, "there is a strong negative correlation between the growth in the ranks of the privately insured within a state and the share of its private-sector employees who are subject to union monopoly bargaining." In other words, in states where union bosses are more likely to hold their grasp on private-sector workers in the workplace by claiming monopoly bargaining privileges over them, the more likely the number of those employees and their families receiving private health insurance from their employer will decrease — i.e. forced unionism threatens workers’ access to private-sector job-based health insurance.
Enter Big Labor’s latest compulsory-dues power grab: card check forced unionism. Card check forced unionism (and similar legislative "compromises" being floated in the U.S. Senate right now) intends to help Big Labor herd more workers into compulsory unionism by making it easier for union bosses to use coercion and intimidation to claim monopoly-bargaining power over millions of additional workers. However, NILRR’s research illustrates that President Barack Obama and Congressional compulsory unionism advocates are working steadily to sell out not only workers’ rights — but also their well-being — to continue to dole out paybacks for Big Labor’s political support.
For more on NILRR’s findings, click here.
Union Czars Betray Duty to Workers, Attack National Right to Work
Recently Politico reported on a new Big Labor tactic to help pass the latest union boss power grab, the woefully misnamed Employee Free Choice Act (more accurately called the Card Check Forced Unionism Bill). Politico acquired a revealing letter and accompanying survey sent by Teamsters Local 507 in Cleveland to Wall Street fund managers:
"Has your company made any public statements in support or opposition to EFCA?" asks one of nine pointed questions in a polite, detailed four-page questionnaire.
"If ‘Yes,’ please explain."
The cover letter, signed by the local’s Secretary-Treasurer and President, makes the union’s purpose even more clear:
As a trustee, I have an obligation to determine whether our fund’s asset managers are engaged in partisan political activity that could adversely affect our fund, its participants, and beneficiaries. I therefore request that you complete the enclosed Asset Manger [sic] Survey to disclose your firm’s political spending and activity with regard to this important issue and return it to me with in the next couple of weeks.
Apparently they don’t actually know what being a trustee of a pension fund entails. They have a fiduciary duty to ensure the financial health of the union members’ pension fund. But here, these union bosses are putting politics, lobbying, and their desire to crush more workers under the thumb of forced unionism ahead of their fiduciary duty.
The Teamsters Local 507 union bosses — likely as part of a wider strategy of the Change to Win union cartel — want to know whether a company managing their pension funds has in any way opposed the job-killing, freedom-crushing Card Check Forced Unionism bill, by taking a public position, supporting certain politicians, or having any kind of relationship with various organizations, including the National Right to Work Legal Defense Foundation, which they list by name.
The National Right to Work Foundation is a charitable, nonprofit organization which provides free legal aid to the victims of compulsory unionism, including victims of card check intimidation. Foundation attorneys are bracing for the cries for help from countless workers who will face ugly intimidation and violence if the Card Check Forced Unionism Bill becomes law, thereby making the less-abusive secret ballot election for union certification a dead letter.
Seven Employees Force Settlement with Teamster Local Union Brass
Seven Employees Force Settlement with Teamster Local Union Brass
Right to Work Attorneys help employees after union officials levy more than $200,000 in confiscatory fines
Chicago, IL (May 29, 2009) – With free legal aid from the National Right to Work Legal Defense Foundation, seven employees who refused to abandon their jobs during a strike forced a settlement with a local union after union officials levied exorbitant and illegal retaliatory fines against them.
The employees, truck drivers for industrial laundry company Lechner and Sons, filed unfair labor practice charges with the National Labor Relations Board (NLRB) against Teamsters Local Union 731, an affiliate of the International Brotherhood of Teamsters union, after Local 731 union officials hit the employees with fines ranging from $13,946 to $40,000 each for not abandoning their jobs during a strike. None of the employees were truly voluntary members of the union during the strike.
In July 2006, Local 731 union bosses ordered the employees to abandon their jobs during a so-called “sympathy strike” involving a different bargaining unit of workers at the plant where the strike occurred. After the strike ended in June 2007, union brass claimed the power to use fines to discipline non-striking employees.
(Continue reading this news release…)
(Click here to see a copy of a Teamsters Local 731 strike fines notice in which Teamster union bosses claimed the power to use $40,000 worth of fines to discipline one of the non-striking employees.)
NRTW President Mark Mix: “Freedom in the workplace always wins — even in Michigan.”
Thursday’s Detroit News extensively quotes National Right to Work president Mark Mix in an informative piece about why Michigan needs a Right to Work law.
Right to Work protections in 22 states ensure that no worker can be compelled, as a condition or employment, to join or pay dues to an unwanted union.
The militant United Auto Workers (UAW) union, which is notorious for launching intimidating card check organizing campaigns and whose unions bosses frequently whine about Right to Work, is particularly dominant in Michigan, where its forced unionism relationship with the "Big Three" automakers in Detroit has been a major cause in Michigan’s economic depression (and yet, the Obama Administration is rewarding UAW union brass with a majority stake in Chrysler).
But as Mix tells the Detroit News, the struggle for employee freedom in Michigan won’t be easy even though the forced unionism economic devastion is so patently obvious:
Mix, nonetheless, remains optimistic. He said interest is picking up in all the Rust Belt states because workers are wondering if what they’ve been promised is really going to happen or if their benefits will even be held intact. The Chrysler bankruptcy and soon to be GM filing has raised some union worker eyebrows, he said.
Of course, Michigan isn’t likely to become the 23rd state to change its ways, but that doesn’t stop Mix and his colleagues from answering worker phone calls.
"There is hope," Mix said. "Freedom in the workplace always wins — even in Michigan."
Click here to read the rest of the article.
Keep Up With the Latest from the National Right to Work Foundation
The National Right to Work Foundation is just the place to get the latest developments on the fight against compulsory unionism. There are several ways to learn about the daily developments in America’s Right to Work movement:
- Get the News – Check out Foundation’s News & Press section to be informed on the legal challenges workers face and the Foundation’s frequent legal victories. Also check out the media’s coverage about some of the Foundation’s efforts on our Delicious bookmarks webpage.
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- Listen – Hear the voices of the Right to Work movement delve into a broad range of topics on workplace freedom with the National Right to Work podcast. In our latest podcast, the National Right to Work Committee’s Greg Mourad sits down with WCHS radio hosts Michael Agnello and Rick Johnson to discuss card check’s legislative prospects. You can also listen to the Foundation’s podcast via iTunes or manually subscribe to the feed.
- Network With Fellow Supporters – Join our Facebook.com group and follow our Twitter page to connect with other Right to Work supporters from across the country. The latest press releases, blog posts, and videos can be found on the Facebook group’s profile page – while the discussion board allows group members talk about current issues relating to compulsory unionism. Follow the Foundation on Twitter to get Foundation updates at home, work, or on-the-go.
- Subscribe to our Newsletter – Read the latest edition of the National Right to Work Foundation’s newsletter, Foundation Action. Foundation Action is a great resource to learn about the Foundation’s groundbreaking efforts in the courts. Sign up for your free subscription today. Subscribers will receive a hard copy in their mailbox every two months.
- Read a Book – Receive a free book from the Foundation. In Stranglehold: How union bosses have hijacked our government, Reed Larson reveals the astonishing story of how Big Labor acquired incredible power over local, state, and national government in America and how the very existence of our democratic institutions are under siege as a result. In Union Dues and Religious Do Nots, Foundation attorney Bruce Cameron provides a how-to guide to employees with strong religious convictions who want to exercise their right to refrain from formal, dues-paying union membership if they morally object to the union bosses’ political agenda. Get your free copy here today.
And of course, continue to log on to the Freedom@Work blog, the best place to get the scoop on the battle against forced unionism.