In a political culture in which most politicians fear Big Labor’s massive forced dues electioneering machine, it’s refreshing to see an elected official articulately and passionately condemn compulsory unionism. That’s just what New Jersey Governor Chris Christie did last week at a town hall meeting.
In the video below, listen to Gov. Christie explain the evil of forcing teachers to pay union fees (roughly 85 percent of full union dues) just to exercise their right to refrain from union membership.
New Jersey employees have the limited right — secured by National Right to Work Foundation-won cases at the US Supreme Court — to pay only the portion of the fees that union bosses can prove is spent on bargaining and contract administration.
In Abood v. Detroit Board of Education (1977), the Court ruled that compulsory dues for politics violates the First Amendment. In Chicago Teachers Union v. Hudson (1986), the Court agreed with Foundation attorneys and unanimously held that union officials must provide employees with an independently verified breakdown of the union’s expenditures and that employees must have the opportunity to challenge the calculation of their forced fees.
Unfortunately, Christie stops short of calling for the Garden State to pass a Right to Work law, which would make union association 100 percent voluntary. But he’s right on when he explains that the teacher union officials are motivated by "the accumulation and exercise of raw political power." Something to think about as Congress considers rewriting states’ employment laws by federal fiat.