The battle over which sectors of society will be rescued from the unfolding crisis of capitalism, has so far been totally one-sided: the rich have already secured their open-ended bailout, which will result in the transfer of trillions in national wealth into the pockets of the very same people that caused the catastrophe. Far smaller sums of money will doubtless be targeted to so-called "
In the final analysis, it is changes in power relationships that determine who emerges from this crisis with a stronger hand. In strategic, real-power terms, possibly the most important measure on Barack Obama’s menu for early action, is the Employee Free Choice Act, which organized labor believes would add five million new union members to the rolls over five years. At present, unions represent only 16 million workers, many of them public employees. In the private sector, only 7.5 percent of workers are unionized, the result of decades of unrelenting Republican assaults on the right to organize and backstabbing by corporate Democrats eager to declare an end to the class struggle.
The Employee Free Choice Act would require companies to recognize a union as soon as a majority of the workforce signed a union card, and to move immediately towards a contract. If negotiations were unsuccessful, a federal arbitrator would step in and impose a contract. As things stand now, even after workers win the right to a union, about one-third of the time the effort fails to lead to a contract.
The Employee Free Choice Act passed the U.S. House in 2007, but was killed by a filibuster threat in the Senate. Democrats will almost certainly not have a filibuster-proof 60-vote majority in the Senate, in January – but let the Republican try to talk it to death. There is no reason to cave in without a fight, not on such a fundamental issue as the right to effectively organize – which is a human right.
Labor power is people’s power, and that also means Black people’s power. At least until the last recession, African Americans comprised one out of five union members in the
African Americans also have a vested interest in unionization of the growing Latino workforce, whose members are second only to Blacks in union militancy. When workers have unions, each group strengthens the other, rather than undercutting each other’s wages. Union power outlasts presidential administrations, and is capable of making change on its own. It is, to paraphrase the TV commercial, "priceless."
Kwirediyo ye-Black Agenda, ndinguGlen Ford.
Umhleli wesigqeba se-BAR uGlen Ford unokuqhagamshelwa apha [imeyile ikhuselwe]
I-ZNetwork ixhaswa ngemali kuphela ngesisa sabafundi bayo.
Nikela