Russell Mokhiber
and Robert Weissman
"While
in theory U.S. law provides for workers to have freedom of association, the
right to join trade unions and participate in collective bargaining is in
practice denied to large segments of the American workforce in both the public
and the private sectors."
That
is the central conclusion of a new report issued by the Brussels-based
International Confederation of Free Trade Unions (ICFTU)
.
Sometimes
it takes an outsider to put matters in perspective. Those living in a society
may become dulled to its everyday injustices; or key elements of society may be
hidden from the view of many; or people may come to view their culture as the
natural state of things, rather than the particular result of a certain social
arrangement.
It
was this outsider’s point of view that enabled Alexis de Tocqueville to write
one of the still-great political sociological critiques of the United States,
Democracy in America.
And
this same perspective enables the ICFTU researchers to plainly, directly and
concisely convey the widespread sabotage of worker rights in the United States.
Here’s
what the report details with piercing clarity:
"Employers
receive legal protection for extensive interference in the decision of workers
as to whether or not they wish to have union representation. This includes
active campaigning by employers among employees against union representation as
well as participating in campaigns to eliminate union representation."
"Penalties
for breaking the law are so limited and ineffective that there is a high level
of corporate lawlessness with respect to labor law. At least one in 10 union
supporters campaigning to form a union is illegally fired."
Employers
engage in widespread harassment and intimidation against union supporters. Often
the consultants, detectives and security firms used to intimidate workers engage
in "surveillance of union activists in order to discredit them. In some
cases, court, medical and credit records of union activists are obtained and the
family lives of activists are studied for possible weaknesses."
Many
government workers, the report notes, are denied the right to strike or bargain
collectively over hours, wages and other critical issues. Nearly half of public
workers suffer from full or partial denial of collective bargaining rights.
Union
supporters who suffer from illegal firings, harassment, surveillance or improper
employer electioneering do not have adequate remedies at the National Labor
Relations Board. NLRB procedures, ICFTU correctly states, "do not provide
workers with effective redress in the face of abuses by employers." NLRB
delays and inability to award damages more than job reinstatement and lost wages
(minus earnings during the period between illegal dismissal and NLRB order) are
so severe that many wronged union supporters simply do not bother filing a case
with the NLRB.
Employers
also routinely eviscerate the rights of those workers who are unionized:
"The
law gives employers the ‘free play of economic forces.’ If employers cannot get
what they want through collective bargaining, they can unilaterally impose their
terms, lock out their employees, and transfer work to another location, or even
to another legal entity." The ICFTU reports refers to Crown Central
Petroleum’s lockout of 250 Texas workers as an example.
"An
increasing number of employers have deliberately provoked strikes to get rid of
trade unions. Unacceptable demands are made of workers and are often accompanied
by arrangements for the recruiting and training of strike-breakers."
Strike-breakers
are also used to prevent unions from ever reaching a first contract.
And,
in one of the great travesties of the U.S. legal system, while the law does
prohibit the firing of workers for exercising collective bargaining rights, at
the same time it permits employers to lock out and "permanently
replace" those workers.
The
ICFTU report also criticizes the United States for permitting widespread use of
child labor, especially in the agricultural industry and among migrant workers;
and, in a growing number of cases, permitting prisoners to be compelled to work
for pay (for rates as low as 23 cents a day).
"A
series of far-reaching measures need to be taken in order to establish genuine
respect for core labor standards within the United States, particularly with
regard to trade union rights," the ICFTU report modestly concludes.
Because
the report was prepared as a submission to the World Trade Organization, it
emphasizes the importance of the United States ratifying International Labor
Organization conventions on core worker rights.
But
something much more fundamental is needed before the systematic assault on U.S.
worker rights is ended. Comprehensive labor law reform is imperative; even more
important is an upsurge in labor organization and militancy, with workers
forcing employers to recognize their rights irrespective of legal enforcement.
The
awesome challenge, of course, is how to generate that militancy and organizing
burst when U.S. corporations are ruthless enough to fire one in ten union
supporters.
Russell
Mokhiber is editor of the Washington, D.C.-based Corporate Crime Reporter.
Robert Weissman is editor of the Washington, D.C.-based Multinational Monitor.
They are co-authors of Corporate Predators: The Hunt for MegaProfits and the
Attack on Democracy (Common Courage Press, 1999, http://www.corporatepredators.org.)