Tanya Gaines and her co-workers launched a union drive in 2014 because it was the only way to win livable wages, fair treatment, and safe working conditions at the Golden Dragon copper tube manufacturing plant in Pine Hill, Alabama, one of the stateās poorest areas.
Workers anticipated managementās opposition, but they feltĀ blindsidedĀ when Alabamaās Republican governor at the time, Robert Bentley, also came out against the organizing drive and wrote a letter demanding they vote against the union.
Gaines and her colleagues stood up to Bentleyās bullying,Ā joined the United Steelworkers (USW), and began building better lives.
More and more workers across the South seek the same path forward that union membership provides. But theyāre still forced to defy Republican officials whoād rather toady to wealthy corporations than support workersā fight for a fair economy.
Autoworkers in Alabama, for example,Ā vowed to stay the courseĀ in January 2024 after the stateās current governor, Republican Kay Ivey, publicly rebuked their efforts to unionize a Mercedes-Benz plant.
Equally furious USW members and other workers in South Carolina demanded that Republican Governor Henry McMasterĀ correct courseĀ after he bragged during his state-of-the-state address in January 2024 that heād oppose unions āto the gates of hell.ā
Unionizing is entirely the workersā choice, a right guaranteed under federal law. And yet Ivey and McMaster stuck their noses where they didnāt belong, just like Bentley did with the workers at Golden Dragon in 2014.
āIt was like a slap in the face,ā Gaines, who grew up in a union family and learned the power of solidarity at a young age, said of Bentleyās interference.
āWeāre here on site, doing the job. He had no idea of the problem it was to work here,ā she added, recalling the exploitation that workers faced. āWe need a voice. This is our voice.ā
Gaines said she and her co-workers continue battling Golden Dragon over safety and other issuesāa fight she canāt imagine waging without the protections and resources the USW provides.
āThey know better,ā Gaines, vice president of USW Local 00176, said of company bosses. āThey just donāt do better.ā
When workers begin organizing, companies regularly go on the attack.
Employers squanderĀ hundreds of millions of dollars every year on anti-union consultantsĀ and force workers into captive audience meetings where they disparage organized labor and threaten union supporters. Companies flood workersā social media and cell phones with anti-union propaganda. They post anti-union messages and videos throughout workplaces, even inĀ restrooms.
Instead of standing up for workers who face these kinds of abuses, Republicans in the South pile on.
In early February 2024, Georgiaās Republican-controlled Senate passed a bill aimed at creatingĀ additional obstaclesĀ for workers seeking to unionize. Among other restrictions, the billāchampioned by Republican Governor Brian Kempāthreatens to withhold state grants and other resources from forward-thinking companies that would prefer to voluntarily recognize unions instead of forcing workers to go through an additional drawn-out election process.
Meddling by elected officials helps to explain historically low union membership in the South. But now, not even desperate measures like the Georgia bill can stem the wave of workers forming unions in the wake of the COVID-19 pandemic.
āTheyāre seeing what the union has to offer. Theyāre seeing some of the advantages of being in the union,ā said Reggie Thomas, president of USW Local 572, which represents hundreds of workers at Graphic Packaging in Macon, Georgia.
Thomas traveled to nearby Fort Valley, Georgia, in 2023 for rallies supporting the union drive at Blue Bird Corp. When 1,400 workers at the bus companyĀ voted overwhelminglyĀ to join the USW, he said that victory sent a message to others throughout the South: āIf the workers at Blue Bird can do it, I can, too.ā
As workers empower themselves, they also build a stronger economy and healthier communities.
USW members and their counterparts in other unions advocated for the Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act, whichĀ unleashed $1.2 trillionĀ for upgrades to transportation, communications, and energy systems nationwide.
RepublicanĀ officialsāincludingĀ Ivey,Ā McMaster, andĀ Kemp, hypocritically welcomed these investments while attacking the union workers who helped to bring the money home.
āBeware the messenger before you listen to the message,ā William āBumpā Roddey, a member of USW Local 1924, said of Republicansā anti-worker scheming.
āLook at where some of the big donations come from,ā said Roddey, who works at the New-Indy mill in Catawba, South Carolina, and serves on York County Council. āThey come from CEOs, the people who have a vested interest in keeping wages low.ā
While career politicians like McMaster have no problem making ends meet, that isnāt the case for average South Carolinians applying for jobs at New-Indy.
Roddey said new hires, many of them first-time union members, marvel at the life-changing wages, workplace safety measures, and work-life balance, among other benefits their USW contract provides.
āItās an eye-opening experience,ā said Roddey, who often hears new union members make remarks like, āI didnāt have that at my last job. I didnāt have that opportunity.ā
And when these workers tell others about what the union does for them, support for labor only snowballs in spite of Republicansā plotting.
āThe other side canāt define us,ā Roddey said. āPeople are looking to make their lives better, and it can only come through the union, because the job pays your mortgage, pays your rent, pays your light bill, feeds your family. Unions are the backbone of the economy.ā
This article was produced by theĀ Independent Media Institute.
David McCall is the international president of theĀ United Steelworkers Union (USW).
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