Source: In These Times
As the congressional battle over President Bidenās domestic agenda reached aĀ critical juncture last Thursday, some national labor leaders appeared to come down on the side of conservative Democrats aiming to stall or significantly downsize the proposed $3.5ātrillion budget reconciliationĀ bill.
Dubbed the Build Back Better Act, the reconciliation bill as currently designed would amount to what Sen. Bernie Sanders calls (IāVt.) āāthe most consequential piece of legislation for working people, the elderly, the children, the sick and the poor since FDR and the New Deal of the 1930s.ā It includes historic investments in healthcare, education and climate change policy, paid for by raising taxes on theĀ wealthy.
Importantly for the labor movement, the bill also reportedly includes key provisions of the Protecting the Right to Organize (PRO) Actālegislation that would reform labor law and remove many of the legal obstacles to forming aĀ union. Among those provisions included in the Build Back Better Act are substantial fines against employers who commit unfair labor practices and aĀ ban on the permanent replacement of strikingĀ workers.
For months, Democratic leaders have said they would pursue a āātwo-trackā strategy of linking the Build Back Better Act with aĀ smaller, bipartisan infrastructure bill championed especially by conservative Democrats like Sens. Joe Manchin (W.V.) and Kyrsten Sinema (Az.), which the Senate passed in August. The logic is that if the partyās conservative faction wants to see the bipartisan infrastructure bill make it to Bidenās desk, it must first get behind the larger reconciliationĀ package.
āThere aināt gonna be no bipartisan bill unless weāre going to have aĀ reconciliation bill,ā House Speaker Nancy Pelosi (DāCalif.) promised inĀ June.
But giving in to pressure from nine conservative House Democrats with ties to the dark money group No Labels, last week Pelosi reversed course and planned to call aĀ vote on the infrastructure bill before any deal was reached on the Build Back Better Act. The intent, made clear in aĀ No Labels memo, was to decouple the two pieces of legislation so that conservative Democrats would no longer be forced to negotiate on the reconciliationĀ bill.
The 96-member Congressional Progressive Caucus pushed back, threatening to vote down the infrastructure bill if Pelosi brought it to the floor before the reconciliation bill also advanced. āāIf we donāt pass our agenda togetherāāāthatās infrastructure AND paid leave, child care, climate action, and moreāāāthen weāre leaving millions of working people behind,ā Rep. Pramila Jayapal (DāWash.), chair of the progressive caucus, tweeted lastĀ Monday.
The standoff came to aĀ head on Thursday, as Pelosi prepared to move forward on the infrastructure vote while progressives promised to āāhold the lineā to save the Build Back BetterĀ Act.
At this crucial moment, the AFL-CIOās chief lobbyist, William Samuel, sent aĀ letter to members of the House. Rather than tell them to hold the line, Samuel wrote: āāOn behalf of the AFL-CIO, IĀ urge you to vote for the bipartisan Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act (IIJA), when it comes to the House floor this week.ā The message directly undermined the two-track strategy of keeping the bills linkedĀ together.
Samuel added that the reconciliation package also needed to pass, but made clear that the infrastructure bill should pass first. āāWe urge you to vote in favor of the IIJA and then quickly complete negotiations and pass the budget reconciliation bill,ā he wrote (italicsĀ added).
At the same time, American Federation of Teachers (AFT) president Randi Weingarten also sent aĀ letter to House members, similarly urging them to pass the infrastructure bill as āāa critical first step,ā adding that it āāmust be followed by passage of the Build Back Better Actā (italicsĀ added).
Rep. Josh Gottheimer (N.J.), leader of the small group of conservative House Democrats trying to decouple the bills, immediately seized on Weingartenās letter, tweeting aĀ screenshot of it and writing: āāThanks to @AFTunion! Letās get bipartisan infrastructure bill doneĀ tonight!ā
In the end, House progressives stood firm Thursday night and Pelosi was forced to postpone the infrastructure voteāāāthus keeping negotiations on the reconciliation bill going for the time being, much to the aggravation of conservativeĀ Democrats.
But the AFL-CIO and AFT letters, both issued at aĀ pivotal moment in this ongoing legislative fight, raise questions about some labor leadersā commitment to passing the Build Back Better Agenda. It is especially surprising given that the AFL-CIO has made passing the PRO Act its top legislative priority, mobilizing thousands of union members to advocate for the labor law reform all yearĀ long.
While labor leaders continue to express support for Bidenās entire domestic agenda, some appear reluctant to discuss their position on the two-track legislativeĀ strategy.
The AFL-CIO did not respond to emailed questions asking if it is confident that elements of the PRO Act would remain in the reconciliation package if the infrastructure bill were passed first. Three AFL-CIO affiliates that have been prominent in their advocacy for the PRO Actāāāthe International Union of Painters and Allied Trades, Communications Workers of America, and Association of Flight Attendantsāāāalso did not respond to requests to clarify their own legislative strategy (see update at the bottom of thisĀ article).
In response to Weingartenās letter, which she said was sent āāon behalf of the 1.7 million members of the American Federation of Teachers,ā aĀ group of rank-and-file AFT members around the country are circulating aĀ public letter urging her āāto retract her statement and demand that Congress pass both bills together at the sameĀ time.ā
Passing the infrastructure bill first āāwould give away all progressivesā leverage to pass the $3.5 trillion BBB Act,ā the letter reads. āāAs educators, we need our union to do everything possible to fight for this visionāāānot to undermineĀ it.ā
Susan Kang, aĀ rank-and-file member of the AFT-affiliated Professional Staff Congress at the City University of New York and mother of two public school students, told In These Times she is āādisappointedā that Weingarten urged the immediate passage of the bipartisan infrastructure bill, particularly because the bill leaves out much of the Green NewĀ Deal.
āI signed on to the letter [aimed at Weingarten] because IĀ support the Green New Deal through the Build Back Better Act,ā Kang explained. āāI support the Green New Deal for public schools, and as my kids crowd into outdated, unventilated classrooms in this second full school year of Covid, it is painfully obvious that we need massive federal money to fix our schools and make them more environmentally and socially moreĀ sustainable.ā
In aĀ statement to In These Times, Weingarten said, āāWe want and need both pieces of the Biden agenda: Build Back Better and traditional infrastructure. AFT members have called, written, shouted and devoted time, money and effort to overcome GOP obstinacy and get it passed⦠Enacting the Biden agenda in its entirety is the best way to transformĀ America.ā
A spokesperson for UNITE HERE, another AFL-CIO affiliate, told In These Times, āāWe want it all to go through, and call on Congress to work together to get it done.ā The hospitality workersā union led extensive get-out-the-vote efforts last year credited with helping Democrats retake control of both the White House andĀ Senate.
āThere is too much at stake for workers and families to leave anything off the table,ā UNITE HERE President D. Taylor said in aĀ statement. āāWe support any measure to achieve overdue reforms on these critical issues, including eliminating theĀ filibuster.ā
In urging the House of Representatives to ram through the infrastructure bill last Thursday rather than hold the line, AFL-CIO and AFT leaders were either genuinely confident that much of the Build Back Better Actāāāincluding key parts of labor law reformāāāwould survive if the two bills were decoupled, or they were tacitly willing to sacrifice some or all of the reconciliation package to ensure passage of the infrastructure bill by an arbitrarily setĀ deadline.
Whichever it is, they wonātĀ say.
Update: Since this article was published on October 4, the United Electrical, Radio, and Machine Workers (UE)āāāwhich is not affiliated with the AFL-CIOāāāhas put out aĀ statement supporting progressives in Congress āāwho are refusing to buckle under to demands from corporate Democrats to water down the budget reconciliation bill.ā UEās national officers said, āāAs anyone who has gone through negotiations knows, giving up your leverage before securing your goals is aĀ losing strategy. We fully support those members of Congress who are using the only leverage they haveāāārefusing to vote on the smaller infrastructure bill until aĀ strong reconciliation bill isĀ passed.ā
Further, aĀ spokesperson for the Association of Flight Attendants (AFA) told In These Times, āāWe have advocated for BOTH to pass together. Not one without the other.ā The spokesperson pointed to a tweet last Friday from AFA president Sara Nelson, sometimes rumored to be aĀ future contender for the AFL-CIO presidency, that āāOne [bill] without the other is aĀ decision to leave womenĀ behind.ā
Jeff Schuhrke has been aĀ Working In These Times contributor since 2013. He has aĀ Ph.D. in History from the University of Illinois at Chicago and aĀ Masterās in Labor Studies from UMass Amherst. Follow him on Twitter: @JeffSchuhrke
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