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<< It's Official: Bush Lies | Main | Assault on Dissent >> March 11, 2004Andy Stern: State of the UnionsAnd the state is not good, according to the head of the AFL-CIO's largest union: At 8.2 percent of the private sector workforce in unions -- down from 30 percent when I began working in the labor movement -- the fact is simple: we have become less relevant. But more importantly, when we have less strength, we cannot change our members' or all working families' lives as effectively, which is what we exist to do.This is part of the emerging push by SEIU and a number of other unions for a radical restructuring of the AFL-CIO, part of what they have proposed as a New Unity Partnership. The unions will stay unified for the election season, but internal warfare within the unions is likely to erupt next year. Which is all to the good-- the best organizing in labor history happened as the AFL and the CIO battled it out in the 1930s over the best way to organize new workers. A bit less placid cooperation between unions and a bit more competitive conflict in the fight to organize may be what's needed. Posted by Nathan at March 11, 2004 08:57 AM Related posts:
Trackback PingsTrackBack URL for this entry: CommentsI think the unions need to craft a global union structure, where despite certain pay differences, workers there and here will work together, resisting some ofthe worst cases of corporate overkill. Posted by: Kevin Hayden at March 12, 2004 12:11 AM A pain free political miracle could come next if America legally mandates universal unionization to equally balance the labor/ownership power equation in our free market economy. The civilized, orderly approach to unionizing all of a nation all at once is legislation -- Germany did it post 1945. Most European nations needed not to adopt mandatory labor agreements because their unionization was well along. Law structures all of economics: or only our neighbors would know whose our house is (was once so); $20 bills are legal/economic instruments that everyone grasps (ever since they replaced private bank dollars). We are the lone non-unionized nation of the first world (Germany went all the way up at once and we came gradually down) -- which adds up to our growing banana Republican way of life. 20% of Americans now earn less than the minimum wage of 1968 -- $8.50/hour -- even though output per person has increased 80% since then. 40% earn less than what the minimum wage could have quite pailessly evolved to -- $12/hour -- at three-quarter pace with that growth. 50% say they would sign a card to join a union. The electorate is ready. When are the union leaders and pundits going start pushing for universal unions? I am a cab driver and I figured it out. I am going to be 60 this week -- I'd like to be able to make a living again in this country before I die. Posted by: Denis Drew at March 12, 2004 02:24 PM hard gui variables is. Posted by: forced sex stories at September 1, 2004 08:58 AM Post a comment
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