Sirotablog
David Sirota is a political journalist and nationally syndicated newspaper columnist at Creators Syndicate. David writes about political corruption, globalization and working-class economic issues often ignored by both of America's political parties.
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September 5, 2007 8:50 AM
The GOP's "Right to Work" vs. Your Right to Know the Facts
The Denver Post's resident "me first, everyone else be damned" conservative David Harsanyi does his best stenographer routine today, using his column to promote Aurora City Councilman Ryan Frasier's (R) so-called "right to work" ballot initiative which proposes to force unions to collectively bargain for workers who refuse to contribute to the union. The column is wonderful in both its stylistic banality and copy-and-pasted flavor - it has been written an infinite number of times by an infinite number of right-wing parrots over an infinite number of years. This makes it a terrific sample specimen to help us dissect all the core fallacies of the overarching "right to work" ideology - an ideology that at its core is aimed at ending the labor movement.
So without further delay, let's dive right in.
The double standard
Harsanyi starts out by saying it is supposedly a horrible and unprecedented atrocity when unions use the resources its members contribute collectively for political activities which some of its members may or may not support. This, we are led to believe, is unique to unions. Yet, there is no mention that that's precisely what happens when you are a shareholder of a company. Many people own lots of shares of stock and do not support management using company resources - that is, shareholder resources - for the political causes those companies push. Companies spend far more money on political causes than unions (more on that in a moment) and are, in fact, under far less obligation to tell shareholders where they spend resources than unions. So if there's a problem here, it is far more a corporate problem than a union problem. But neither Harsanyi or the Republican hack he transcribes bothers to mention those facts.
The myth of the all-powerful unions
Harsanyi cites an anti-union front group to claim that unions spent $925 million on "political expenditures" during the 2004 election cycle, and that such an factually suspect figure "illustrates a great deal of political influence." But as we all know, "political influence" is relative. $925 million sounds like a lot of money - but it sounds like a little when you compare it to the billions that corporations spend on politics. As I report in Hostile Takeover, the data shows that for every one dollar contributed by labor unions business interests gave $15. When looking at just individual contributions to lawmakers, the gap is even more pronounced: Business executives out-contributed labor leaders and staff by a factor of 1,000 to 1. This data is quite literally not disputed by any newspapers media organizations, or nonpartisan watchdog groups. It is not disputed, in other words, by anyone other than a handful of operatives working inside a few right-wing, corporate-funded organizations. The idea that unions' political contributions make them as powerful or more powerful than Corporate America in the political process is so silly and so factually absurd that no respectable journalist with any integrity would even imply such a thing.
The disdain for democracy
Harsanyi says that when successful elections to unionize a workplace happen, it is a tragedy for those who "happen to vote no" because those workers are forced to collectively bargain with their employer for better wages and benefits (more on that in a moment). Yet, this is precisely what "democracy" is. When you vote "no" for a political candidate who ends up winning, say, a seat in the legislature, you have to live under that legislator's representation. You don't have a choice, because the majority won. If you don't like that, then you don't like democracy (which many conservative pundits don't).
The claim of "freedom" and "choice"
Harsanyi closes his piece with more stenography, quoting Frazier saying "it's a bunch of baloney" that a right-to-work initiative "makes it harder for workers." Frazier claims his proposal "does not hurt workers, it gives them a choice to be a part of a union - if they want to be part of it." Now we're into the real guts of the dishonesty.
No one - not even conservative automatons - disputes all of the benefits that unionized workplaces bring workers: Higher wages, better health care and retirement benefits, etc. Workers get those things by pooling their dues and standing in solidarity to form a union that collectively bargains with the employer. A right-to-work initiative says that any worker can decide not to contribute to those collective efforts, yet work under the contract (and all the better benefits) that the union secured - even if, by the way, the contract previously said the employer will only hire union labor (ie. a union shop). As American Rights at Work notes, unions in "right to work" states "are required by law to defend non-dues paying members involved in a dispute or charged with a grievance at work, but even those employees do not have to contribute dues."
This is not a choice, nor is it freedom, nor is it fair. It sets up a situation whereby unions and their members who stand in solidarity are forced to give away their assets (ie. a contract made possible by union dues and collective bargaining) for free.
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So, just to review - according to Harsanyi, Frazier and the tiny handful of corporate elites who run the "right to work" initiatives:
- Unions should not be allowed to spend resources on campaigns that some of its members may not support, but corporations should be allowed to spend resources on campaigns that many of its stockholders do not support.
- Unions are all-powerful political forces whose campaign contributions mean they wield "a great deal of political influence" even though unions contributions are dwarfed by corporate contributions at a ratio of roughly 15-to-1.
- Even if unions win a democratic election, they should not be able to act on behalf of all workers in a workplace because a minority of workers voted no. Yet, in every other arena where democracy exists, the majority should be entitled to the benefits of winning an election.
- Forcing unions and their members to spend resources on collectively bargaining for non-members constitutes "freedom" and allowing workers who don't want to contribute to a union nonetheless get all the benefits of a union is fair.
What these inherent hypocrisies show is that the "right to work" initiatives are designed not to give workers "freedom" but to undermine unions in two ways - first by eliminating their ability to collectively negotiate for union shops and build larger membership with better bargaining power and second by forcing unions to expend resources collectively bargaining for people who do not contribute to the union.
Luckily, Coloradoans seem to understand that "right to work" initiatives are ploys by Big Money interests to drive down wages by undermining the labor movement. As government data shows, the average worker in a "right to work" state makes about $5,000 less per year than other workers. A statewide poll shows that once Coloradoans get beyond the happy-sounding "right to work" misnomer and hear the details of what it actually means, the majority opposes it.
Additionally, even Colorado's business community has said publicly it has "no desire" for Frazier's "right to work" initiative.
But that doesn't deter the crowd pushing the "right to work" initiatives. They don't care if there is no grassroots support for their agenda. Aspiring, ladder-climbing politicians like Frazier have their eye on a different audience. They are undoubtedly looking for praise, approval and support from Grover Norquist's network of out-of-state corporate front groups like the National Right to Work Committee - a sham organization funded almost exclusively by multinational corporations. And they are, as usual, aided and abetted by whatever right-wing mouthpiece happens to have a media platform, and happens to be willing to ignore objective facts.

Discussion
I'm not really a fan of unions, having had a bad experience with one myself. Long story short, I was a union steward for UFCW. After all the hard work I put in for fellow workers, and what kind of thanks did I get? In the end, the UFCW hung me out to dry. I took a stand against the corporation and no one at UFCW had my back.
Anyway, as much as I might not like unions, the "Right To Work" thing is a joke! They make it sound really good. Who can argue with a "right" to "work"? But it's all about destroying the labor movement. While I may not be entirely pro-union because of my experience, I'm certainly not in favor of destroying unions either.
i am a union member for the last 44 years. ten of thoes years i was the elected and paid full time business manager of my local union. we had many confrontations with the supporters of right to work laws, both in the field and in the state legislature. what always puzzeled me about their argument was how they only see this as appropriate for organized labor, but not all the other institutions that recieve their funding from their participants. following their logic, we all should be able to recieve all the benefits of all orginaziations, corporations, governments, clubs, etc. for free. all involved with the right to work committe are entitled to all of their work, research,propaganda etc. without paying them anything. same for the cattlemens association, the chamber of commerce, even the federal government. if the people who support these endeavors with their hard work, and money were not exclusively entitled to the benefits of their efforts, our entire system would collapse.
Yeah; small mystery that the priests of the Church of Capitalism want those not in the money to dry up and blow away. More for them.
Every time I've thought I was being too cynical about Capitalism's deadening effects on freedom, I just had to look at the yatchs in the harbor. People don't (can't!) work enough on their own, to pay for a thirty million dollar boat. That money comes out of my pockets and yours; a dollar or ten from each of us. It's leveraged by the people who work for the priests, until the pile gets huge enough to pay for all sorts of foolishness.
Yatchs are just the start, they have to buy governments as well, in order to ensure that everyone keeps worshipping at the Church of Capital, instead of taking a clear-eyed look at what passes for a public dialog and public priorities in this country.
The USSR fell, under the strain of competing with a militant/commercial juggernaut like the US. But the US is on the skids, too, having made such a graven god of the capitalist instinct; that no obscene profit is seen to be too much, out of tune with a free society.
If I were incredibly rich and unprincipled, I also would be trying to convince my wage slaves that a vote for lower wages and benefits is a vote for freedom. That sucking up to the rich and greedy is the cure for not being able to pay the rent. That destroying the public school system, and using the money for war and conservative "think" tanks, is preferable to bringing up healthy, sane, and issues-educated citizens, knowlegable and ready to tackle their democratic role.
If I were incredibly rich and unprincipled, I'd promote sports, wars, and television, to keep the populace afraid, distracted, tranced, and ready to buy whatever is advertized, including the paperboard lies telling them how free and sexy they are and will remain, so long as they remember to worship heavily at the strip mall every day.
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Kill your TV, and free your mind.
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