Log in

View Full Version : USA: Machinists Union sets up Unemployed Union



Martin Blank
25th February 2010, 23:21
The Unemployed Now Have Their Own
Union, and It's Catching on Quickly

By Harry Kelber, Labor Educator
Posted/Printed on February 24, 2010

http://www.alternet.org/story/145797/

It's been only a month that a union for the unemployed has come into existence through an ingenious grassroots organizing campaign. In case you haven't heard about it, the union's name is "UR Union of the Unemployed" or its nickname, "UCubed," because of its unique method of organizing.

UCubed is the brain-child of the International Association of Machinists and Aerospace Workers (IAM), whose leaders feel that the millions of unemployed workers need a union of their own to join in the struggle for massive jobs programs.

The idea is that if millions of jobless join together and act as an organization, they are more likely to get Congress and the White House to provide the jobs that are urgently needed. They can also apply pressure for health insurance coverage, unemployment insurance and COBRA benefits and food stamps. An unemployed worker is virtually helpless if he or she has to act alone.

Joining a Cube is as simple as it is important. (Please check the union web site: www.unionofunemployed.com (http://www.unionofunemployed.com/)). Six people who live in the same zip code address can form a Ucube. Nine such UCubes make a neighborhood. Three neighborhood UCubes form a power block that cntains 162 activists. Politicians cannot easily ignore a multitude of power blocks, nor can merchants avoid them.

The union is built from the ground up. Cube activists will select their own leadership in each cube, neighborhood, block and higher group as well.

Jobless Union's Encouraging Progress in One Month

The UR Union of Unemployed (or UCubed) already has members in over 300 zip code addresses and 43 states, reports Rick Sloan, acting executive director of the union. Seventy-five cubes are up and running. For the first month, 19,998 people visited the site and viewed over 138,000 pages of content.

The union's Op-Ed article appeared in 62 newspapers, ranging from the "Black News" to the "Mexican American Sun," and from the "Las Vegas Tribune" to the "Senior Life of Northern Indiana." Total circulation exceeded 12 million readers,

UCubed put out three press releases last month, informing politicians in Washington that the union of unemployed will be watching--and reacting--to their vote on the latest job proposals of the Obama administration.

* * * * *

It is to the advantage of the AFL-CIO and Change to Win to encourage their unemployed members to participate in the UCubed organizing campaign. It is important for organized labor to display meaningful sympathy and solidarity with those who have been without a pay check for many months. A large union of unemployed workers can be an important ally in political campaigns and a source of legions of volunteers. When those unemployed workers finally get back to their jobs, we want them to have a favorable memory of how unions stood by their side.

Let's give the unemployed the support they need to be effective in their own defense.


Read more of Harry Kelber's work at Labor Educator (http://www.laboreducator.org/).

It's too soon to say what will come of this project, but it might prove to be worthwhile -- in spite of the fact that it's sponsored by the corporatist IAMAW.

bayano
1st March 2010, 17:57
I've heard about this, and though I'm surprised the IWW hasn't taken up a similar campaign, I'm interested in getting connected to see the contradictions and revolutionary potential of this particular endeavor. I think most of us would agree and had been wanting some kind of union for unemployed workers, this 'crisis' being the perfect opening for such a formation, but of course we have to approach with all the caution due a group formed by another group. So, along with this, we should look for a sound analysis, or perhaps biased analyses of IAM to know where they're coming from. I've known machinists, but have never been close to an IAM local as much as many other unions. I know it's AFL, but little else. And the 'partners' are too, including the CWA, AFSCME, AFL, Painters.

On the other hand, I don't like the design. Orange and green? What is this, a modernist Irish holiday? And the cubes are irritating and corporate, or otherwise remind me of that movie cubed. Who is it supposed to appeal to, because I don't think it offers an image of the grassroots, of labor solidarity, of class struggle. It comes off corporate and manufactured (but by a hip PR firm, not machinists). To take the concept further away from class struggle, they talk about members or organizers as "Jobs Activists". How bland and uninspiring! I mean, is it a union, or a PAC and advocacy group?

This is something I'm going to closely pay attention to, because it's the kind of thing left socialists (i.e. anarchists, commies, whomever) often want. It's also potentially an attempt to organize some kind of counterweight to the Teabaggers, though that is a very risky game to play for those of us with radical politics, especially when led by the AFL. And now it formally exists, so let's take a peek.

ls
1st March 2010, 18:30
I've heard about this, and though I'm surprised the IWW hasn't taken up a similar campaign, I'm interested in getting connected to see the contradictions and revolutionary potential of this particular endeavor. I think most of us would agree and had been wanting some kind of union for unemployed workers, this 'crisis' being the perfect opening for such a formation, but of course we have to approach with all the caution due a group formed by another group. So, along with this, we should look for a sound analysis, or perhaps biased analyses of IAM to know where they're coming from. I've known machinists, but have never been close to an IAM local as much as many other unions. I know it's AFL, but little else. And the 'partners' are too, including the CWA, AFSCME, AFL, Painters.

Didn't the IWW take an approach like this in the past in organising unemployed workers? Even now I know that it's one pound a month dues if you're unemployed and join the IWW in this country, but anyways you're right, they should be reaching out to the unemployed.

There appears to be some unemployed groupings over there anyway, I can't remember specific names but I remember being shown them by another comrade, afaik they were a lot like the 'unemployed workers groups' here such as huwg (http://hackneyunemployedworkers.wordpress.com/) and so forth. Perhaps other unemployed workers could join these sorts of groups that appear to exist over there, then federate them in some way to connect the struggle in order to break away from AFL-CIO sponsored "unemployed union" stuff.

Having said all of that, if joining this union means you can get help in some way to survive off of American welfare or perhaps, helps you get a job, then by all means you should join it (and do the above, as well as join the IWW too!).