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blake 3:17
12th July 2013, 02:31
Got this via Bill Fletcher. From the Atlantic.

The 2 Supreme Court Cases That Could Put a Dagger in Organized Labor

Amid the ruckus over its voting rights and gay marriage rulings, the justices quietly accepted a pair of cases that could make it nearly impossible for private sector unions to organize new members.

MATT BRUENIG AND ELIZABETH STOKERJUL 9 2013, 10:05 AM ET




Reuters
During the last half century, private sector unionism has endured a rather brutal death march. Almost every year, we learn once again that the percentage of private sector workers who are union members has declined to a new record low. For the most part, the decline has been a gradual affair, with private sector unions slowly suffocating under America's uniquely terrible labor laws. In the coming year, however, this slow demise could hasten considerably, courtesy of the Supreme Court.

In the shadow of the intense media coverage last month surrounding the Voting Rights Act, affirmative action, the Defense of Marriage Act, and Proposition 8, the justices quietly agreed to hear two cases that could devastate unions in the private sector.

The first case, Noel Canning v. NLRB, arises out of the dysfunction gripping the U.S. Senate. For years now, the chamber's Republican minority has refused to confirm presidential appointments to the National Labor Relations Board, the government agency that protects the union rights of workers. As a result, the NLRB has struggled to maintain the three-member quorum necessary for it to legally function. To circumvent Senate obstruction, President Obama has been forced to name new NLRB members during Senate recesses. To choke off these appointments, Senate Republicans have more recently refused to go into recess by seizing upon technicalities that keep the body perpetually in session.

A ruling against the administration would let Senate Republicans neuter the country's labor laws
Despite this maneuvering, President Obama continued to make recess appointments to the NLRB without seeking Senate confirmation. His administration has argued that the Senate goes into recess when it effectively shuts down, even if the Senate claims it is still in session. To finally resolve this conflict, the Supreme Court in the Noel Canning case will decide under what circumstances the President can make recess appointments to the NLRB. Given the conservative orientation of the present Supreme Court, it is entirely possible that these recess appointments will be ruled invalid.

Such a ruling would essentially give Senate Republicans a blank check to neuter the only agency empowered to enforce the country's labor laws.

A non-functional NLRB would, for instance, leave workers illegally fired or intimidated by employers during union organizing drives with nowhere to turn. Additionally, without an NLRB to resolve union election disputes, unions may find it nearly impossible to become the certified representatives of new groups of workers. It is hard to imagine any union successfully organizing new workers under these conditions.

The second case, Mulhall v. UNITE HERE Local 355, calls into question what is probably the most successful union organizing strategy of last decade. Because our labor laws are so unfriendly to workers, major unions -- including SEIU, UNITE HERE, and CWA, among others -- often seek to enter into so-called "organizing agreements" with employers. These deals establish the rules that the unions and employers must follow in subsequent organizing battles. The most common provisions require employers to remain neutral about the union and to recognize it as soon as the majority of their employees sign cards authorizing it to represent them.

In Mulhall, these agreements are being challenged under anti-corruption laws that prevent employers from providing "things of value" to unions. If the Supreme Court decides that organizing agreements are unlawful, the only promising unionization strategy in recent years will die.

By themselves, either of these cases could deliver debilitating blows to a union movement already badly wounded from years of steady decline. Combined, they could be a death sentence to new private sector organizing altogether. This is especially true because of the special way they interact. One of the chief advantages of the organizing agreements challenged in Mulhall is that they make it easier to form new unions without the NLRB. Without them, unions will have no choice but to rely on the NLRB, which may then be rendered powerless by Noel Canning.

Private sector unions are already in decline. But this is the one-two punch that could cripple them for good.

http://www.theatlantic.com/business/archive/2013/07/the-2-supreme-court-cases-that-could-put-a-dagger-in-organized-labor/277616/

MarxSchmarx
16th July 2013, 04:41
I must admit I'm not surprised to read either of these.

One thing Mulhall highlights is what organizers have been saying for decades - the NLRB is not your friend. There has been a concerted strategy to undermine the NLRA on which this is all based going back decades, which sees the NLRA as effectively interfering with the right of contract.

It's hard to see a silver lining in any of this. At times like this, the left should be looking to alternatives to the mainstream capitalist unions to carry on the embers.

Jimmie Higgins
16th July 2013, 09:14
It seems like capitalist consiousness has more faith in workers fighting back than workers themselves do at the moment. Across the board, any concievable popular check on future austerity measures are being attacked - even if these are already weak and ineffectual: voting rights, the ability for elections to impact economic policy, and unions themselves.

Die Neue Zeit
17th July 2013, 05:39
I must admit I'm not surprised to read either of these.

One thing Mulhall highlights is what organizers have been saying for decades - the NLRB is not your friend. There has been a concerted strategy to undermine the NLRA on which this is all based going back decades, which sees the NLRA as effectively interfering with the right of contract.

It's hard to see a silver lining in any of this. At times like this, the left should be looking to alternatives to the mainstream capitalist unions to carry on the embers.

If intimidation by employers during union organizing drives leads less workers to their own "organizers" and the NLRB and more towards class actions with punitive damages (http://www.revleft.com/vb/disgruntled-young-workers-t181695/index.html), I'm game. :cool:

cyu
17th July 2013, 23:32
On the other hand, unions could eff up the US Supreme Court big time.

They do call it a revolution after all ;)

It's not like the court even has any credibility or legitimacy left after http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Citizens_United

Red Rebel
18th July 2013, 06:29
the NLRB is not your friend

Pretty much. The NLRB has been less and less effective for at least 30 years. A union's strength is in their rank and file and not in some para legal court that the capitalists gave to us.

Not familiar with Mulhall, I'll have to keep an eye on it.

MarxSchmarx
19th July 2013, 05:33
If intimidation by employers during union organizing drives leads less workers to their own "organizers" and the NLRB and more towards class actions with punitive damages (http://www.revleft.com/vb/disgruntled-young-workers-t181695/index.html), I'm game. :cool:

Both strategies have their risks/rewards. One risk with going with the class actions/punitive damages track is that you are to a large degree at the mercy of the court system, at least in adversarial legal jurisdictions (e.g., anglophone countries).

I think it's an open question how such approaches, whether NLRB based or couirt based, are able to attract popular support rather than the ascension of judicial or semi-judicial (in the case of NLRB) support. I think this is an open question and we will have to see what works/doesn't work with various strategies, but trying different combinations to see what works including the sort of punitive damages redress route you point out will take time to figure out. After all the legal route did work very well for a lot of movements (e.g., the civil rights movement in America) and so we have to see it as one front among many. But there is admittedly a part of me that is saddened how the old workplace organizing model struggles to adapt to contemporary circumstances.

Klaatu
20th July 2013, 02:18
No wonder unions are in trouble. With union members like this guy, who needs enemies?
Talk about a Judas! This stupid fuck needs to quit his union-protected job and go work for WalMart.


The comeback state

This past December, Gov. Rick Snyder and the Legislature made national headlines by passing historic right-to-work legislation that ended over 75 years of forced unionism in our state.

After decades of union domination in the industrialized states, primarily here in the Midwest, workers have begun to realize that the gains that unions made in the 1930s and ’40s have long since been adopted into federal law, and unions have become, to some extent, an impediment to business growth, expansion and job creation.

Sadly, we can all see what decades of union controlled “pro-labor” politicians have done to the once-proud city of Detroit. The union bosses have blindly supported corrupt tax-and-spend Democrats, who then endorsed the inefficiencies of the city’s unionized municipal workforce.

Union bosses and the Democratic party have developed an incestuous relationship that has left Detroit on the verge of declaring Chapter 9 Bankruptcy, due to the union bosses’ refusal to face the city’s dire economic situation, which they helped create.

Snyder’s re-invention of Michigan has brought the beginning of an economic turnaround for the entire state.

Since Snyder was elected, Michigan has actually led the nation in creation of manufacturing jobs with over 88,000.

Indiana, another state that recently passed right-to-work legislation, ranks third, with over 53,000 manufacturing jobs created in the last three-and-a-half years.

It’s undeniable, despite what the union bosses will tell you: Right-to-work laws attract businesses and help create jobs.

Brian Pannebecker, UAW member/Local 228

source
http://www.detroitnews.com/article/20130716/OPINION01/307160004/1007/OPINION01/The-comeback-state

cyu
22nd July 2013, 01:20
When the rich can get their own politicians elected on the national level (where they then appoint stooges to the Supreme Court to make logic-defying "interpretations"), getting stooges into positions of power in unions is so much easier. This is basically what it's like to live under a plutocracy.