With the election of the next U.S. president and key Senate seats drawing
closer, a number of unions are coming together to lay the groundwork for their
agenda.
Late last month, the Communication Workers of America, the United Auto
Workers, the United Steelworkers and the International Federation of
Professional and Technical Engineers announced an alliance “to help elect
candidates who support working families and to advocate on public policy
issues,” according to a statement.
Topping the alliance’s priority list is making sure the Employee Free Choice
Act passes. The act, which failed to gain approval last year, would allow a
union to form if a majority of workers signed cards authorizing a bargaining
unit, thus making it easier for unions to organize. Under current law, a company
can insist on a secret-ballot election conducted by the National Labor Relations
Board.
“We want to make sure that this legislation becomes veto-proof,” says Marco
Trbovich, a spokesman for the alliance.
The Employee Free Choice Act is crucial for the labor movement as it
struggles with a declining membership. Manufacturing-based unions in particular
are suffering from dwindling numbers. At the end of 2007, the UAW had 500,000
members, down from 1.5 million at its peak in 1979.
Although union membership is down, the labor movement still has a lot of
political clout on Capitol Hill, experts say.
“Unions have gotten weaker, but that weakness is not reflected in the
political arena,” says Joshua Freeman, a professor of labor history at the City
University of New York Graduate Center. “They are very effective in mobilizing
their members and families. It’s now fairly common to have one out of four votes
in an election coming from a union household.”
Democratic presidential candidates Sen. Hil¬lary Rodham Clinton and Sen.
Barack Obama have said that if they win the election, they will sign the
Employee Free Choice Act into law.
That means the union also is focusing on making sure there are enough
supporters voted into the Senate this fall to push the bill through Congress to
the president’s desk for approval, says Chuck Ro¬cha, national political
director of the United Steel¬workers.
The new alliance is going to focus on rallying its members and families to
support candidates for the Senate, particularly in battleground states like
Pennsylvania and Ohio, Rocha says. There are 33 seats in the Senate up for
election this fall.
“We are looking at states where we can change or affect a vote because of an
open seat or a retirement or at least cast a friendly EFCA vote against a
hostile one,” he says. The UAW, CWA and Steelworkers alone have 320,000 members
in Ohio, 240,000 in Pennsylvania and 460,000 in Michigan, Rocha says. “You can
assume that it’s at least double that with their families,” he says.
The alliance also will continue to pressure the Democratic presidential
nominee—should the Democrats win the White House—to follow through on the
promise to enact the Employee Free Choice Act, Rocha says. The alliance hasn’t
decided whether it is going to publicly endorse one of the Democratic
candidates.
It’s wise for the unions not to assume the Employee Free Choice Act will
become law if a Democrat wins the election, observers say.
“The rhetoric on the campaign trail isn’t the same as it is after the
candidate is in office,” says Arthur Wheaton, education specialist at the School
of Industrial Labor Relations at Cornell University. “And this bill is essential
for the labor movement.”
—Jessica Marquez