Hot Air Mobile
Home The Vault Gear About
Hot Air -- get your fill


Audio: Sharpton opposing Card Check?

posted at 7:55 am on December 18, 2008 by Ed Morrissey
Share on Facebook | regular view

What do George McGovern and Al Sharpton have in common, besides a lifelong devotion to liberal policies and the Democratic Party? As it turns out, an attachment to the secret ballot. In a shocker, Sharpton criticized the push by his party to pass Card Check legislation and promises to fight it every step of the way. Sharpton discusses the Employee Free Choice Act with National Action Network’s Charlie King on his radio show yesterday, but it’s Sylvester Smith from Change Agents that really gets to the heart of the matter (emphases mine):

Charlie: The union leaders can go into let’s say a business of 40 people and they can go to their homes and get 21 people to sign a card saying that we want to have a union and once they get 50 plus 1 people to sign this card it means that that work force has now been unionized.

Al Sharpton: And what’s the second objection?

Charlie: The second objection or concern we have is on the binding arbitration. So let’s say using my hypothetical that the union that the workforce gets unionized by getting let’s say 21 people to sign a card saying that they want a union then you could have after 90 days if you can’t have an agreement between the union and the employer it going into what’s called binding arbitration and an arbitrator, a federal arbitrator, would come in and basically decide what that contract is going to be for two years. So essentially what you could have is a person, a working man or woman, in a business who will have a contract put upon them without them ever agreeing to have a union or voting on it or having a say in what that contract will be once unionized.

Al Sharpton: All right, now Sylvester Smith, for businesses, and I’m very concerned about minority business after a long time fighting for them, why do you think this is bad?

Sylvester: That’s a very good question Rev. Sharpton. I appreciate you for asking. If I could, if I may take a moment just to kind of give you a little information about my personal experience with this issue. I am a small business advocate. I own a small public relations firm in Little Rock, Arkansas called Change Agents and one of my public relations clients is a The National Federations of Independent Business, which is the largest small business advocacy group in the nation. So I understand the challenges that small business owners face everyday as they try to provide quality goods and services to their customers, and provide quality good paying jobs to their employees so that their employees can support their families, but as an African American person, who grew up in south Arkansas, I also understand that there are certain business people who do not do business in a way that is necessarily honest or upstanding and who do not look out for the best interests of their employees. If I may take another quick moment, I’ll give you a recent experience that my aunt had. My aunt was working for a small business in Louisiana and she also…the business owner was her pastor and she saw the pastor engage in some business activity that she didn’t necessarily agree with that made her question whether or not he should be her religious leader. So she informed him that she was no longer going to attend his church and he immediately terminated her. So that’s an instance in which my aunt would have loved to have had a union representative.

Al Sharpton: Right, to protect her job.

Sylvester: To protect her job, so I want to make it clear to your listeners that I understand that there are some nefarious employers out there that we need to be protected from but at the same time really, Sharpton, this deal goes too far. Again, back to my experiences as a young African American growing up in south Arkansas, my mother ran for state legislature in 1990, an African American woman, and in her bid to be the first African American member of the state legistlature she ran into a very strong opposition from the local establishments including the business community and she had people come to her, both white and black, and say my boss told me that if I vote for you I will lose my job, but there is a God above and I know that he’s going to protect me and I know that I have the right to go into that booth and pull the lever for the person I believe in and I did it for you. Now, this whole concept of eliminating the secret ballot is contrary to everything that people like yourself fought for in the civil rights movement to give African American the right to vote, okay. And the reason that the secret ballot is so important is because coercion is very real, Rev. Sharpton, and this whole concept of a card-check system basically means if you want the union you sign the card, and it’s there for somebody to check. So, regardless of whether or not you’re for or against the union, let’s say you’re for and you sign this card and the union fails. Well you’re boss will have a way to check that card to see who was against him and then that opens you up to some coercive activities or retribution from your boss.

Al Sharpton: Yeah, well, what I don’t understand about it which is why I’m in the campaign is why wouldn’t those of us who support workers being protected, why would we not want their privacy protected. I mean why would we want them opened up to this kind of possible coercion?

Sylvester: Well, and that’s the 50 million dollar question, Rev. Sharpton, it’s a question we’ve been trying to answer but we think that the heart of this issue is not about protecting workers, the heart of this issue is about the decline of union membership that’s been going on in this country for the past thirty years. The unions at this point are in a death spiral and much of it’s tied to the exportation of production jobs from this country to other countries and the unions…

Al Sharpton: Yeah, the outsourcing, well I’m all for, and as well for those who don’t believe in the right to organizing, clearly I’m for any legislation to give any state the right to organize, but I’m talking about specifically where workers are not protected from coercion, in terms of these card-checks that you talk about, and as arbitration because explain, Charlie King, to me the whole question that you raised, if you have a federal arbitrator who says that this is the deal, even when the union only established out of card-check, is the deal for two years, and there’s nothing you can do about it, I mean, a lot of the business that we afford for the African American community to get contracts and sub contracts and all. They could face some very serious problems here.

Charlie: They could face incredible problems with it. Number one, it divides small businesses so that the employer and the employee can’t even really talk about what this contract is, and the second piece of it, going back again to the secret ballot is, and Sylvesters exactly right, is that the civil rights movement was predicated on the right to be able to go in and say what you honestly believe without fear of reprisal. That’s why we have the secret ballot in electing our president, our elected officials, and it’s a critical component of what we’ve fought for.

Al Sharpton: So let me get this very clear because I’m going to have a debate on this, we’re going to really get into this as we get toward the inauguration, but you’re not against organizing unions, you’re not saying that workers don’t need unions but we’re saying that these two items are going too far. That’s your position, Sylvester.

Sylvester: Yes sir.

Al Sharpton: That’s mine, and I think that we need to debate it and be real clear about it as this campaign is launched, we’ll do it starting next week. Thank you, Sylvester, we’re going to kick off and we’re going to have you tell your legislatures how you feel about it one way or another. You know how I am. We keep it real. That’s my position. Let’s see what yours is. We’ll take a break. We’ll be right back. Keeping it real. Al Sharpton, right after this.

continues…

Al Sharpton: Keeping it real. Keeping it real. I’m your host Rev. Al Sharpton and we are back. You can watch us live streaming on NationalActionNetwork.net. And we talked in the last segment, I’m starting a whole series on looking at legislation going, by both friends and foes, and I have serious issues with some of the things. We started with NAN’s conference, and NAN has joined the small businesses in regards to the unions and this card-check legislation that I’m going to be involved with, and you all know when I jump on something I stay with it whether people agree or disagree so we’re going to start our weekly series talking about that and then other legislation. We also want to deal with some stuff that I agree with, from labor and from others, and again, I’ll invite your debate on these issues.

I’ve argued before that coercion works both ways with Card Check.  Obviously, unions can coerce workers into signing cards, but employers can coerce workers to keep them from signing cards as well, and take retributive action if they do.  The secret ballot protects workers, and it’s worth noting that employers are the ones wanting that protection to stay in place, while unions want workers exposed to this kind of exploitation and abuse.  That speaks volumes about which side wants to use coercive tactics.

The civil-rights aspect of this shouldn’t get minimized, either.  The movement fought to get black citizens the right to vote through casting secret ballots.  Can anyone imagine what would have happened to the civil-rights movement if states had gone to a Card Check system instead?

If Sharpton sticks to his word, it will provide yet another voice against the passage of Card Check in the next session of Congress.  If we can keep it from passing out of the 111th Congress, Republicans can probably kill it for good, as their electoral prospects in the Senate will improve in 2010.

Previous posts on Card Check:


Blowback

Note from Hot Air management: This section is for comments from Hot Air's community of registered readers. Please don't assume that Hot Air management agrees with or otherwise endorses any particular comment just because we let it stand. A reminder: Anyone who fails to comply with our terms of use may lose their posting privilege.

Trackbacks/Pings

Trackback URL

Comments

Comment pages:

Who?

Jaibones on December 18, 2008 at 8:01 AM

There is no intelligent or ethical argument for card check, it’s just a license for more union thuggery, which of course benefits the absolutely worthless, corrupt and incompetent Democrat Party.

Even Sharpton can see it.

NoDonkey on December 18, 2008 at 8:21 AM

First W. said this:

“I’ve abandoned free-market principles to save the free-market system,” Bush told CNN television, saying he had made the decision “to make sure the economy doesn’t collapse.”

and this from Sharpton..

I did wake up on Bizzaro World after all..

DaveC on December 18, 2008 at 8:21 AM

Snow in Las Vegas and I agree with Al Sharpton.
The End Times really are upon us.

rbj on December 18, 2008 at 8:22 AM

Unions are just like communist revolutions.
“Join us, & we’ll fight for your interests!”
After the commies take over a country, there’s a tiny ruling class & masses of peasants supporting them.
In reality, union leaders only fight for union leaders.

jgapinoy on December 18, 2008 at 8:22 AM

Card check is so damn unAmerican. The euroweenies have high hopes it’s going to pass. You have to wonder why they would even care besides the fact that they want to see this country destroyed and are marxists.

Blake on December 18, 2008 at 8:24 AM

Headline:

Stopped Clock Theory Proven!

hillbillyjim on December 18, 2008 at 8:24 AM

Al Sharpton on the correct side of an issue?

Whoa, that’s a first.

Tim Zank on December 18, 2008 at 8:34 AM

…the heart of this issue is not about protecting workers, the heart of this issue is about the decline of union membership that’s been going on in this country for the past thirty years.

It’s about bailing out the unions, and what the Civil Rights Movement and the U.S. Constitution is about has nothing to do with it.

Sharpton’s going to take serious heat on this. Will he cave?

petefrt on December 18, 2008 at 8:38 AM

The Twilite Zone

Mark Garnett on December 18, 2008 at 8:41 AM

You know this issue is a no-brainer when even a dope like Sharpton gets it.

Since the dummies are starting to catch on, maybe there’s actually a chance that those other famous idiots (a/k/a Congress) won’t pass this POS legislation.

AZCoyote on December 18, 2008 at 8:52 AM

Watch the unions to see what lies in store for our Obamanation.

Unions started out with a “good cause”…migrated to socialist welfare…nanny unions…now CardCheck with its FASCIST taint.

Let’s roll.

ex-Democrat on December 18, 2008 at 9:15 AM

Al Sharpton on the correct side of an issue?

Yeah, but for all the wrong reasons.

And once his Dhimmicrat pals explain the VOTES that can be reaped from a resurgent union constituency he will be back on the bus.

Book it.

ex-Democrat on December 18, 2008 at 9:17 AM

Uh, who cares what Al Sharpton thinks?
He might be someone I listen to when he does a mea culpa, publicly, for his Tawana Brawley crime spree:

Amendment X on December 18, 2008 at 9:30 AM

Al Sharpton: Yeah, well, what I don’t understand about it which is why I’m in the campaign is why wouldn’t those of us who support workers being protected, why would we not want their privacy protected. I mean why would we want them opened up to this kind of possible coercion?

is how in the heck I have a radio job

Branch Rickey on December 18, 2008 at 9:37 AM

I think this is the second time in my life I’ve agreed with ‘Rev.’ Al on anything.

AAaak!

My only defense is the ’stopped clock’ adage. That’s my story, and I’m sticking with it.

RickZ on December 18, 2008 at 9:43 AM

I’d much rather Al Sharpton and George McGovern be right for the “wrong” reasons than wrong for the “right” reasons.

Card Check is an enemy to an essential American liberty. If that means I have to share a stage with Sharpton to fight it, I’d rather hold my nose and go with Sharpton.

He moves even half of the Congressional Black Caucus towards him and the Employee Forced Choice Act won’t even pass the house, nevermind the Senate.

Don’t look a gift horse in the mouth. Card Check is an enemy to everyone, not just conservatives.

BKennedy on December 18, 2008 at 9:56 AM

Sharpton’s going to take serious heat on this. Will he cave?

petefrt on December 18, 2008 at 8:38 AM

When ‘Rev.’ Al sinks his teeth into an issue, he never caves. See: The Tawana Brawley Hoax.

RickZ on December 18, 2008 at 9:57 AM

Wow, I’m speechless. Al on the right side of an issue. Who would have believed it?

Done That on December 18, 2008 at 10:14 AM

Again, how is it possible that an employee can be forced into a union just because more than half of the people he works with vote for it? That has got to be a violation of his rights somehow.
And that’s not even going into the extortion an monopoly/trust aspect of unionization.

Count to 10 on December 18, 2008 at 10:49 AM

Snow in Las Vegas and I agree with Al Sharpton.
The End Times really are upon us.

rbj on December 18, 2008 at 8:22 AM

He still has some survival instinct left.

I mean why would we want them opened up to this kind of possible coercion?

why indeed?

I look upon management and union as two sets of bullies who whip the stuffing out of the worker and share the spoils

entagor on December 18, 2008 at 11:25 AM

Sharpton realizes that unions are colorblind — they only see green. It makes complete sense for him to be opposed to this. You know the first shops unions will go after are what they perceive as being filled with easily impressionable workers.

By ‘impressionable’ I mean, intimidated. By ‘intimidated’ I mean bullied.

grdred944 on December 18, 2008 at 12:04 PM

The biggest complaint I have against unions is you have to pay them for the privilege to work somewhere. I would have no problem if the people who want to be members of a union as long as I had the same opportunity to work somewhere without having to be a member of the union.

My other complaint is they say the union dues are to provide you with really good benefits and protect the worker. Yet they have become too politically active. Using the dues to contribute to a candidate I may not agree with. As anyone with any sense can see if the UAW did not contribute to any political party they may have a little more money to pay for the benefits they promised their members.

lwssdd on December 18, 2008 at 1:35 PM

Well…good for him. Nice to see him on the right side of an issue for once.

Kevin71 on December 18, 2008 at 3:25 PM

Mr. Sharpton:
Get familiar with the term “persona non grata”. Stick to subjects with a bit more familiarity.

How about the actions of union-busting firms that have been thuggery in the disguise of law firms? They have eviscerated the protections of the “secret ballot”.

No thank you, but keep those union-busting thugs in suits away from my town.

Union-busting is un-American in its current, coercive form.

sethstorm on December 18, 2008 at 5:50 PM

Unionize everything, Nanny state everything, Nationalize everything, and let the drones serve the state.

Oh yeah, and let the drones progeny pay for it.

44Magnum on December 18, 2008 at 7:12 PM

Comment pages:


You must be logged in to post a comment.