Unions demoralized by losses under Democratic Washington
posted at 11:36 am on March 1, 2010 by Ed Morrissey
One might think that the appointment of SEIU chief Andy Stern would cheer up Big Labor activists, but Bloomberg reports gloom instead. The union movement has lost ground in the private sector over the last couple of years as a percentage of workers represented, not to mention the lost opportunities they have suffered while Democrats bear the handicap of having an 18-seat majority in the Senate and a 75-seat majority in the House with a Democratic President:
The union-organizing bill known as card-check, labor’s top priority a year ago, has stalled. Obama ignored union pleas to use his executive powers to appoint a National Labor Relations Board nominee blocked by Republicans. Senate Democrats such as Blanche Lincoln of Arkansas haven’t supported some union goals.
“The labor movement is at a crossroads, and it has to rethink its political strategy,” said Amy Dean, a former labor official who is co-author of “A New New Deal,” a book about reshaping the labor movement. “The conversations that we are having at our kitchen tables and our living rooms that express our disappointment with this administration are very similar to the conversations that we had under the Bush administration.” …
Unions spent a record $450 million helping elect Democrats to Congress and the White House in 2008. With a mixed record of success going into the mid-term 2010 congressional elections, they are wondering what to do now.
“We’re demoralized,” said Robert Haynes, president of the Massachusetts AFL-CIO. “We’re not happy about anything.”
Unions have fallen victim to their own successes. Over the last seven decades, the union movement has pushed federal and state governments to enact into law many of the workplace protections for which they had to battle corporate management. Minimum-wage laws replaced collective bargaining to protect employees from sweatshop compensation, and payroll laws force American employers to pay overtime for work over 40 hours in a week.
The result: most private-sector employees get a fair deal from their employers and don’t see the need to pay union dues. Instead of consolidating their strength around the rescue of manufacturing jobs — a task that could have attracted both Democrats and Republicans to their banner — unions responded by demanding an ever-more-radical agenda of government control and forced unionization that offended American sensibilities. That culminated in the Card Check bill, which would have eliminated the secret ballot and put the federal government in charge of setting wages in the private sector. Small wonder that Gallup and Pew polls show sharp declines in popular support for the union movement.
If unions want to survive, they have to divorce themselves from politics, or at least from the Democratic Party. It wasn’t that long ago that unions supported both parties and had an agenda almost entirely focused on workers rather than on growing government. Unfortunately, the only growth industry for unions now is government, with government employment the only sector remaining stable over the last two years — and the only sector that still has a healthy percentage of union labor.
If they’re demoralized now, just wait until after the midterms.
Note: The tagline comes from an excellent novel by Douglas Adams, one I’d highly recommend as an escape from … just about everything. If you liked Adams’ Hitchhiker’s Guide to the Galaxy, you’ll love The Long Dark Tea-Time of the Soul.









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Union members, your union dues do not have to go to political contributions! Per the Supreme Court’s Beck (not that Beck) decision, you have the right to demand a refund of the portion of your dues that went to politics, & they are obligated to give it to you. But only if you ask!
jgapinoy on March 1, 2010 at 2:37 PM
One of the main problems with unions in the private sector is that they have no concept of economics as they seek pay raises and job longevity regardless of the profitability of their employers. They can get away with that ignorance in government employment because governments largely ignore economics believing they can levy more taxes to cover their increasing labor costs.
docdave on March 1, 2010 at 2:40 PM
The great news of the Obama-Care bill is that we can tax people who are Union members differently than non-Union members.
Since we can exempt people who are Union members from the 40% tax on insurance today, we can tax Union members 350% in the future and it will be legal.
barnone on March 1, 2010 at 2:51 PM
seriously. Andy Stern is the #1 most-frequent visitor to the Obama Party Crib.
And Obama appoints him to the Deficit gabfest to protect union interests against cuts -
http://www.reuters.com/article/idUSN2614740720100226
And the Obamunists just STOLE Chrysler and GM, violated contract and finance laws and gave majority ownership to Govt and the Unions, shafting the shareholders to do it.
Yet somehow the premise is unions are suffering. Seriously, wtf?
rayra on March 1, 2010 at 3:03 PM
Uncanny. I’m actually reading The Hitchhiker’s Guide to the Galaxy right now. I’m on the fourth book of the trilogy (yeah, Douglas Adams was weird like that) called So Long and Thanks for All the Fish.
Palin/Beeblebrox 2012
Campaign Slogan: The ‘Cuda & the Frood
If anyone out there in Hot Air Land likes Adams, you might try Terry Pratchett on for size. Similar humor, just with a quasi-medieval setting.
Left Coast Right Mind on March 1, 2010 at 3:56 PM
I was wondering if that was where you got that from, or if it had entered common parlance.
And if you’re a reader, you might want to start with the first book in the (sadly only two book) series.
gekkobear on March 1, 2010 at 4:02 PM
Union management hasn’t figuired out the part about finding a need, inventing or designing a product, estimating costs and profits and then hiring people and buying the elements to make and sell it.
And their allies?
Biden can’t spell j-o-b-s. The One and His wife want everyone to do “community service” or government “work”.
Ha. Ha. The Democrat party has nobody (at the top) who ever even tried to start or run a business. Even GE is just a divison of the Energy Department these days proped up bu loan guarantees.
But back to healthcare and green jobs which just need government investment and tax breaks…
IlikedAUH2O on March 1, 2010 at 4:06 PM
And the unions just want card check. Just get more union shops.
Then slice the smaller and smaller pie or get the feeding tube into the government budgets so we can have more jobs like the six figure bus drivers working in many cities.
Hey Dems and MSNBC! The real RACISM in this country is the belief that a black UAW member can’t buid a car as well as a Turk in the Black Forest.
A majority of Americans would back trade policies which would resist imports from countries with artificial currency manipulation or barriers to our products in their markets. The One doesn’t have the guts for a good old fashioned TRADE WAR!
IlikedAUH2O on March 1, 2010 at 4:40 PM
As long as we’re at it, “Long Dark Tea Time of the Soul” is itself a sequel to the far superior “Dirk Gently’s Holistic Detective Agency”.
Hucklebuck on March 1, 2010 at 5:01 PM
Recent union activities have resulted in massive job losses!!!
Do union bosses think that their members and potential members don’t notice this???
landlines on March 1, 2010 at 7:02 PM
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