Card-Check Threat Alive And Well
Jun5Beware, IMBD.com warns us that since the Employee Free Choice Act has been found wanting, the dreaded “card check” bill is taking a new, sneakier turn…
Big Labor: If you thought “card check” legislation that would kill off workers’ right to a secret ballot is dead, think again. Despite public repudiation, it’s back — with its advocates using sneakier tactics.
The Employee Free Choice Act would permit the establishment of new unions solely on the signatures of a company’s employees, taken either on the fly or with union thugs standing in their doorways.
Besides denying workers a right to a secret ballot, “card check,” as it’s known, also forces federal arbitration onto companies for union contracts, ensuring that either unions dictate the wages they want or a federal bureaucrat will step in and do it for them based on politics, not economics.
It’s a formula for disaster. This still-undead bill will shut plants, drive jobs abroad and ensure that few new jobs are ever created. Little wonder the public has turned a thumbs-down on it, and Congress has backed away. A recent Pew poll shows that 61% of Americans think labor unions have gotten too powerful.
But it hasn’t stopped Big Labor. Card check remains its top goal, and instead of dropping a bad idea, it’s switching tactics.
Card-check supporters have begun a new lobbying effort that targets a few wavering senators including Democrats Dianne Feinstein, Arlen Specter and Mark Pryor. The idea is to put the squeeze on Congress instead of taking the case to voters.
It may be one reason why card check has morphed into new incarnations, the latest a “compromise” bill from Feinstein. She has proposed a mail-in card-check format, which still amounts to a denial of secret ballot. Curiously, Feinstein backed away from her own compromise Thursday, raising questions as to whether she was being manipulated and wanted out.
The other prong of the card-check lobby has set up a supposed “grassroots” group as a fig leaf for the same old Big Labor interests.
A new group calling itself “Business Leaders for a Fair Economy” has gotten press for its novelty value as a 1,000-member business group that actually favors card check. Its Web site says it’s paid for newspaper ads in The Hill, Politico and Wall Street Journal, all closely read by the political set, urging Congress to pass card check.
“What is good for workers is good for business,” its chairman says.
But at its Web site, not all its 1,000 members are identified, the way, say, members of a chamber of commerce might be…
Read the rest at IMBD.com



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