James P. Hoffa is now saying that if Obama pulls the “public option” out of his healthcare bill, it is not a deal killer as far as union support is concerned.
Hoffa said that he was only interested in what was “doable” and that they need to “get something done… and declare a victory.”
Now let’s take a look at these quotes from Mr. Hoffa, shall we? What does it mean if we aren’t seeing obliged union support without integrity for Obama’s healthcare coming from Hoffa’s Teamsters? Hoffa is saying that he doesn’t care at all what healthcare “reform” will look like as long as they can get it done with and “declare a victory.”
This is unprincipled support of Obama’s healthcare purely for political reasons. What would Hoffa and the unions get from such unprincipled support of Obama’s socialist take over of one sixth of our nation’s economy? Why is Hoffa so disinterested in the actual outcome of the healthcare debate as long as they win it? What will Hoffa get out of this?
It’s all a gambit leading to what the unions really want: the Employee Free Choice Act.
You see, if Hoffa and the unions can be seen by the administration and the Democratic Party as having had a major hand in helping to pass healthcare reform and if the administration can claim a great victory in passage of healthcare “reform,” then when the EFCA comes to the plate Obama might still have enough juice to get the EFCA passed. And the EFCA is all the unions care about. They don’t care a whit if healthcare really passes or not. They just want a feather in Obama’s cap to help give him the power to pass the EFCA later on. If Obama loses his healthcare fight or if he only gets something passed in a materially weakened form, then the EFCA might be endangered.
So, because the unions want the EFCA to succeed later, they are willing to lend unprincipled support to Obama’s healthcare policies now.
It is a sad commentary, but it does show how unprincipled unions really are when all is said and done.
The Gallup polling organization recently revealed a poll that shows employee unions are at an all time low in popular opinion. Gallup found “organized labor taking a significant image hit in the past year.”
While 66% of Americans continue to believe unions are beneficial to their own members, a slight majority now say unions hurt the nation’s economy. More broadly, fewer than half of Americans — 48%, an all-time low — approve of labor unions, down from 59% a year ago.
That is a pretty hard fall in just one year. Almost 10% of Americans have changed their opinions toward the negative on unions in just a year. Worse, the once high of 75% approval as it stood in 1957 is now down to 48%. That is also a pretty hard fall. According to Gallup, it has never been that low.
Negatives against unions have grown since Gallup first began to poll about unions in 1937.
There has been an even larger jump in the percentage saying labor unions mostly hurt the U.S. economy, from 36% in 2006 to 51% today. This is the first time since the question was established in 1997 that more Americans have said unions hurt rather than help the economy. Americans’ general concerns about the current state of the economy could certainly be a factor in these more negative views of unions, in addition to specific perceptions about unions.
Gallup seems to have nothing but bad news for union popularity. It seems they are falling into the negative in just about every category!
Check out Gallup’s full report.
The United Farm Workers union wants to enshrine in law a new way for potential members to vote in representation. For years now, the UFW has tried to push Sacramento to OK a plan to allow potential union members to cast their vote away from their workplace.
The union claims that if union representatives can visit possible members at their homes to gather their vote it will prevent farm owners from “intimidating” their workers out of casting a yes vote.
But, the truth is that this will give the union representatives full reign to themselves be the intimidators. Not only that, but if union reps can go to voter’s homes to gather votes there won’t be anyone to guarantee whether those union reps were intimidating the voters or not. It’ll just be the worker and the union rep who will know for sure. Not only that but this bill will effectually eliminate the worker’s secret ballot and voter privacy.
Fortunately for the integrity of workers Governor Schwarzenegger has vetoed this abomination… again.
Good for the Governator.
The Seattle Times’ Danny Westneat is the son of teachers union members. But even he is starting to notice that teachers unions don’t care about the kids…
Teachers strikes are different
I’m the son of two teachers. So I think I was genetically programmed to believe that teachers know best.
Which is why this week I’ve been feeling like a rebellious child. It’s these teacher strikes. They have gotten absurd.
Take Kent. The three-day strike there is escalating into full-scale war. The end result almost certainly will be a judge ordering teachers back to work. Then, bitterness all around.
Yet what’s the issue that’s tearing that place apart? Believe it or not, the top one listed at the union’s Web site is a dispute about staff meetings.
Back in the beginning — meaning before the 1970s — teachers really were second-class employees asked to do first-class jobs. Their pay was abysmal. Administrators often had the iron touch of dictators.
The strikes of the ’70s (the first K-12 teacher strike in this state was in 1972) shook up that power structure — for the good, in my view. Teachers won more authority. Now they are paid a bit more like the professionals we expect them to be.
But a teachers strike is more than just part of a negotiation between workers and bosses, like it is at, say, Boeing. There’s a third party that raises the stakes dramatically: parents and their kids.
My point is, if you’re shutting down schools, you’d better have good reason. A reason that’s morally unassailable.
“We want fewer meetings” doesn’t cut it.
The Kent teachers say they’re forced to have too many staff meetings. Fair enough. (One minute of meetings is too many for me.)
The teachers want to limit these staff and training meetings to two 60-minute sessions per month. The administrators want four per month. Two versus four. Really, Kent teachers and administrators? You’ve shut down a district of 27,000 students over this?
That’s not all, of course. The district offered a 4.5 percent pay raise over two years. The teachers want about 10 percent. At a time when 0 percent would be progress to many of us, this dispute seems tone-deaf.
The last issue is that classes are too big. The district says it doesn’t have the money to make them meaningfully smaller. It would mean hiring teachers at a time when most districts are laying them off.
Ballooning class sizes is definitely worth shouting about. Only not so much at the Kent School District. It should be at the state Legislature, the one body that has the power to do much about it.
Ironically, this week in King County Superior Court, these same Kent administrators and teachers are doing just that. They are on the same side of a lawsuit arguing the state isn’t paying its fair share for education.
I suppose you can fight with one arm and hold hands with the other. But the contrast between the lawsuit and the strike makes the strike seem like gamesmanship.
Up in Lake Stevens, teachers may be about to go on strike, too. This would be their third strike in 11 years. Isn’t this starting to feel like a seasonal routine?
Yesterday the head of Kent schools said the strike there is illegal. Probably so — public employees generally don’t have a right to walk off the job.
But when he said this, I realized that, to me, whether it’s legal or not is a technicality. What matters is whether it’s righteous. Deep down, legal or not, is it about something worth fighting for?
Sorry, Mom and Dad. I know I’m off the reservation here. But I think that this time, the teachers should go back to class.
The White House has announced that President Obama will speak before the AFL-CIO convention on September 15 and that healthcare will be the hot topic.
Last month the AFL-CIO announced that it would put interest in the Employee Free Choice Act (EFCA) on the back burner until heatlhcare is passed. Obama will likely use this opportunity to push his take over of one sixth of the nation’s economy with his nationalized healthcare policies.
The union is likely right to put its interest in the EFCA on hold in order to rally to help Obama push his socialized healthcare plan. It is probable that if Obama spectacularly loses this healthcare fight his help with the EFCA later will be severely diminished.
The Café des Artistes has been doing a steady restaurant business in New York City since 1917, but is now forced to close its doors. One of the main reasons for this happens to be the fact that the Café is unfortunate enough to be a union restaurant and the exorbitant costs of supporting a union workforce has contributed to killing the business.
A blog called the 212DressingRoom, a website about New York fashion, culture, art and other rather Bohemian subjects, has detailed the sad end of the long time café written by the owner of the place, Jennifer Lang.
The decision to close the Café is exceedingly painful to make, but inevitable. We are one of the very, very few independent restaurants in New York City that operates with a union; many of those have closed in the last few years, and hundreds have closed in the last few decades. In that respect, we are a dinosaur because the huge added expense of having a union restaurant can be crippling, especially when the economy takes a nosedive.
Since 99% of the independent restaurants in New York City do not have a union, we are not playing on a level playing field with the rest of our competition. One example: We pay approximately $250,000 more each year for health insurance and pension coverage for our employees than we would if we were paying for non-union coverage.
This is a stark reminder that unions kill profitability and cost jobs. A minute can be spent here to realize what the Obama administration’s “cure” for this sort of situation is, too.
With its support for the Employee Free Choice Act (EFCA), a bill that will likely assist the growth of unions nationwide, we will see the “playing field leveled,” alright. But it won’t be beneficial to anyone because what we will see is that everyone will wind up hurting. Many businesses will close and those that are left will have fewer employees because they won’t be able to expand as they are stifled with union expense.
Mrs. Lang ably shows that unions weigh a business down and destroy its competitiveness. Sadly, New York will lose a long-time favorite eatery because unions have killed it.
And Obama wants to unleash this destructive force on the whole country.
(H/T Jimmie L.)




