The debate taking place over the future of the labor movement could determine its very survival.
Saturday, January 29, 2005 at 01:58PM
TheSpook
Here's something to consider:
It's a concrete possibility we will wake up one morning and there won't
be a single American labor union left. For 30 straight years, American
organized labor has been hemorrhaging members, power and influence.
[Fifty years ago, 35 percent of workers belonged to unions, today just
12 percent do (and only 9 percent in the public sector).] There are
already 22 states in which "right-to-work" rules effectively outlaw
collective bargaining; the National Labor Relations Board, entrusted
with the sacred duty of protecting the human right to organize, has
been turned into just another way station for GOP corporatist hacks;
and the American manufacturing sector, once the backbone of the
movement, has been eviscerated by globalization. Faced with the
possibility of permanent irrelevance, different factions of the AFL-CIO
have recently been engaged in a knock-down, drag-out fight over what is
to be done. Despite occasional coverage in the mainstream media, this
has drawn just a smattering of attention in liberal publications and
the blogosphere. But progressives everywhere need to realize that they
have a powerful stake in its outcome: Without the American labor
movement there is no American left, and the debate taking place right
now could very well determine if the movement survives. [more]
Article originally appeared on (http://brownwatch.com/).
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