It's Go Time
By Ron Gettelfinger
It may come as something of a surprise
to anyone who's paid even the slightest attention to the economic
crisis brewing in our country, but workers have a lot to celebrate
this Labor Day.
"What," you might ask, "is there to celebrate?
Wages have fallen, tens of thousands have lost their homes and
health care, food and fuel costs are sky high and prospects for
finding a good job are melting faster than the polar
ice."
In a word: Change.
Labor Day marks the start of the fall campaign season, and workers
are pumped and ready to turn back a near-decade of decline.
As it happens, this year the workers' holiday coincides with the
opening of the Republican National Convention. And while the GOP
tries to muster enthusiasm for a presidential candidate who vows
to continue the same policies that have made such a mess of things,
union members will celebrate in parades and rallies, confident
we will chart a new course in November and take back the American
Dream for all Americans.
For the past eight years our "public" policies have
been skewed to benefit corporate America at the expense of workers.
The Bush administration and congressional Republicans have pushed
for more free-trade agreements that have put millions of people
out of work. Their answer to the health care crisis is to move
people into the private insurance market through high-deductible
"health savings accounts" and to tax workers who have
employer-provided coverage.
And the party of Lincoln blocked a much-needed amendment to the
Civil Rights Act of 1964. The bill is named for Lilly Ledbetter,
who sued her former employer when she discovered shortly before
retiring that for years she had been paid less than her male counterparts.
The U.S. Supreme Court ruled that her suit was not timely, allowing
her employer to benefit from decades of concealing their discriminatory
behavior. Sen. Barack Obama is a co-sponsor of legislation to
reverse this injustice to tens of millions of American women;
Sen. John McCain stands opposed.
McCain and his Republican colleagues also oppose the Employee
Free Choice Act, which would protect workers' fundamental right
to form and join unions and bargain over wages, benefits and working
conditions.
Workers who have had the freedom to form unions and bargain collectively
created an upwardly mobile society and made our nation the envy
of the rest of the world. This is the model that fueled robust
economic growth throughout much of the last century. And it's
the only way our nation and our way of life will survive and flourish
in the new millennium.
But in recent years workers and our unions have had to play defense
to an all-out assault by organizations like the National Right
to Work Legal Defense Foundation and the fact-free Center for
Union Facts. These corporate-backed groups pretend to be looking
out for the best interests of workers when their real aim is to
prevent people from having the power to improve their workplaces
and their lives.
This year working families are fighting back. We're mobilizing
to elect Barack Obama and congressional candidates who will put
people ahead of powerful corporations.
Obama has been a fighter for ordinary Americans since his days
as a community organizer on Chicago's South Side. He believes
workers should have the ability to improve their lives through
collective bargaining, and he understands that good-paying jobs
with secure democratic rights in the workplace are essential to
rebuilding our broken economy.
Obama has steadfastly refused to cross picket lines. He has offered
strong support to UAW members and to members of other unions who
are organizing and bargaining for justice in the workplace, and
he is a co-sponsor of the Employee Free Choice Act.
Like us, Obama believes health care should be a right and not
a privilege for those who can afford it. His health care plan
would offer those without insurance and small businesses an affordable
health care plan, with coverage similar to that members of Congress
now enjoy.
And Obama is committed to creating good jobs here in the United
States by renegotiating bad trade deals like NAFTA and ending
tax breaks for companies that send jobs overseas.
On the other end of the spectrum, McCain wants to give $175 billion
a year in tax cuts to corporations. He's promised to expand the
trade deals that have cost our nation more than 3 million manufacturing
jobs since President Bush took office. He wants to tax health
care benefits of working families at a time many of us are having
trouble making ends meet.
McCain's hard-line partisan voting record (he voted with Bush
95 percent of the time last year) reflects an alarming lack of
interest in making our society work for working people. In fact,
he promises more of the same miserably failed policies that have
left so many out of work, out of their homes and out of their
health care.
This November working families will deliver the news to McCain:
We're out of patience.
But our job won't end in November. We know the forces of privilege
and power aren't going to suddenly throw in the towel and declare
game over once we've elected Obama and a worker-friendly Congress.
Corporations and their front groups will continue to try to prevent
workers from joining unions, to seek lucrative tax breaks that
bleed the public treasury and to cut corners on environment, consumer
and public health protections.
You can be sure we will stay in the game too. We will hold elected
leaders accountable by a simple standard: What have you done to
help working families?
Union members stand up for each other not just on Election Day,
but every day, in our workplaces and in our communities. We will
work to protect and preserve the American Dream for all people.
That is labor's legacy; that is labor's mission. This is the time,
and we're ready to go.
Happy Labor Day!