Wednesday, August 21, 2019
The presidential hopeful aims
to end "right to work for less" and union-busting, and bar federal
contracts for companies that exploit workers
Ahead of an AFL-CIO event in
Iowa Wednesday, Democratic presidential primary candidate Sen. Bernie
Sanders announced that,
if elected, he would "make it easier, not harder, for workers to join
unions by implementing the Workplace Democracy Plan and establishing a national
goal to double union membership during his first term."
Pointing to research from
the think tank Economic Policy Institute which shows that "since the
1970s, declining unionization has fueled rising inequality and stalled economic
progress for the broad American middle class," Sanders aims to reverse
that national trend with a new plan that builds on legislation the
Independent senator from Vermont initially introduced in 1992.
"Corporate America and
the billionaire class have been waging a 40-year war against the trade union
movement in America that has caused devastating harm to the middle class in
terms of lower wages, fewer benefits, and frozen pensions," Sanders said
in a statement. "That war will come to an end when I am president. If we
are serious about rebuilding the middle class in America, we have got to
rebuild, strengthen, and expand the trade union movement in America."
Described by the Sanders
campaign as a "pro-union" plan, the comprehensive proposal from the
longtime labor rights advocate calls for enabling the National Labor Relations
Board (NLRB) to certify a union if the majority of eligible employees have signed
valid authorization cards.
The plan incorporates various
policies Sanders has championed for years as a member of Congress. The campaign
says he would sign the Public
Service Freedom to Negotiate Act and Keep
Our Pension Promises Act, codify the Brown-Ferris
joint-employer standard into law, and repeal Section
14(b) of the Taft-Hartley Act, which would end the power of states to enact
so-called "right to work for less" laws that eliminate the ability of
unions to collect dues from those who benefit from contracts.
"When Bernie is president
he will work with the trade union movement to establish a sectoral collective
bargaining system that will work to set wages, benefits, and hours across
entire industries, not just employer-by-employer," the campaign explains.
"In addition, under this plan all cities, counties, and other local
jurisdictions would have the freedom to establish their own minimum wage laws
and guarantee other minimum standards for workers."
Under the plan, employers would
be required to start negotiations within 10 days of receiving new unions'
requests; honor existing union contracts if they merge with or acquire other
companies; and "disclose anti-union information they disseminate to
workers and provide for equal time for organizing agents."
Companies would not be able to
permanently replace striking workers, force workers to attend anti-union
meetings, or "ruthlessly exploit workers by misclassifying them as
independent contractors or deny them overtime by falsely calling them a
'supervisor.'"
Sanders would also work to
establish federal protections so that employees cannot be fired for any reason
other than "just cause" and give federal workers the right to strike.
As president, Sanders would
issue an executive order barring federal contracts for any companies that
"outsource jobs overseas, pay workers less than $15 an hour without
benefits, refuse to remain neutral in union organizing efforts, pay executives
over 150 times more than average workers, hire workers to replace striking
workers, or close businesses after workers vote to unionize."
In a campaign newsletter
Wednesday, speechwriter David Sirota highlighted some corporations that could
lose government contracts under the plan: Amazon, Boeing, General Motors, Honeywell,
McKesson, and United Technologies.
"Of course, there is one
way for these companies to avoid losing their federal contracts under a Bernie
Sanders administration: they could simply start paying their workers better,
stop their union-busting, and stop offshoring jobs," wrote Sirota.
Responding to the proposal on
Twitter Wednesday, Ben Spielberg, co-founder of the political blog 34justice, wrote that
"it would be hard for unions to dream up a better friend in the White
House than Bernie Sanders, who has tirelessly stood with the labor movement
throughout his entire career."
Mary Kay Henry, international
president of the Service Employees International Union, was among those who
welcomed the plan, calling it "the latest sign 2020 candidates can't
ignore millions of workers demanding leaders rewrite the rules so everyone can
join a union, no matter where we work."
The new labor plan also ties
in another of Sanders's signature proposals—replacing the country's for-profit
healthcare system with Medicare for All. As part of that transition, companies
with union-negotiated healthcare plans would be required to hold new
negotiations overseen by the NLRB to ensure that corporate savings are put
toward wage increases and other benefits for workers.
Sanders and Rep. Mark Pocan
(D-Wis.) introduced the
most recent version of the Workplace Democracy Act in May 2018, during the last
session of Congress. The bill, which would amend "the National Labor
Relations Act and related labor laws to preserve workers' rights to join labor
organizations and engage in collective bargaining," was co-sponsored by
several other presidential hopefuls—Democratic Sens. Cory Booker (N.J.),
Kirsten Gillibrand (N.Y.), Kamala Harris (Calif.), and Elizabeth Warren
(Mass.).
No comments:
Post a Comment