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Ralph Nader: Revitalizing the AFL-CIO

May 29, 2011 in General, Social & Economic Justice

When Harry Kelber, the 96 year old relentless labor advocate and editor of The Labor Educator speaks, the leadership of the AFL-CIO should listen. A vigorous champion for the rights of rank-and-file workers vis-a-vis their corporate employers and their labor union leaders, Kelber has recently completed a series of five articles titled
The reaction: Silence from union leaders, their union publications and at union gatherings.

Kelber, operating out of a tiny New York City office, knows more firsthand about unions, their historical triumphs, their contemporary deficiencies and their potential for tens of millions of working families than almost anyone in the country. Over the decades, no one has written more widely distributed pamphlets that cogently and concisely explain unions, the labor movement and anti-worker restrictive laws like the Taft-Hartley Act of 1947, than this honest, sensitive worker campaigner.

At a perilous period for both working and unemployed Americans, facing deep recession, corporate abandonment to China and other repressive regimes, and the Republicans’ virulent assault on livelihoods and labor rights, Kelber believes that AFL-CIO should be on the ramparts. Instead, he sees it as moribund, hunkering down, with control of the power and purse concentrated in the hands of the silent and Sphinx-like Federation officers and the tiny clique of bureaucrats who run the show.

“In the AFL-CIO, the rank-and-file have no voice in electing their officials, because only the candidates of the Old Guard can be on the ballot,” he writes.

Certainly, the AFL-CIO is not reflecting the old adage that when “the going gets tough, the tough get going.” They recoil from any public criticism of Barack Obama, who disregards or and humiliates them by his actions.

Mr. Obama promised labor in 2008 to press for a $9.50 federal minimum wage by 2011, and the Employee Free Choice Act, especially “card check,” and then forgot about both commitments. He has not spoken out and vigorously fought for an adequate OSHA inspection and enforcement budget to diminish the tens of thousands of workplace related fatalities every year. He’s been too busy managing drones, Kandahar and outlying regions of the quagmire of our undeclared wars.

Nothing Obama does seems to publically rile the AFL-CIO. In February, he crossed Lafayette Square from the White House with great fanfare to visit his pro-Republican opponents at the U.S. Chamber of Commerce yet declined to go around the corner and visit the AFL-CIO headquarters. Where was the public objection from the House of Labor?

He prevents his vice-president from responding to the Wisconsin state federation of Labor’s invitation to address the biggest rally in Madison, Wisconsin protesting labor’s arch enemy, Republican Governor Scott Walker. Biden, a self-styled “union guy”, wanted to go but the political operatives in the White House said NO. Still no public objection from Labor’s leaders.

Kelber describes the lack of a strong, funded national and international strategy to deal with the growing gap between rich and poor and the expanding shipment of both blue and white collar jobs abroad. He laments AFL-CIO’s failure to develop a “working relation with the new global unions that are challenging transnational corporations and winning some agreements.” He also notes that the AFL’s top leaders “have minimal influence at world labor conferences. They rarely attend them, even when they are invited.”

Pushing for higher wages and worker rights in the poorer developing countries, including the adoption of International Labor Organization (ILO) standards has great merit and is also a constructive way to also protect American workers.

What is restraining AFL-CIO’s President Richard Trumka? A former coal miner, then a coal miners’ lawyer, and president of the United Mine Workers, Mr. Trumka has been at the Federation for over a decade. He knows the politics of the AFL-CIO, makes great speeches about callous corporatism around the country, and has a useful website detailing corporate greed.

Read the whole entry here:http://www.nader.org/index.php?/archives/2278-Revitalizing-the-AFL-CIO.html

9 responses to Ralph Nader: Revitalizing the AFL-CIO

  1. ‘we shall take steps that will damn well astound you’

  2. Just out of idle curiosity

    What is this story doing on Green Party Watch?

    After all, at one time there were state Green Parties that apparently passed motions stating that even if Ralph did get the GP nomination, in a alleged fixed GP Convention process that they states would not allow Ralph Nader on their ballot access.

    Not to mention a whole bunch of other anti-Nader tactics and things on the National GP level.

    So as an aside, since the GP National has not released any financial statements since 2009, can we assume that the facade is over?

    So sad. So freaking sad. I also note that on Independent Political Report and Ballot Access Report that there is regular conversations and discussions. Active engagement by folks there.

    Almost like they are still live and kicking.

    Here, just re-posts by Mr Oogle and his Fantasy Parliaments Team and Roseanne Barr and her Green Tea site.

    Which is then removed.

    //:-D>——–

  3. I just posted it because people still associate Ralph Nader with the Green Party. Simple as that.

  4. How’s that new third party of yours working out, Michael Cavlan? From the amount of time you spend attacking the Green Party rather than saying one positive thing about your own party, I think that I can guess.

  5. Now, now VAGreen, you know better than to feed the trolls. ;-)

  6. Eddie, ignore Michael, he’s just keeping his axe sharp.

  7. Michael, if you recall, Mr Oogle and his Fantasy Parliaments Team posted at IPR until they banned him.

  8. Oh, don’t worry. I know who Michael is. I will work with the Green Party for years to come!

  9. They rarely attend them, even when they are invited.