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Teamsters Local 107 in Philadelphia scored quite a haul (before the nepotism charges, that is.)
Lights. Camera. Infraction. Teamsters Local 107 will not be able to continue to take advantage of its lucrative position placing Philly Teamsters on sets when movies–and movie stars–come to town. From the Philadelphia Inquirer: It’s a chance to rub elbows with Hollywood stars. And make good money while doing it. For years, a select group of Teamsters [more...]

Posted Tue, 16 Mar 2010 .

Union backing in Arkansas a touchy subject
Arkansas’ Senate seat is just one battle ground against moderate Democrats who have not lived up to Big Labor’s EFCA expectations. Lt. Gov. Bill Halter released a press statement detailing more than $500,000 in campaign contributions by labor groups to Blanche Lincoln. The same release calls Blanche’s accusations that Halter’s debt has been paid off to [more...]

Posted Mon, 15 Mar 2010 .

 Read more at LaborPains.org

Card Check Executive Summary

The best decisions are made with the best information—and without coercion. That is true for employees deciding whether to join a union. It is equally true for politicians who are being pressured by labor leaders to codify the union organizing method known as “card check,” a scheme rife with intimidation, coercion, and confusion.

This report examines two methods by which employees choose (or do not choose) union membership. The evidence is clear: secret ballot elections are a far superior method of deciding unionization than the “card check” process. This veritable mountain of evidence comes from the following:

  • Employees who have been the targets of intimidation or the victims of confusion during union organizing drives
  • Public opinion polling, which shows that 78 percent of Americans think secret ballot elections are the most democratic method of choosing representation, while 87 percent agree that “every worker should continue to have the right to a federally supervised secret ballot election when deciding whether to organize a union”
  • Former members of the National Labor Relations Board
  • The Supreme Court, which has said the card check system is “admittedly inferior to the election process”
  • Written statements in support of secret ballots from the same politicians who are now trying to end such elections for employees
  • Documents—from the same unions that are now trying to end secret ballot elections for employees—showing that cards are not a reliable method of discerning an employee’s true preference
  • Labor union officials who have required secret ballot elections in dozens of cases for their own staff employees seeking to join a union

As union officials and their allies campaign to take away secret ballots, they rely on a collection of dubious talking points. As this report finds, their criticisms of government-overseen elections are almost always overblown. In the case of the most important statistic—the rate at which union supporters are fired—union allies have overstated the truth by a factor of ten. In reality, an analysis of federal government data conducted exclusively by the Center for Union Facts found that fewer than 2 percent of election drives involve wrongful termination.

The current success of political attempts to end private ballots in favor of publicly signed cards can be understood in light of America’s altered political landscape. The head of one labor-funded organization recalled the old line: “Reward your friends and punish your enemies.” And the message to Congress has been heard.

The real punishment, however, will fall squarely on working Americans.