The Nation: The Corporate War on Labor
http://www.thenation.com/article/170342/corporate-war-labor#
John Nichols
October 3, 2012 | This article appeared in the October 22, 2012 edition of The Nation.
Mitt Romney may have trouble delivering a clear message on most issues. But theres no mistaking where he and his allies stand on the question of whether working people and their unions should have a voice in American politics. The candidate, who has relied on the support of billionaire-funded Super PACs to stay in the running, told NBCs Education Nation Summit in late September, We simply cant have a setting where the teachers unions are able to contribute tens of millions of dollars to the campaigns of politicians
. I think weve got to get the money out of the teachers unions going into campaigns. Its the wrong way for us to go.
Republicans like Romney and their biggest donors know that after Supreme Court rulings like Citizens United, corporations and wealthy individuals can dominate the debate through unlimited spending. They also know that as long as union members are able to pool dues and small contributions to challenge the corporate agenda of cutbacks, layoffs and privatization, there is going to be a debate on fundamental questions about education, social services and whether America is going to have a middle class.
So Romney wants to silence the voices of teachers, cops, sanitation workers and firefighters. And hes not alone. Some of the biggest donors to GOP campaignsincluding the billionaire Koch brothershave gathered their resources to do just that. Working with the ultraconservative Lincoln Club of Orange County, a key player in the Citizens United case, they spent millions to get an initiative on the California ballot in November. Proposition 32 would bar automatic deductions from the paychecks of union members to fund campaigns on their behalf. But it doesnt stop there; Prop 32 would prevent public and private sector unions from aiding state and local candidates.
Unions like the California Teachers Association and the California State Council of Service Employees are among the largest and most politically engaged in the nation, and though they are often outspent, they have held their own against the campaigns of GOP candidates like Meg Whitman and billionaire-funded initiative proposals. If Prop 32 passes, however, unions could become almost extinct in California politics, says UC San Diego political science professor Thad Kousser. Labor activists agree. First they silence our voice, says the California Labor Federation. Then they will come after our jobs, wages and retirement.
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