In 1978, when I was 17 years old, I worked as an usher at concerts and sporting events earning $2.25 an hour, the minimum wage. I had to surrender about 15 cents of this meager hourly wage to a union I was forced to join. I could never understand what a union was doing to help me since the company had the legal requirement to pay me $2.25. I was infuriated over the principle of this confiscation by labor bosses I had never met.
I wanted out of the union, but they told me I must pay dues to keep the job. Shouldn’t there be a law against this type of coercion?
There is, actually. It is called the First Amendment. The right of association is not explicitly listed in the Bill of Rights. Still, the courts established this “fundamental right,” ironically enough, in 1958 in the landmark Supreme Court case NAACP v. Alabama. Crucially, the courts declared that “the First Amendment protects a right to associate and a right not to associate together.”
I was thinking about this when I watched the viral video of Rep. Tim Ryan, the Ohio Democrat, on the House floor slamming Republicans for opposing the Protecting the Right to Organize Act that would force tens of millions to join a union.
“Heaven forbid that we pass something that’s going to help the damn workers in the United States of America,” he fumed. ” We talk about giving the right to organize; you (Republicans) complain.”
The left lionized him as a champion for the little guy. But hold on there, Congressman. No one is saying that unions should not exist or that they should not be able to organize. I would be first in line to defend their First Amendment right to do so.
But let’s be clear: This bill doesn’t allow people to associate with a union. It forces them to join the union. In other words, it violates millions of workers’ First Amendment right not to associate with a union.
In 27 states, voters have adopted right-to-work laws that prohibit forced union participation. Those laws are popular with voters and workers. Mark Mix, the president of the National Right to Work Committee, which defends nonunion workers’ rights, said that “almost every attempt to repeal RTW laws and create ‘closed shops’ by Big Labor has been soundly beaten on the ballot or in state legislatures.” That’s why the union bosses are running to Congress.
There are good reasons why blue-collar workers may not want to join a union. The corruption with Big Labor has been so rampant with union bosses taking high six-figure salaries, parties, and spending union dues on junkets to Hawaii and the Caribbean that workers have said they want out. Unions also donate tens of millions of dollars of worker dues to Democratic politicians. In many unions, as many as half of the rank-and-file workers on the line aren’t even in favor of the Democrats. They are Trump-voting Republicans.
High-performing workers also don’t want to be under the umbrella of “collective” bargaining agreements because they want to get pay raises above what low-performers and shirkers earn. Union laws often prevent productive workers from getting more, just as teachers unions all but prevent poor-performing teachers from getting fired.
For whatever reason, millions have freely decided they don’t want to be in the union. How is Ryan helping them by taking away that freedom to choose, which is another core principle I thought Democrats believed?
Don’t forget the convenient reason why workers of right-to-work states don’t want to be told by Washington they must rush into the union bosses’ arms. Right-to-work states are where the jobs are. Right-to-work states create about twice as many new jobs as forced-union states. Right-to-work states have created triple the number of manufacturing jobs as forced-union states. America hasn’t lost auto jobs. The jobs have left states such as Michigan, Ohio and New York in favor of free states such as Texas, Tennessee, Florida and Alabama.
That raises one last question for Ryan and his Democratic House colleagues, nearly all of whom voted for the Protecting the Right to Organize Act. Rather than force states such as Florida, South Carolina and Utah to adopt the policies that have economically crippled New York, Illinois and New Jersey, why not encourage the worker freedom policies that are standard fare in the economically high-flying states.
Workers should think about this: If all 50 states become forced union states, where will the jobs go next? Probably China and Mexico.
Stephen Moore is a senior fellow at the Heritage Foundation and an economic consultant with FreedomWorks. He is the co-author of “Trumponomics: Inside the America First Plan to Revive the American Economy.” To find out more about Stephen Moore and read features by other Creators Syndicate writers and cartoonists, visit the Creators Syndicate website at www.creators.com.
What a disgrace, forcing workers to join a union. Oh, the communists want total control of all of our lives. We will soon have cameras in our houses and the government will be watching every move we make.
YOU vill join. OR else ve brekk ya legs!..
Unions are for losers who cannot or refuse to, compete one on one with their labor competition. It is for people unable to or refuse to excel and contribute more than required in order to advance and exceed employer’s expectations and therefore advancing their individual lives. The first thing an ambitious younger kid is told by the union steward is to slow down because you will make the other old timers look bad. The others are the lame sheep who hide in the middle of the herd thinking themselves safe from the wolves. When it is Democrat wolves in Sheep;s clothing that arrive on the scene,the union stooges are just collateral casualties waiting for a happneing.
WHICH IS why i would love to do away with all unions.. Period.
Once unios were a needed entity in the industrial world considering the working conditions in the late 19th and early 20th centuries but then they became political tools especially Federal, state, and municiple unions which became closed shops if someone worked for any of their agencies. Forced dues, collected by the government agency, often went to political candidates not supported by members. In the private sector unions like the UAW and USW contracted therie members out of jobs that were sent overseas. Today that power is being ham fisted by the teachers unions to the detriment of students and their families. Want to join a union, make it volutary and see how many really think it is to their advantage in this day and age?
FOR Years i’ve been saying UNIONS, especially federal worker unions, teacher unions and such, NEED TO GO…
Throughout western Pennsylvania and eastern Ohio, the landscape is dotted with empty sites that used to have steel mills. Unions didn’t help their cause, but neither did the one sided trade deals, militant environmentalists, and incompetent company management. As a result, places like Johnstown, Aliquippa, Ambridge, and Youngstown are now ghost towns. Amazingly, some of the folks still vote Democrat and love the unions!
You can’t fix stupid…
Some things cannot be fixed- like stupid democratic ideas.
I can’t count the number of times when in the Navy that we had interface with union run civilian support facilities that would milk a job over and over again to get as many fingers in the pie or to force over time. When pushed came to shove, we sailors who got to work 24 hours a day with NO overtime then got to accomplish the work the union slugs already got paid to do 3 times over.
Same here. HEll, one of the ships i was on, TRIED twice to get union reps, for one antenna company, to get theirbutts ON The ship (while out at sea), to repair the damn antenna they just installed 3 months prior (YEA IT BROKE IN THREE MONTHS).. They kept refusing, even AFTER we sent out TWO CASREPS (Casualty reports)..
SO WE DID IT ourselves.. Fixed it in 3 days total (me and two other guys up the mast), and THEN WE GOT b1tch3d at for “Stepping on the contractors job” by the upper chain….
Exactly! In the shipyard this was the common practice. All these shops had to have an official code to put up a ladder so the other code could remove some insulation so another code could repack a valve so another code could put back the insulation and another code could paint the insulation and another code take the ladder away. That job would take 4 days to do what a sailor would do in 2 hours. And even on shore duty, as the leading crew chief I’d get told to take “care of something” where I’d submit the request to the civilian unions, get blown off or an excuse. The command would then (defecate) on me to “get it done” where I’d have my crew take care of it. The result? A job done and the predictable union grievance to the command who in turn would then again (defecate) on me for bypassing protocol.
I often got in TROUBLE (and thus had crummy evals) for doing things like that. CHallenging the upper chain, for ordering me to BYPASS regulations and rules, to “just get done, what THEY wanted me to do”, when THEY WERE THE ONES who pushed me to get CERTIFIED AND qualified in that job… Then they whined i FOLLOWED THE RULES of that certification…