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The National Right to Work Committee® is a coalition of 2.2 million American citizens united by one belief:

No one should be forced to pay tribute to a union in order to get or keep a job.

These citizens agree that Federal labor law should not promote coercive union power, and support the protection and enactment of additional state Right to Work laws until the federal sanction for compulsory unionism is eliminated.

Click here to learn more about the National Right to Work Committee and how you can help.

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We at the National Right to Work Committee are fighting at many levels to protect America's working men and women's right to decide for themselves whether or not a union deserves their financial support.

Whether it be in the state and federal legislatures, the courts, or hearing rooms at the FEC or the NLRB, we fight to ensure that workers join unions because they want to -- not out of fear or federal mandate.

Please become an active member by pledging a monthly gift, or by helping us financially on one of the specific legislative efforts highlighted above.

National Right to Work Committee
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Email: members@NRTW.org

Because of NRTWC's tax-exempt status under IRC Sec. 501 (C) (4) and its state and federal legislative activities, contributions are not tax deductible as charitable contribu tions (IRC 170) or as a business deduction (IRC 162(e)(1).

Right to Work Blog

News & commentary from the legislative trail

Archive for May, 2009

Big Labor Composes Scarlet Letters Against NRTW

Thursday, May 28th, 2009

The Politico’s Ben Smith exposes more attempts by Big Labor Bosses to use clout gained from forced unionism; union pension “trustees” are attacking the National Right To Work Legal Defense Foundation.  While ignoring pension fund trustees’ fiduciary responsibility requirements, Teamsters union’s health, welfare and pension fund trustees are trying to intimidate Wall Street against NRTW and away from any opposition to their card check forced unionism bill. 

Just by listing NRTW in their letter, the union is trying to create a scarlet letter-effect that will steer Wall Street away from the Foundation.    

To sum it up: Big Labor Bosses are using the public votes of congress to intimidate congressmen into taking away workers’ private ballots and now they are using the pension fund gains through forced unionism to intimidate Wall Street against opposing card check forced unionism; and yet, we are supposed to believe that card check will not lead to increased intimidation?

The labor movement is taking square aim at Wall Street with a new tool in its fight to pass the Employee Free Choice Act: the hundreds of billions of dollars in pension funds it manages for union workers and retirees, some of it held by the same firms that are fighting the provision known as “card check.”

“Has your company made any public statements in support or opposition to EFCA?” asks one of nine pointed questions in a polite, detailed four-page questionnaire.

“If ‘Yes,’ please explain.”

The detailed questionnaire has three parts. The first asks about fund managers’ public positions, lobbying and political contributions. The second asks managers to “disclose any relationships during the past five years between your company and any organization(s) opposing the passage” of EFCA. The form lists [the National Right To Work Foundations specifically]. 

Another labor official said the AFL-CIO, the largest labor federation, is set to ask its own pointed questions of money managers soon.

“In the coming weeks, we will be rolling out initiatives from shareholders, investment groups and businesses in support of the Employee Free Choice Act,” said AFL spokesman Eddie Vale, who declined to discuss targeting Wall Street.

Financial industry officials took a darker view of the survey. “The fact that union bosses would try and shake down financial institutions by asking that they disclose information” about the bill “is beyond outrageous,” said an aide to one trade organization, who – like other industry officials rattled by the letters – refused to speak on the record. He also called it “troubling that Big Labor would use their pension plans as the bargaining chip.”

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When Will Michigan Reform Itself?

Wednesday, May 27th, 2009

Its an unemployment rate of nearly 13% — the highest rate since 1983 — the state of Michigan desperately needs to reform its economy.  Enactment of a Right to Work law would end the brain and job drain that is killing the state.  The question remains — are politicians ready to break big labor’s grip on the state’s economy?

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Harkin is Making Progress

Tuesday, May 26th, 2009

Sen. Tom Harkin (D-Iowa) says they are “making progress” in their negotiations over the Card Check Forced Unionism bill. We suspect workers who don’t want to be forced into a union are not at the bargaining table.

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So Much For Free Expression

Tuesday, May 26th, 2009

Union bosses representing Los Angeles police officers are demanding that editorial writers for the San Diego Union-Tribune be fired because of the newspapers stance on labor issues.  The LA Times has the story:

The union representing Los Angeles police officers is pressuring the owner of San Diego’s biggest newspaper to change the paper’s editorial stance on labor issues or to fire its editorial writers.

The feud is rooted in the recent purchase of the San Diego Union-Tribune by Platinum Equity, a private Beverly Hills firm. 

Platinum relies on a $30-million investment from the pension fund of Los Angeles police officers and firefighters, along with large sums from other public-employee pension systems across the state, to help fund its acquisitions of companies. As Los Angeles Police Protective League President Paul M. Weber views it, that makes the League part owner in the flagging Union-Tribune — and League officials are none too happy with the paper’s consistent position that San Diego lawmakers should cut back on salaries and benefits for public employees to help close gaping budget deficits.

“Since the very public employees they continually criticize are now their owners, we strongly believe that those who currently run the editorial pages should be replaced,” Weber wrote in a March 26 letter to Platinum Chief Executive Tom Gores.

Weber, in an interview, emphasized that the League is not demanding changes in the paper’s news coverage or in its staff of reporters. “It’s just these people on the opinion side. There is not even an attempt to be even-handed. They’re one step away from saying, ‘These public employees are parasites,’ ” he said.

Bob Kittle, editor of the Union-Tribune’s editorial page, rebuffed Weber’s comments. Although his staff has written several editorials critical of the benefits and pension commitments city leaders have made to San Diego’s five public employee unions, he denied Weber’s charge that the paper is out to hurt public employees.

“We are not anti-public safety or public employee,” he said. “All of this has to be considered within the context of what the city can afford. A bankrupt city can’t provide any public safety very well.”

Kittle said no one at Platinum or higher-ups at the paper had contacted him about the union’s request.

In a recent interview with the Union-Tribune, a Platinum executive indicated that the League was wasting its time.

“Platinum has no editorial agenda,” he said. “We will rely on the newspaper’s professional staff to ensure that its pages appropriately reflect the values of the community it serves.”

joel.rubin@latimes.com

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Big Labor: Most Powerful Political Force in Government

Sunday, May 24th, 2009

Steve Malanga compares the effects the economy has had on the private and public sectors in the Wall Street Journal and the comparison is startling.  While private companies are forced to cancel bonuses, freeze salaries and sometimes layoff workers, public sector workers are thriving, thanks to the political force of big labor who continue to squeeze taxpayers.

Malanga insightfully notes:

Call it a tale of two economies. Private-sector workers — unionized and nonunion alike — can largely see that without compromises they may be forced to join unemployment lines. Not so in the public sector.

Government unions used their influence this winter in Washington to ensure that a healthy chunk of the federal stimulus package was sent to states and cities to preserve public jobs. Now they are fighting tenacious and largely successful local battles to safeguard salaries and benefits. Their gains, of course, can only come at the expense of taxpayers, which is one reason why states and cities are approving tens of billions of dollars in tax increases.

It’s not as if we haven’t seen this coming. When the movement among public-sector workers to unionize began gathering momentum in the 1950s, some critics, including private-sector labor leaders such as George Meany, observed that government is a monopoly not subject to the discipline of the marketplace. Allowing these workers — many already protected by civil-service law — to organize and bargain collectively might ultimately give them the power to hold politicians and taxpayers hostage.

It wasn’t long before such fears were realized. By the mid-1960s, dozens of cities across America were wracked by teachers’ strikes that closed school systems. Groups like New York City’s transit workers walked off the job in 1966, bringing business in Gotham to a near halt. The United Federation of Teachers led an illegal strike which closed down New York City schools in 1968.

Widespread ire against strikes by public workers produced legislation in many states outlawing them. That prompted government workers to retreat from the picket lines into the halls of government. In Washington, they organized political action committees, set up sophisticated lobbying efforts, and used their muscle to help elect sympathetic public officials.

Today, public-sector unions sit atop lists of organizations that devote the most money to lobbying and campaign contributions.

In Pennsylvania, a local think tank, the Commonwealth Foundation, counted the resources of the state’s teachers union a few years ago. It had 11 regional offices, 275 employees and $66 million in annual dues. In Connecticut, representatives of the teachers union camped outside the legislators’ doors in 2005 to keep tabs on school reformers who were calling on these officials to expand school choice.

And in California, unions spent more than $50 million in 2005 to defeat a series of ballot proposals that would have capped growth in the state’s budget. Now the state’s teachers union is putting its clout behind a ballot initiative, to be voted on next week, that would restore more than $9 billion in educational spending cut from the state’s budget.

The results of such efforts are evident in the rich rewards that public-sector employees now enjoy. A study in 2005 by the nonpartisan Employee Benefit Research Institute estimated that the average public-sector worker earned 46% more in salary and benefits than comparable private-sector workers. The gap has only continued to grow. For example, state and local worker pay and benefits rose 3.1% in the last year, compared to 1.9% in the private sector, according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS).

But the real power of the public sector is showing through in this economic crisis. Some five million private-sector workers have lost their jobs in the last year alone, and their unemployment rate is above 9% according to the BLS. By contrast, public-sector employment has grown in virtually every month of the recession, and the jobless rate for government workers is a mere 2.8%. For anyone who thinks such low unemployment numbers are good news, remember that the bulging public sector must be paid for with revenues that most governments don’t currently have. This is one reason for a spate of state and local tax increases, such as $5 billion in tax increases New York state passed in April, and $12 billion in tax increases California’s legislature agreed to in February that will only become law if voters pass a series of ballot initiatives next week.

The next lesson we are likely to learn is that voter revolts against new taxes are no longer effective because of the might that these public- sector groups now wield. The tax-cut uprising of the late 1970s began in California with Proposition 13 capping property taxes. It then spread to more than a dozen states before it became a national movement that helped elect Ronald Reagan. The next tax revolt, during the recession of the early 1990s, helped sink officials like New Jersey Gov. James Florio and produced ballot propositions in places like Colorado that capped spending or made tax increases more difficult.

Now powerful and savvy, public unions have moved effectively to quash antitax movements. In New Jersey, public unions derailed a taxpayer revolt in 2005 by using their legislative clout to water down a bill that would have created a state constitutional convention to enact property-tax reform. Meanwhile, under pressure from unions, state legislatures in places like Florida have been tightening rules and requirements for passing voter initiatives and referenda — blunting a favorite tool of antitax groups.

In states like Iowa where public unionization rates are still low government workers have had to accept concessions. But allies of the unions in Washington are working to rectify that situation with union-friendly legislation like the card check bill, which will make organizing much easier.

In the private sector such efforts will still be subject to the demands of the marketplace. Employers who are too generous with pay and benefits will be punished. In the public sector, however, more union members means more voters. And more voters means more dollars for political campaigns to elect sympathetic politicians who will enact higher taxes to foot the bill for the upward arc of government spending on workers. That will be the pattern for the indefinite future unless taxpayers find a way to roll back the enormous power public workers have acquired.

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Senators Nervous About Specter

Saturday, May 23rd, 2009

Sen. John Ensign (R-NV) said that Republican Senators are “nervous” that Sen. Arlen Specter (D-PA) will flip-flop on the Card Check Forced-Unionism bill.

“We’re very nervous about some of the public statements he’s made,” Ensign told a group of conservative bloggers Wednesday, as reported by the American Spectator.

Specter had announced that he wouldn’t back EFCA (or “card check”) before having switched parties last month to pursue reelection as a Democrat. Since then, union officials have  lobbied Specter to get the critical votes to overcome a filibuster of the bill.

“We hope he honors not just the letter of his pledge, but the intent of the pledge,” Ensign told the bloggers.

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Obama Administration Alert: Mark Pearce, NLRB Nominee

Friday, May 22nd, 2009

Last week the National Right To Work Committee Alert concerned Service Employee International Union union lawyer Craig Becker, one of President Obama’s two current National Labor Relations Board (NLRB) nominees.  Today we’ll pull back the curtain on another  NLRB nominee, Big Labor Lawyer Mark G. Pearce. [Added 8/6/2009 Pearce Alert with his SF-278 Personal Financial Disclosure report.]

Due the nature of some of Mr. Pearce’s art that is included in the Committee’s Alert,  a censored alert is also provided.  (Pearce Uncensored Alert, Pearce Censored Alert). 

 

In his own words, Pearce says he is caught in an internal struggle between his artist and lawyer self.  He writes, “That kind of sounds like I’m drowning and about to go under, doesn’t it? While I enjoy the law, I struggle at fulfilling my desire to help bring beauty to the world. Art is my best vehicle to do this, or life raft.”

Pearce defended alleged underworld connected union boss Hotel and Restaurant Employees Union Local President Frank Ervolino. By May 2000, Ervolino and his wife were indicted by a federal grand jury for embezzling more than $235,000 in union funds.  A year earlier, Court-Appointed Hotel and Restaurant Employees Union Monitor Kurt Muellenberg’s office concluded that the amount embezzled was $491,000.

As you add up Pearce’s 20-plus years as a big labor lawyer, there is little to see.  It is hard to pinpoint just who is Mark Pearce. But what we do know is that his actions indicate that he is against individual workers rights and supports big labor forced unionism.

So, Contact your Senators now at 202-224-3121 and ask them to stop Mark Pearce and end Obama’s payback to forced unionism bosses.

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Harkin: “Optimistic” on Card Check Forced Unionism Bill

Friday, May 22nd, 2009

Sen.  Arlen Specter is deeply engaged in discussions with forced-union cheerleader Sen. Tom Harkin to craft minor changes to the Card Check Forced Unionism bill.  The negotiations appear the be hearing fruit as Harkin is expressing new optimism that the legislation will be on the Senate floor by Summer.

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Food For Thought But you pack some extra for the road…

Thursday, May 21st, 2009
Big Labor Cheerleader, former Rep. David Bonior, admits in a Roll Call column (subscription required) that “Labor’s Wish List STARTS with EFCA.”  That’s right, the Card Check Forced Unionism bill is just the first step in a long road toward coercive unionism.  
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Big Labor Hidden Agenda

Thursday, May 21st, 2009

Diane Furchtgott-Roth looks behind the rhetoric of the Card Check Forced Unionism bill:

Under binding arbitration, if firms and newly-organized unions cannot agree on their first collective bargaining contract within 120 days, the Federal Mediation and Conciliation Service, a government agency headed by a political appointee, would set up arbitration panels to craft two-year contracts. Neither the union nor the employer would have an opportunity to choose any members of the panel, and the Mediation Service would write the regulations. 

Unions want mandatory arbitration because they believe the threat of arbitration, followed by arbitration itself, will force employers to pay better compensation packages. That will help them recruit more members, providing a fresh infusion of funds for daily operations as well as for failing pension plans.
…With fewer workers joining unions, the collectively-bargained multiemployer pension funds are characterized by an increasing number of retirees supported by fewer younger workers. Many systems are typical Ponzi schemes, with new contributions paid out in benefits rather than being saved for contributors’ retirement.

Union pension funds can only survive through new contributions. That’s why unions will do anything to raise participant levels-including taking away secret ballots and forcing workers into underfunded pension plans.

America’s workers should not have to give up secure retirements in the name of a compromise on the Employee Free Choice Act. Just as workers deserve secret ballots in union elections, they also deserve the right to consider judiciously their labor contracts, and walk away from those that they deem unfair.

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