More on Card Check’s Forced Government Contracts
WASHINGTON, D.C.,
April 22, 2009
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Alexa Marrero
((202) 225-4527)
The so-called Employee Free Choice Act – a misnomer if ever there was one – is widely known for its imposition of card check organizing, a process that eliminates the secret ballot for workers deciding whether to form a union. And it’s no wonder. This attack on worker privacy has drawn the ire of Americans from all across the political spectrum.
However, a somewhat lesser known provision has grown in prominence recently as political observers have become aware of a twin attack on workers’ rights: the forced government contract. The proposal has been called “calamitous for the U.S. economy,” and for good reason. It empowers faceless government bureaucrats to set salaries, hours, working conditions, benefits, and other terms of employment for two years – and workers won’t have anything to say about it. Former House Speaker Newt Gingrich explains in today’s Politico—
Gingrich, “Arbitration the real threat in EFCA,” Politico, 04.22.09 The card check proposal hits workers not once but twice when it comes to their fundamental right to vote. It could deny the secret ballot in choosing to join a union, and then deny any vote at all on a contract that dictates pay and benefits. This isn’t about free choice – it’s about no choice at all. # # # |