Card Check’s Forced Government Contracts: “In a Word, Disastrous”
WASHINGTON, D.C.,
June 22, 2009
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Alexa Marrero
((202) 225-4527)
The controversial card check scheme continues to draw bipartisan opposition, and for good reason. Its forced government contracts – compulsory interest arbitration, in government-speak – are drawing particular scrutiny, with serious questions being raised about their impact on workers, businesses, and the economy.
Today’s Roll Call contains an essay from R. Theodore Clark Jr., a senior partner at Seyfarth Shaw LLP in Chicago, who “has been involved in more than 60 public-sector interest arbitration cases over the past 40 years.” Clark lifts the veil on some of the lesser-known aspects of these forced government contracts and debunks the arguments of card check supporters:
With record unemployment rates in some regions of the country and job losses continuing to mount, it’s no wonder policymakers and opinion leaders are looking with suspicion at a bill that could put 600,000 Americans out of work in the first year after enactment alone. Disastrous indeed. # # # |