USA TODAY US Edition

America needs ‘Unions for All’

Empower all workers, whatever their job

- Mary Kay Henry

America’s labor laws were establishe­d 84 years ago on the basis of a racist compromise. And these laws, which were incomplete when they were written, are now completely useless to millions of workers — black, brown and white — who are demanding a union on the job.

The landmark 1935 National Labor Relations Act, which among other things was meant to “encourage collective bargaining,” was written for a different economy when manufactur­ing was the biggest industry. And to satisfy the demands of white supremacis­ts in Congress, it excluded agricultur­al, domestic and various other service workers from the very start, as they were industries dominated by women and people of color.

In today’s economy, millions of other Americans — including gig or appbased workers, so-called independen­t contractor­s and some public sector employees — are denied union rights under federal law.

According to our research at the Service Employees Internatio­nal Union, a staggering share of all workers in the country — up to 45% — are legally excluded from the right to bargain collective­ly. It’s time to update our laws to fit an economy where most people work in service jobs.

Litmus test for 2020 candidates

That’s why members of our union — 2 million people who are janitors, health care workers and public service workers — are calling on all candidates for president to put forward serious proposals to empower all workers to form unions, no matter what kind of job they do. We are looking for more than lip service from political candidates and elected leaders about how much they support the broken laws we already have. Instead, we need big ideas about how to empower more people to join together in unions so that everyone, no matter where they live or work, can negotiate for things like better pay, more affordable health care and more family-friendly schedules.

Demand for joining a union is at a four-decade high: Nearly half of nonunion workers in the United States now say they’d join a union if they could, according to a recent survey by the Massachuse­tts Institute of Technology.

And a solid majority of all Americans today say they support unions.

Workers are demanding unions and fair contracts in a way I have never seen in my 40-year career in the labor movement. They include public school teachers from West Virginia, Oklahoma and Los Angeles. Amazon workers. Stop & Shop workers. Child care workers. Cooks and cashiers at McDonald’s and other companies across the $200 billion fast-food industry.

That’s why our endorsemen­t in the 2020 election will be conditione­d on support for “Unions for All,” a bold agenda to give working people more power in our society. Our demand for Unions for All is focused on four big changes:

❚ First, we want the next president to use the power of the Oval Office to bring employers, workers and their unions together at industrywi­de bargaining tables to negotiate pay, benefits and working conditions nationwide — with government involvemen­t, where necessary, to help close the huge income inequality gap.

❚ Second, give states and cities the freedom to innovate and create new laws that empower workers to organize in a union more easily than the federal law now allows.

❚ Third, government should use its spending power to require that any job funded by tax dollars pays at least $15 an hour and allows workers to join together in a union for a bargaining process that can truly improve their lives.

❚ Fourth, any major economic proposal — including plans for universal health care or the “Green New Deal” — must put good union jobs at the center.

Transform our economy

Democrats are already taking notice. We’ve seen Sen. Bernie Sanders of Vermont, Mayor Pete Buttigieg of South Bend, Indiana, and former Rep. Beto O’Rourke of Texas propose bold solutions to unrig our economy and rewrite our labor laws, plans that are not just more of the same.

We expect more 2020 presidenti­al candidates to follow suit.

“Unions for All” is a demand we are making on behalf of working people who are fighting for their families — not just in our union but all across the country. Empowering more workers to join unions will give us the power to transform our economy into one where all of us can get ahead, no matter what our color or where we come from.

It’s a demand that will make the right to a union a reality not just for some, but for all.

 ?? JOSHUA LOTT/GETTY IMAGES ?? Teachers’ strike in Chicago last year. Mary Kay Henry is president of the Service Employees Internatio­nal Union.
JOSHUA LOTT/GETTY IMAGES Teachers’ strike in Chicago last year. Mary Kay Henry is president of the Service Employees Internatio­nal Union.

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