Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Unions and workers

- OPINION JAY AMBROSE

Sitting far away in the White House, President Joe Biden recently cheered for a union to be formed at an Amazon warehouse in Alabama. By a two-to-one vote, workers said no thanks, that they weren’t all that upset by this whiz of a company and would rather work out any difference­s without another organizati­on in their face.

As quoted by The New York Times, a couple of them said paying dues for fewer results did not appeal to them.

Despite this setback in trying to help union campaign contributo­rs, however, Biden still embraces a truly bold idea of how to strengthen them while depriving workers of their rights to choose. The scheme is to outlaw right-to-work laws in those 27 states that have them.

What those states prohibit are private union contracts that say you can’t get a job at a company unless you pay these union dues that some identify as a moral obligation. After all, it’s said, the money serves all workers by wrestling successful­ly with the urges of greedy CEOs, and you ought to pay for what you get.

Dues have other advantages. For one thing, unions get money to support the campaigns of politician­s making laws employees want. Along with the possibilit­y of genuine sympathy, that could be a reason we have a Biden plan for an extreme national $15 minimum wage that a lot of companies would not be able to pay. One million workers could lose their jobs.

Innovative Jeff Bezos, the primary owner of Amazon, already pays that minimum wage, and is for such a law that would weaken his competitio­n.

Unions having a tight handle on government can also be seen in teachers unions being able to keep so many schools closed to in-person teaching during the covid-19 crisis. According to most experts, the schools are safe.

None of this means that unions never played a positive role. Trade unions got started in this country as early as 1794 and have informed our culture ever since. They may have been overly under the influence of socialists, communists and anarchists for a while, but they certainly were crucial in converting early industrial­ism from its worst aspects.

Despite my criticisms, the unions’ impact on government has had numerous positive effects, not least on the end of child labor. I might mention I am also hugely grateful for the five-day work weeks and eight-hour days that laws demanded.

Private unions have been going away, dropping from a high of 35 percent of all workers in 1954 to 6.2 percent in 2019. I don’t want them dead, but neither do I want politician­s hurting workers in general on their behalf, and I think they need to be less dogmatic.

Some should more carefully consider that helping to meet their companies’ competitiv­e needs can often be the best way to meet employee needs.

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