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Text 14774, 104 rader
Skriven 2005-08-27 05:12:00 av Jeff Binkley (1:226/600)
Ärende: Unions
==============
This cannot be good for the democrats...

=========================================

http://biz.yahoo.com/ap/050826/breakaway_unions_interview.html?.v=10

AP
Breakaway Union Leaders Outline Strategy
Friday August 26, 4:11 pm ET 
By Will Lester, Associated Press Writer  
Breakaway Union Leaders Hope to Grow Organized Labor by Targeting Jobs 
That Won't Go Overseas 


WASHINGTON (AP) -- Unions that broke away from the AFL-CIO hope to 
rebuild the tattered labor movement by targeting workers in growing 
industries such as health care, waste management and security.
"We want to identify jobs that can't be shipped overseas," Teamsters 
President James Hoffa said in an interview with The Associated Press on 
Friday.

The targeted industries, which also include food service and businesses 
that cater to retirees, account for 30 million to 45 million workers, 
said Andrew Stern, president of the Service Employees International 
Union. He said workers in these industries, which employ a large number 
of immigrants and minorities who do not have college degrees, aren't 
paid fairly for their work, Stern said.

"We are living through the most profound transformative economic 
revolution in world history as we go from a manufacturing to a service 
and information economy and from a local and national economy to an 
international economy," Stern said.

The AFL-CIO was not adapting to the new economy with its global reach, 
fast-growing industries in service, health care and security, the labor 
leaders said.

"The AFL-CIO is the United Nations and we're NATO," Stern said, 
reflecting the belief of the breakaway union leaders that the labor 
federation was not adapting quickly enough to the changes. It's critical 
for labor to organize whole sectors of the economy to avoid industries 
competing to see which one can pay the lowest wages, Stern said.

"We're talking about organizing wholesale, not retail," Stern said. "It 
requires a different thinking."

The breakaway unions say they will have millions of dollars in annual 
fees they aren't paying to the AFL-CIO to use in organizing their own 
core industries.

"The AFL-CIO was not working," Hoffa said. "We had less people in the 
labor movement. The numbers were going down, not up. We're more nimble 
and we don't have the big bloated bureaucracy."

Stern said the Northwest Airlines strike was an example of what has gone 
wrong in the labor movement, with multiple unions not having sufficient 
clout to reach an agreement.

The labor leaders said the movement needs to do a better job of 
educating workers and consumers about the importance of boosting wages 
and keeping jobs in America. He also said a key to the new labor 
strategy is to do more organizing overseas.

The labor movement is changing to a global effort because companies now 
have a global presence, Stern said.

The Teamsters and SEIU broke away from the AFL-CIO in late July, saying 
the labor federation was spending too much time on politics and not 
enough on recruiting new members. The United Food and Commercial Workers 
broke away soon after that, meaning three of the largest unions in the 
AFL-CIO representing more than 4 million workers were leaving the 
federation of more than 50 labor unions that had numbered 13 million 
workers.

Several others, including the Laborers, Unite Here and the United Farm 
Workers have joined the breakaway unions in the Change to Win Coalition, 
but those three are still in the AFL-CIO. The Carpenters' Union, which 
left the AFL-CIO in 2001, has also joined the new labor coalition.

Hoffa said the new labor group plans to hold a one-day convention in St. 
Louis on Sept. 27.

The new group will focus more on organizing and less on party politics, 
which Hoffa and Stern say was too much at the center of the AFL-CIO 
operation. The new groups say they will support politicians who back 
labor, rather than backing one party's politicians.

"We are spending our money talking to workers and not Democratic 
politicians and hoping they'll save us," Stern said. "Workers can't wait 
for a magical transformation of our country."

But Stern and Hoffa acknowledged they face a difficult task rebuilding 
labor's strength.

When the AFL-CIO formed 50 years ago, union membership was at its 
zenith, with one of every three private-sector workers belonging to a 
labor group. Now, less than 8 percent of private-sector workers are 
unionized. "Corporate America is incredibly strong, people are out to 
bury us right now," Stern said. "We're trying to climb out of a hole 
that took an awful long time to dig, but we're going to climb out."


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