With outgoing SEIU president Andy Stern having forever changed America through the nationalization of health care, AFL-CIO president Richard Trumka is picking up where Andy is leaving off
As President Obama goes out on the road to use his bully-pulpit to push financial reform, the AFL-CIO staged a major march on Wall Street yesterday. However, as with nearly every union grassroots astroturf effort, there is always a hidden agenda.
A couple of weeks ago, we laid out the broad union agenda for the United States. Beyond the nationalization of health care and mass unionization, another of the “visions” that unions have for America is what is referred to as European-style Participative Management. What is the union vision of participative management? Here is the simple definition:
Style of management that lays stress on the importance of good human relations and of workers’participation in management decision making, though such participation can vary in practice from being a hoped for safety valve for employee discontent to involving genuine consultation and even decision making. Source: European Union.
More specifically with regard to unions, it is the installation of union bosses (or their representatives) to serve on corporate boards of directors (of publicly held companies, for now) so that the “workers’ voice” is heard. Another way to look at it is participative management is a way for unions to determine how a company operates.
Yesterday, between 10,000 and 15,000 union astroturfers showed up en masse in lower Manhattan to allegedly protest Wall Street “greed.”
As the Gothamist points out:
[M]any Wall Street workers didn’t appreciate being generalized as greedy fat cats. Empire Wealth Management Group executive VP Jeremiah Giddings told the Post, “There’s a lot of honest firms on Wall Street that are trying to do right by our clients. Protesters can’t give all of Wall Street a black eye for a few firms.”
The Post’s Andrea Peyser also called the anger “misguided,” saying the protesters were using Wall Street as a common scapegoat for their myriad problems. And Mayor Bloomberg has already called for Senate support of Wall Street, though that didn’t go so well. Still, the protest went on, starting at City Hall and marching down to the “charging bull” in Bowling Green. “We’re tired. They’ve gotten richer, but we’re still poor,” marcher Loretta Manning told the Daily News. “We’re getting poorer. It’s not fair.” People also made some pretty interesting signs, from a papier-mâché CEO pig to the simple slogan “GREED KILLS.” And of course, the Raging Grannies made an appearance.
The protesters’ anger is not “misguided,” as the Post’s Peyser assumes. It is intentional, and it is sinister.
The push for “fiancial reform” isn’t to “reform” Wall Street, it is a push to remake America’s quasi-free market system into that of a European model.
Yesterday’s assemblage of the pitchforks and torches was a purposeful march to push a bill that will put unions onto the boards of corporations, as Warner Todd Hudson notes on his Union Label blog:
Senator Chris Dodd (D, Conn.) wants to give unions more power in the boardrooms of our nation’s businesses. In essence, Dodd wants to force corporate boards under the thumb of unions by federal fiat.
Carefully hidden in Dodd’s new regulations are provisions that give new powers to board members, powers aimed at giving unions more say in the operations of businesses from the inside through investments of pension funds.
The Dodd bill takes away from the states the ability to make rules governing how corporate boards are established and run and for the first time reassigns that power to the federal government through the SEC. Democrats expect to use this new power to affect corporate boards to force pension fund investors to obtain more seats on those boards and that means union pension funds will suddenly have more influence on business simply because of their influence in Washington.
[snip]
This is just one more small step in the elimination of America’s private business community and the implementation of a quasi-socialist business state. One more anti-American arrow in Obama’s quiver shot over the bow of America.
While unions are framing the debate as an issue between “Wall Street vs. Main Street,” the reality is, this is a push to expand union influence into the boardrooms of corporations. As unions, through the auto bailouts, have already injected their representatives onto the boards of both Government General Motors and Chrysler, why stop there?
Perhaps, instead of calling it “Wall Street reform,” a more apropos term would be: A Union Takeover of Wall Street.
photo credit: The Gothamist
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“I bring reason to your ears, and, in language as plain as ABC, hold up truth to your eyes.” Thomas Paine, December 23, 1776
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Jeff Emanuel
Great report. As more of the Christmas Tree ornaments
redneck_hippie (Diary) Friday, April 30th at 5:08PM EDT (link)come to light, we will find out how much testicular virility there is in congress to fight it.
The GOP needs to pick this up and run with it... nt.
LaborUnionReport (Diary) Friday, April 30th at 8:19PM EDT (link)“I bring reason to your ears, and, in language as plain as ABC, hold up truth to your eyes.” Thomas Paine December 23, 1776
In any compromise between food and poison, it is only death that can win. In any compromise between good and evil, it is only evil that can profit.-Ayn Rand
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News & Views on Today’s Labor Unions.
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Aren't the Corporations withholding pension funds
hickorystick (Diary) Saturday, May 1st at 11:02AM EDT (link)to invest in their own business/make up for their failure. GM was famous for this. I’m more concerned to get Federal government out of business board rooms. These board rooms are dirty. They are milking the corp for bonuses, at the companies long term detriment.
Dem state governors are showing the same ethics with the public pensions. I would suggest Repubs take bring on Unions as a partner in protecting pension funds. Contrast UPF’s with borrowing from the Chinese to fund national debt.
Doing to business what the unions have already done to government.
barrypopik (Diary) Saturday, May 1st at 12:31PM EDT (link)The unions are doing to private business what they’ve already done to government. The SEIU and other unions bragged that they elected Barack Obama with their millions. To them, it was worth every penny.
The unions have long owned New York (city and state), driving both into bankruptcy.
A law destroying private industry–just what American needs now.
It is union power to influence management that makes
Achance (Diary) Saturday, May 1st at 1:09PM EDT (link)unionized public and third sector operations so corrupt and inefficient. In the public sector, if an executive or a legislative body doesn’t do what the union wants, the union tries and often succeeds in replacing them. Even Republican governments that were elected over union opposition have to be cognizant of union power to disrupt operations and raise political opposition.
In the third sector the company needs the union’s political power to get government funding, permitting, or government contracts. That’s why the only real union presence in the private sector is this “third sector” of nominally private companies that do business with the government or are heavily regulated or government funded.
In Vino Veritas
The scary thing about Trumka..
Vassar Bushmills (Diary) Saturday, May 1st at 5:15PM EDT (link)…is that he is too stupid to be a Communist. He’s a girlie-man. In the prisons they have special names for men who become the sex-objects of Alpha males. Someone had dirty pictures of him with a pig (probably male) or he is otherwise being blackmailed.
The lesson learned here is that he is a lap dog for a variety of puppeteers, just as a mutt is named for several fathers.
ROFLMAO at this: "He’s a girlie-man" Good one Vassar! nt.
LaborUnionReport (Diary) Saturday, May 1st at 10:10PM EDT (link)“I bring reason to your ears, and, in language as plain as ABC, hold up truth to your eyes.” Thomas Paine December 23, 1776
In any compromise between food and poison, it is only death that can win. In any compromise between good and evil, it is only evil that can profit.-Ayn Rand
LaborUnionReport.com
The Most Comprehensive Source for
News & Views on Today’s Labor Unions.
Follow @laborunionrpt