The
Fall of the House of Labor
by
Patrick
J. Buchanan
Recently
by Patrick J. Buchanan: The
Winter of Conservative Discontent
In 1958, Senate
Minority Leader William Knowland, his eye on the 1960 GOP nomination
coveted by fellow Californian Richard Nixon, went home and declared
for governor.
Knowland's
plan: Ride to victory on the back of Proposition 18, the initiative
to make right-to-work the law in the Golden Land. Prop. 18 was rejected
2 to 1. Knowland's career was over, and the Republicans were decimated
nationally for backing right-to-work.
Badly burned,
the party for years ran away from the issue.
This history
makes what happened in Michigan, cradle of the United Auto Workers,
astonishing. A GOP legislature passed and Gov. Rick Snyder signed
a right-to-work law as libertarian as any in Red State America.
The closed
shop, where a worker must belong to the union before being hired,
is dead. The union shop, where an individual must join the union
once hired, is dead. The agency shop, where a worker cannot be made
to join a union but can be required to pay dues if the union is
the agent negotiating the contract for all workers, is dead.
Michigan just
legislated the open shop.
And behind
the blue-collar bellicosity in Lansing is this new reality. Non-union
workers can now "free ride" on union contracts. This is close to
a non-survivable wound for labor.
Workers who
do not belong to unions will cease paying dues, and union members
will begin quietly to quit and pocket their dues money.
Why pay dues
if you don't have to? Why contribute a dime to a union PAC if you
don't have to, or don't like labor's candidates?
Michigan workers
are not going to suffer. They have simply been given the freedom
to join or not join a union, to pay or not pay dues. And while wages
in right-to-work states such as Virginia, Tennessee, Texas and Florida
are slightly below those of other states, employment in right-to-work
states is higher.
For these are
the states where domestic and foreign investors look to site new
plants. The BMW assembly plant is in Greenville-Spartanburg, S.C.,
the Mercedes plant in Tuscaloosa, Ala., the Volkswagen and Nissan
plants in Tennessee. As Gov. Rick Perry boasts, Texas has been the
biggest job creator in the Obama recession.
But union power
is going to be circumscribed as non-union workers elect to free-ride
and union members start resigning. And just as Michigan saw Indiana
creating jobs after passing right-to-work, other states may observe
Michigan and go forth and do likewise.
There are now
24 right-to-work states. But while these laws arrested the rise
of the house of labor, there was an inevitability to its fall. Who
are the collective killers? Like the murder on the Orient Express,
just about everyone on the train.
First came
automation. A third of U.S. workers were unionized in the 1950s.
But with new technologies, we discovered we did not need so many
men to dig coal, make steel or print newspapers. We did not need
firemen riding in the cabs of diesel locomotives.
A second blow
came with the postwar rise of Germany and Japan. Their plants and
equipment were all newer than ours. Their wages were far lower,
as they did not carry the burden of defending the Free World. Under
our defense umbrella, they began to invade and capture our markets.
And Uncle Sam
let them do it.
A third blow
to Big Labor, concentrated in the Frost Belt, came from the Sun
Belt. With air conditioning making summers tolerable, the South
offered less expensive and more reliable labor than a North where
union demands were constant and strikes common.
But the mortal
blow to American unions came from globalization.
With the collapse
of communism in Eastern Europe, the Soviet Union and China propelling
hundreds of millions of new workers into the global hiring hall,
U.S. multinationals saw historic opportunity.
If they could
move factories out of the U.S.A., they would be free of union demands,
wage-and-hour laws, occupational health and safety laws, environmental
laws and civil rights law. By outsourcing, they could produce for
a fraction of the cost of doing so in the U.S.A.
And if they
could get the U.S. political class, in return for corporate generosity
at election time, to let them bring their foreign-made goods back
to the U.S.A., tax and tariff free, profits would explode, and salaries
and bonuses with them.
The
corporate establishment and political establishment shook hands,
the deed was done, and the fate of U.S. industrial unions sealed.
So came NAFTA, GATT, the World Trade Organization, MFN for China,
free trade with all.
And with globalization
came trade deficits unlike any the world had ever seen, a loss of
one-third of U.S. manufacturing jobs in the last decade, a U.S.
dependence on foreign-made goods almost as great as in colonial
days, the enrichment of our corporate and financial elites beyond
the dreams of avarice, and the decline and fall of the house of
labor.
Unions are
dying because, in America, economic patriotism is dead.
December
14, 2012
Patrick
J. Buchanan [send
him mail] is co-founder and editor of The
American Conservative. He is also the author of seven books,
including Where
the Right Went Wrong, and Churchill,
Hitler, and the Unnecessary War. His latest book is Suicide
of a Superpower: Will America Survive to 2025? See his
website.
Copyright
© 2012 Creators Syndicate
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