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Today the Las Vegas Sun looks behind conservatives' curtains and exposes the
true
intent of corporate-funded attacks on worker organizing drives. Corporate-backed adman Richard Berman is known for attacking
Mothers
Against Drunk Driving and for claiming that second-hand smoke does not
cause cancer, but his latest targets are teachers' unions. Though he
purports to fight for workers through his
Center for Union Facts front group, Rick Berman betrayed his true intent:
What's not in doubt is that when Berman goes after the teachers, it will be brutal.
At the Sparks conference, he approvingly quoted mobster Al Capone:
"You can get further with a kind word and a gun than you can with just
a kind word."
Political and labor observers are watching closely because as Berman
acknowledged in his Sparks speech, his attack on teachers unions is
really a small front in a much bigger battle over the future of the
labor movement and its role in American politics. It's not clear Berman
cares at all about education policy. His real target is the broader
labor movement.
What's obvious is that Berman fronts for anti-union forces who are
afraid of workers, but it's not clear who's funding the
multi-million dollar campaign:
Berman refuses to say who's backing the anti-teachers union
campaign; he never discloses his financial backers, allowing large,
mainstream companies to fund him without having to associate their
brand names with his sharp-elbowed approach.
Lawsuits and a whistleblower, however, have revealed some of his
past backers: Philip Morris, and then Tyson Foods, Coca-Cola, White
Castle and Outback Steakhouse, once he began attacking foes of obesity.
After getting money from corporations, Berman's nonprofit groups pay
millions of dollars in fees to Berman & Co., an influential
Washington lobbying firm also headed by Berman.
Berman's recent attacks show that his anti-union corporate funders are terrified about the prospect of more workers standing up for themselves.
Berman's campaign is nothing new, said Nelson Lichtenstein, a labor
historian at the University of California, Santa Barbara. Labor has
been the subject of coordinated attacks consistently during the past
century, notably in the 1930s, when large corporations such as DuPont
and General Motors formed the "Liberty League" to challenge the newly
minted Wagner Act, which gave workers the right to organize and bargain
collectively.
From 1933 to 1938, union membership doubled, and it almost doubled again by 1947.
Lichtenstein, who also directs the university's Center for the Study
of Work, Labor and Democracy, said anti-unionism usually comes at times
when labor asserts itself or enters new territory. Now, he said, is
such a time.
Despite the fact that union density is at an all-time low (12
percent), labor experts predict reforms such as the Employee Free
Choice Act could lead to explosive growth. "It's always darkest before
the dawn," he said. He called Berman "extraordinarily clever" and
"disgusting."
Disgusting indeed. This isn't all - the article gives an unprecedented look behind the scenes of an anti-union attack; you can read the whole article here .
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