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Barack Obama's support for strikers and auto workers can be a springboard for FDR-type reforms

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bigtree Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Tue Dec-09-08 07:02 AM
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Barack Obama's support for strikers and auto workers can be a springboard for FDR-type reforms
Edited on Tue Dec-09-08 07:04 AM by bigtree
from Peter Dreier, HuffPo: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/peter-dreier/chicago-factory-sit-in-a_b_149510.html


December 9, 2008

Chicago Factory Sit-In: A Symbol of What's Wrong and What's Needed

{snip}

IT'S worth recalling that FDR did not campaign for president in 1932 - three years into the Great Depression - as a proponent of government activism or with a clear plan for economic recovery. But in the five months between his election victory and his March 1933 inauguration, Depression conditions had worsened, and grassroots worker and community protests escalated throughout the country. As soon as he took office, Roosevelt became more vocal, using his bully pulpit--in speeches and radio addresses--to promote New Deal ideas, pushing banking reform, public works, relief for struggling farmers, and help for homeowners within the first few months of his administration. In June 1933 he signed the National Industrial Recovery Act (NIRA), which for the first time recognized workers' right to collective bargaining.

Immediately, union activists gave speeches and posted signs -- on posters and billboards, and in store windows - proclaiming, "The President wants you to join the union." Workers responded, and union membership began to climb. When the Supreme Court ruled in May 1935 that NIRA was unconstitutional, FDR and Congress immediately enacted the National Labor Relations Act, often called the Wagner Act, to preserve workers' right to organize. Workers became even bolder in order to protect their jobs and defend their rights. Department store clerks, coal miners, steelworkers, auto workers, and others engaged in various forms of protest, including the first wave of "sit-down" strikes demanding recognition of their unions. The combination of government intervention and union activism laid the foundation for the post-World War 2 prosperity that lifted the majority of Americans into the middle class.

That social contract has now been shredded, spurred by two decades of government deregulation of business, widening inequality, increasing job insecurity, and the unraveling of the social safety net, including health insurance. These trends have been compounded during the Bush years -- corrupt crony capitalism, the mortgage meltdown, escalating foreclosures, and large-scale lay-offs.

The bold factory take-over by the Republic workers in Chicago may be a fluke, or it just could be the opening salvo of a new wave of "bottom up" activism. Clearly their protest has struck a nerve with the American people, including many families who don't share their plight but can empathize with their predicament. It would be uplifting and useful to see vigils and rallies in cities around the country on behalf of another New Deal - a pump-priming 21st century infrastructure plan, a "green jobs" investment program, a universal health insurance proposal, a long-overdue reform of labor laws, a strategy to help Americans afford housing, and a significant federal investment in public schools and college financial aid.

Like FDR, Obama can use his bully pulpit to encourage Americans to organize and raise their voices - as he did Sunday in support of the workers at Republic Windows and Doors, a month before he officially takes office. But if Americans want the country to change direction, as the election results indicated, they'll have to follow Obama's advice, and the Republic workers' example: change happens from the bottom up.


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