August 1, 2005

Union Chopping Block

Prospect: Will The AFL-CIO Split Bring Better Organizing?

  • AFL-CIO president John Sweeney address the labor unions represented at their annual convention at Chicago's Navy Pier.

    AFL-CIO president John Sweeney address the labor unions represented at their annual convention at Chicago's Navy Pier.  (AP)

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(The American Prospect) 

But the longer-term picture is more complex. If real resources are indeed shifted to organizing, that's a plus. There was hand-wringing in the 1930s when labor radicals founded the CIO, outside the established (and enfeebled) American Federation of Labor (AFL). It was CIO unions that organized new industries like autos and steel, where earlier efforts by craft unions had failed.

The AFL-CIO has certainly been a mainstay of grassroots progressive politics. But individual unions and union members are the foot-soldiers. And in 2004, the AFL-CIO's role was partly supplanted by independent, so-called "527" voter mobilization groups like America Coming Together (ACT), which happened to be run by the AFL-CIO's former political director.

With a rival federation, there could be new jurisdictional battles between AFL and non-AFL unions fighting to organize the same workers. The AFL has not been all that effective at preventing fierce battles between member unions, but with a rival federation, these battles could worsen, diverting precious resources from both sides.

In this period of conservative ascendancy, American progressives face agonizing reappraisals and tough choices that sometimes turn fratricidal.

When Ralph Nader ran for president, it was out of sheer frustration that progressive politics was almost totally blocked by the influence of big business on both parties. The move did not exactly prove helpful to his larger cause, but you can understand the exasperation.

Last year, two young environmentalists published a paper titled "The Death of Environmentalism," which rocked that movement. Their contention was that the coalition of mainstream, Washington-based environmental groups was spending hundreds of millions of dollars, and losing every major battle. Better to blow it up, they urged, and start over with a broader, fresher coalition.

Looking at American history, from the civil-rights movement of the 1960s to the industrial labor movement of the 1930s and the agrarian revolt of the 1880s, one can never predict where the next movement for social justice will break out. But you can safely bet it will be led the young and the radical.

It's one thing when Martin Luther King Jr. and student civil-rights workers are up against brutal, racist sheriffs; it's far more painful when it's a fight within the progressive community.

It is always risky to tamper with liberal institutions when they are under assault, as the Naderites found out. It's also better to break some china than to slowly fade into irrelevance. One can only hope for solidarity, reconciliation, and a more powerful movement once the dust settles.


Robert Kuttner is co-editor of The American Prospect. A version of this column originally appeared in the Boston Globe.

By Robert Kuttner
Reprinted with permission from The American Prospect, 5 Broad Street, Boston, MA 02109. All rights reserved.
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