From: Martin Hittelman [mailto:[email protected]] 
Sent: Monday, November 12, 2012 3:51 PM

Subject: AFTER THE NOVEMBER 6 ELECTION: CRITICAL CHALLENGES FACING THE LABOR
MOVEMENT!

After the November 6 Election: Critical Challenges Facing the Labor Movement



The November 6 election was a devastating defeat for the far right, but was
it a victory for the working class? Clearly, the Republican Party leadership
is the avowed enemy of labor. Romney attacked unions throughout his
campaign. He opposed every public program designed to promote the health and
welfare of the American people. He advocated privatizing Social Security and
voucherizing Medicare. He urged turning Medicaid entirely over to the
states. He supported union-busting Scott Walker in his bid to remain
governor of Wisconsin and he hailed enactment of a "right-to-work" law in
Indiana. He blasted the teachers' union in Chicago and elsewhere. He called
for trillions in tax breaks for the millionaires and billionaires, while
cutting workers' benefits to fund it. He endorsed government's dictating to
women on questions involving their reproductive rights. He denounced
undocumented workers and called for their "self-deportation." He argued for
additional billions for the military and a more belligerent foreign policy,
escalating the threats against Iran. And the positions he espoused were all
part of the far right's creed. 


But is the Democratic Party the answer to Romney and the far right? Labor
has been in the forefront of the fight to preserve Social Security,
Medicare, Medicaid and other social programs. Yet President Obama has
already made clear his desire to join with Republicans in cutting these
programs, declaring in an October 24, 2012 AP interview that he is "prepared
to make a whole range of compromises," even though this will rankle his own
party. Harry Reid and Nancy Pelosi are already on board. The AFL-CIO has
issued a strong and uncompromising statement opposing cuts to Social
Security and Medicare so the scene is set for a major confrontation with the
Obama administration and its Congressional supporters on this issue. None of
this should come as a surprise. Political parties represent classes and both
the Democrats and Republicans are corporate parties. The Democrats get 72%
of their funding from big business -- the Republicans get an even higher
percent -- and who pays the piper calls the tune. 


What the Past Four Years Have Wrought 
For the past four years (and well before then), the labor movement has been
under savage assault on every conceivable front. At a time of economic
crisis -- and with severe austerity measures directed against the working
class and the poor being unleashed -- it is no exaggeration to say that
labor is fighting for its very survival. We see this on the collective
bargaining front, where major employers like Caterpillar and Verizon
demanded and received significant concessions from their unions, despite the
companies making record profits. We see it in Wisconsin's and other states'
assault on public employees' bargaining rights, and Indiana's vote adopting
"right-to-work" legislation. We see it in the escalating bipartisan campaign
to undermine and cut Social Security and Medicare, along with measures to
destroy retirement security. We see it with the foreclosure of millions of
homeowners and the imminent foreclosure of millions more. We see it with
enactment of a deeply flawed health-care program, which, despite containing
some positive features, will drive up costs and fail to guarantee quality
health care coverage for all. We see it with the record number of
deportations. We see it with the declining standard of living for the
working class while corporate profits and stock prices have soared. We see
it with the "Free Trade" agreements with Colombia, South Vietnam and Panama
- vehemently opposed by labor - that Bush couldn't get approved but Obama
pushed through with bipartisan support. 


Meanwhile, labor's priority issues have been ignored. These include a jobs
program that would put tens of millions of workers back to work; Medicare
for all; reform of the labor laws and restoration of the right to strike;
the Employee Free Choice Act; repeal of repressive anti-labor legislation;
and retirement security - not robbing Social Security while cutting into
federal workers' pension funds to pay for payroll tax cuts. One of the
greatest scandals of the 2012 presidential campaign was the refusal of the
Obama administration to press measures to bring relief to the tens of
millions of impoverished Americans, whose numbers grow rapidly by the day.
On foreign policy, Obama promoted the corporate, anti-worker agenda: an
expansionist policy designed to find new areas of the world to exploit,
indiscriminate use of drones, continued occupation of Afghanistan for more
than two years, threats and preparations for war against Iran while
tightening sanctions, support for right-wing and repressive governments
around the world that repress unions and protect U.S. corporate interests
(e.g., Colombia, Bahrain), and maintaining the astronomical Pentagon budget.
Considering all of the above, can it really be claimed that winning four
more years for this administration was a victory for the working class? 


What Lies Ahead? 
Labor's subservience to the Democratic Party has cost the working class
heavily, so we in the Emergency Labor Network welcome AFL-CIO President
Richard Trumka's call for a break with that state of affairs and for
building an independent labor movement. For us, this includes giving
consideration to establishing a new political party - a workers' party led
by the organized labor movement and its community partners, with a program
that truly reflects the needs and interests of the great majority.
Regardless of which of the corporate parties controls the government and
dominates its branches, the November 6 election solved none of the big
issues confronting the American people. The hunger and homelessness; the
home foreclosures; the corporate foreign policy; the assaults on the
environment; the attacks on labor and on Social Security and Medicare, the
need to expand Medicaid in all states; and the Bush tax cuts. All of these
issues and more will still be with us after November 6. As for the AFL-CIO
and its taking a strong stand against cuts to Social Security or Medicare,
this is all to the good. But it is just the starting point and it will not
mean much in the absence of an all-out campaign that goes beyond traditional
lobbying. 


It is high time that in accordance with our best traditions, labor mounts
street demonstrations of the most massive kind, akin to Solidarity Day I and
II actions in the nation's capital. Imagine the potential in reaching out to
the more than one hundred million people on Social Security, Medicare and
Medicaid to join in such an outpouring, along with labor's community allies.
We have demands to raise: Hands Off Our Cherished Safety Net Programs!
Expand Medicaid Coverage in Every State! Put America Back to Work by
Rebuilding Our Crumbling Infrastructure and Implementing a 21st Century WPA
Program! Money for Jobs, Health Care, Housing and Education -- Not for Wars
and Occupations! Bring All the Troops Home From Afghanistan Now! No War on
Iran! Amnesty for all Undocumented Immigrants! For a Safe, Clean and Healthy
Environment! Freedom and Justice for All! We must not let Obama's victory on
November 6th delude us into thinking our fight is over. Indeed, with both
the president and the Congress - in varying degree only - determined to
follow Corporate America's lead in imposing severe austerity measures on our
already severely wounded working class, we dare not let down our guard; dare
not fight for anything less than real political change:and fight for it even
harder than before November 6. No less than the very lives and fortunes of
working people, the unemployed and underemployed, and of all rank-and-file
Americans are at stake. And only a united movement of the working class,
joined by hundreds of thousands of its community supporters, can win the
tough battles that lie ahead. But such a movement can win them! So let us
waste no time in organizing it! Issued by the Emergency Labor Network
(ELN)For more information write [email protected] P.O. Box 21004,
Cleveland, OH 44121 or call  <tel:216-736-4715> 216-736-4715
begin_of_the_skype_highlighting 216-736-4715 end_of_the_skype_highlighting
or visit our website at www.laborfightback.org
<http://www.laborfightback.org/> . Donations gratefully accepted. Please
make checks payable to the ELN and mail to the above P.O. Box. 
  _____  

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