https://www.thenation.com/article/economy/labor-bargaining-mcalevey-berkeley/

How Labor Can Win at the Bargaining Table
A new report from Berkeley is a rare piece of good news for American labor—and 
a bracing reminder of what real organizing looks like.

By Sam Gindin

Bessemer, Ala. (Elijah Nouvelage / Getty Images)
The state of the American labor movement has, since the mid-1970s, been 
dispiriting. There have, of course, been moments of creative and inspiring 
resistance, but the predominant story has been a chronicle of decline: 
private-sector unionization rates below where they were a century ago, the 
abject failure to make breakthroughs in key emerging sectors, defensive 
stagnation in bargaining achievements, and—election-year rhetoric aside—the 
political marginalization of working-class concerns.

The revival of the working class as a social force is the definitive economic 
and political challenge now confronting the American left. Whether the 
post-pandemic moment will be a turning point with unions poised for a new 
militancy, and whether the recent delegitimation of state and political 
institutions might lead to a sustained revival of progressive class politics, 
are open questions. It “depends.” And what it depends on will have a lot to do 
with what happens in organizing at the workplace level.

Which is why Turning the Tables: Participation and Power in Negotiations, by 
Jane McAlevey and Abby Lawlor, is a rare piece of good news. Published by the 
UC Berkeley Labor Center, it builds on McAlevey’s earlier works, adding new 
case studies on the detailed process of collective bargaining (often foreign 
territory to many workers and labor academics), incorporates participant 
interviews, and focuses laser-like on the challenge of exactly how to raise 
worker expectations and actually win.

Written as a “report” on new bargaining experiences in the health, education, 
and hospitality sectors and among journalists, Turning the Tables is 
essentially a comprehensive handbook for workplace organizing. The specifics of 
the method are presented in admirably clear prose, while the rich case studies 
illustrate and validate the underlying organizing method. The interviews 
underline the exhilarating emergence, through the bargaining process and 
strikes, of workers’ strategic skills and confidence.

Most of all, the case studies highlight the difference between going through 
the motions versus actually organizing. In too many unions preparing for 
bargaining, surveys on workers’ preferences are generally pro forma, generating 
minor interest; in the case studies here, surveys repeatedly become a tool for 
generating intense collective discussions. In their communications strategies, 
unions have been catching up on the use of social media; here the emphasis is 
on labor-intensive direct contact. As a psychiatric nurse asserts: “Facebook is 
helpful. Email is helpful, Texting is helpful. But there’s still nothing that 
beats that one-to-one communication.”

Similarly, opening the actual bargaining sessions to members is about more than 
being “inclusive” (important as that is). The experience also tends to sharpen 
the separation from management, build trust in the union, and create a sense of 
the larger collective. A teacher notes that with open bargaining “everybody 
gets to hear what is happening in other people’s worlds.” Another adds that 
having far more members engaged in day-day bargaining “knits you together as a 
community.” In the small rural town of Greenfield, the Massachusetts Nurses 
Association even opened up its bargaining to include members of the community.

Yet, while McAlevey has inspired a remarkable domestic and international 
following, she also has her critics. One wing of that criticism surfaced after 
McAlevey’s recent argument that the drive to organize Amazon’s warehouse in 
Bessemer, Ala., did not incorporate “best practice.”

Some, though acknowledging that McAlevey’s specific criticisms had validity, 
charged that expressing them publicly in the aftermath of a painful defeat was 
a betrayal of solidarity and amplified worker demoralization. Others went 
further and questioned the very notion of “best practice.” Every organizing 
drive and bargaining campaign, they argued, is context-contingent and varies 
with the main concerns of workers, the sector involved, the nature of the 
workplace, the balance of power between workers and employers, and so on.

The reproach for speaking out does the labor movement no favors. It comes 
disturbingly close to echoing familiar appeals for “unity” and “solidarity” 
from union leaders more interested in silencing their opposition than in 
risking what it might take to win. Restricting controversies to private circles 
rather than dealing with them in the open is both patronizing to workers and 
counterproductive. The Bessemer defeat was the right time to raise hard 
questions, because it was a moment when the movement was paying attention.

Arguing that McAlevey’s particular approach falls short is one thing. It is, 
however, quite another thing to cavalierly dismiss the very attempt to develop 
a best practice in building worker power. McAlevey’s work, culminating in 
Turning the Tables, makes a convincing case that such a core of strategic 
principles—a method—is indispensable.

McAlevey’s method is based firmly on workers’ self-determined needs; 
appreciating that “class” is experienced both inside and outside the workplace; 
focusing on informal leaders as catalysts to the broadest membership 
participation; applying structure tests to assist workers in collectively 
assessing the depth of their strength; and increasing  the degree of direct 
worker participation in bargaining (“Big Bargaining”).

A longer-standing and more substantive critique of McAlevey’s approach is that 
it is “staff driven”—controlled not by the workers themselves but by outsiders. 
This notion that workers are spontaneously radical but limited in expressing 
this by staff and bureaucratic leaders standing in their way is blindingly 
naive. Are we truly to believe that workers can one day take on capitalism and 
transform the world but are incapable of taking on their own elected leaders? 
It should be clear to anyone who has interacted with working people that they 
have no “inherent” nature; workers can be radical or conservative. Capitalism 
has, through the logic of its structures, created a working class whose daily 
experiences push it to a dependence on employers, drive it—out of necessity—to 
short-termism and pragmatism, divide and fragment it multidimensionally, and 
often leave it too exhausted to be actively engaged.

The challenge—the active organizing challenge—is to build on the contradictions 
within capitalism to support the remaking of the working class: to develop the 
individual and collective potentials of workers into a coherent, confident, and 
creative social force capable of leading a struggle against not only their 
employer but eventually capitalism itself. Such organizing cannot be achieved 
without “leadership”; the question is what kind of leadership, with what 
relationship to the workers affected? Above all, does the overall strategy 
adopted in the workplace contribute to developing the individual and collective 
strength of workers in a way that is self-sustaining after the organizers 
leave? (The absence of such lasting power is the basis for McAlevey’s critique 
of Saul Alinsky).

The defining principle of the method that McAlevey learned and adapted through 
her time at New England Local 1199 (itself modeled on the CIO organizing of the 
1930s) begins and ends precisely with the basic democratic principle of 
broadening and deepening the participation of the workers involved. It starts 
with the commonsense understanding that workers develop unevenly, and this is 
where the informal workplace leaders, as opposed to those appointed or selected 
via a caucus, come in. They may or may not originally be pro-union—but they are 
central because they are defined by the trust fellow workers have in them. The 
crucial role of the organizer is to find such leaders and win them over. It is 
these informal workplace leaders—and not outside organizers—that are to become 
the key catalyst to reaching and activating the rest of the workforce. And the 
ultimate goal is that a significant majority of workers become organizers in 
their own right.

Actual “staff driven” unions—code for bureaucratic, top-down unions—will not 
touch McAlevey with a 20-foot pole. Such union leaders fully understand that 
the threat implied by McAlevey’s approach to organizing is precisely that it 
may make their lives less comfortable by raising expectations, encouraging far 
greater direct worker participation in bargaining, developing confident and 
active members, and opening the door to new leaders who might challenge those 
currently in place.

McAlevey’s method may not meet some “revolutionary” test, but its proven 
successes, ratified in practice by workers and further corroborated in Turning 
Points, underscores the crucial truth that workers can achieve valuable, if 
partial, victories even within capitalism. There are, indeed, limits to her 
method. It cannot for example be applied—at least not without significant 
modifications—where union leaders are hostile; the strategies for replacing 
such leaders does not fully parallel those for fighting the boss. Overcoming 
competitive relationships across unions also demands further changes.

The realities of a capitalist economy remain challenges not only for McAlevey 
but for all union activists—and the left as a whole. Organizing at the union 
level cannot be directly translated into organizing politically for a more 
egalitarian, democratic, environmentally sustainable society; political 
organizing is a distinct sphere of activity. Nevertheless, even there, the 
invaluable tool kit McAlevey has provided can advance the task of developing a 
working class with the vision, capacities, and self-confidence to go further.

Two specific elements of her method are especially critical. The first may seem 
obvious: organizing rooted in the workplace. But the extent to which the 
postwar history of trade unionism has involved retreating from or trading off 
workplace rights and power for centralized and technical collective bargaining 
cannot be stressed enough. In this regard, bureaucratization has indeed been a 
barrier to working-class achievements. Equally problematic are calls for 
“social unionism”—investing in recruiting new workers to the union without 
appreciating the centrality of first educating, developing, and maintaining the 
existing workplace base. Without that base, progressive intentions will be 
internally undermined.

A second crucial contribution is McAlevey’s emphasis on wall-to-wall 
“industrial” bargaining—bringing all workers in a workplace together regardless 
of differentials in status. Along with opening the door to regional or sectoral 
organizing and bargaining, this promotes the practical importance of the class 
sensibility that is fundamental as well to a larger politics. And that impetus 
to a class perspective is further reinforced by mapping what/who you are up 
against, who is potentially on your side, and in erasing the often “artificial 
distinctions between ‘workers’ and ‘community.’”

Workers may share class indignities, but, siloed in their individual unions and 
struggles, they are not a class in any coherent ideological or applied sense. 
And their formation into a class cannot be assumed or wished for—nor can it be 
conjured up by uncritically celebrating failed efforts. It can only happen 
through struggles, experimentation, evaluating lessons learned, and the 
emergence of institutions to facilitate this process. McAlevey’s great 
contribution has been her determination to enter into this process with eyes 
wide open, a faith in the individual and collective potentials of working 
people, and an indefatigable drive to systematize experience and lessons.

[Sam Gindin was research director of the Canadian Auto Workers union from 
1974–2000. He is co-author (with Leo Panitch) of The Making of Global 
Capitalism, and co-author with Leo Panitch and Steve Maher of The Socialist 
Challenge Today.]


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