http://www.latimes.com/news/opinion/la-oe-lichtenstein22-2008may22,0,4845253.story

>From the Los Angeles Times

The battle for labor's future: The SEIU's Andy Stern has an ambitious
plan. Not everyone is on board.

By Nelson Lichtenstein

May 22, 2008

When an internal fight at a trade union erupts into the news, American
culture has a ready frame. It's Marlon Brando versus Lee J. Cobb in
"On the Waterfront" once again, perhaps updated by a recent episode of
"The Wire," set among the corrupt and gritty longshoremen of the
Baltimore docks. Or it's a modern-day retelling of the Jimmy
Hoffa/Teamsters story, destined to end in another mysterious gangland
murder.

But there are no shiny suits or pinkie rings in the conflict at the
Service Employees International Union, the big, fast-growing
organization of janitors, hospital workers and public employees that
has more than 650,000 members in California alone. All the dramatis
personae are idealists who came out of the social movements of the
1960s and 1970s, and although turf battles and dues money are
certainly on the agenda, the real question they are debating is the
road forward for the American trade union movement.

Leading the cast is Andy Stern, the SEIU's national president since
1996. A Pennsylvania SEIU activist in the 1970s, Stern was put in
charge of union organizing efforts in the 1980s, just as President
Reagan and other resurgent Republicans helped stiffen corporate
management's hostility to trade unionism. The SEIU was one of the few
unions that continued to grow in those difficult times, sparked by
militant organizing campaigns such as the Justice for Janitors
movement, which had its epicenter in Los Angeles.

Stern, now 57, has been a bold, impatient leader, which has earned him
a spot on the cover of almost every mass circulation magazine,
including Business Week under the query "Can This Man Save Labor?"

Stern's ambition is to transform and revive American unionism. In
2005, he led several big unions, including the SEIU, the Teamsters and
the United Food and Commercial Workers, out of the AFL-CIO. In their
new coalition, known as Change to Win, Stern pushed each of the unions
to devote a qualitatively large proportion of their resources to
organizing, even if it meant reducing the number of staff who
"serviced" existing members. He insisted that unless unions such as
the SEIU achieved a far higher degree of "density" in specific
industries, such as healthcare, they wouldn't be strong enough to
raise wages and working conditions for everyone.

Stern also has made it clear that he sees the U.S. economy as a single
integrated system in which the status of labor is closely related to
the structure of capitalism. This has led the SEIU to take great
interest in issues that once would have been considered irrelevant to
what went on at the bargaining table, such as how to regulate private
equity firms, which now control companies that employ more than a
million workers in industries the SEIU seeks to organize. Stern has
sought to strike deals, or at least open negotiations, on a variety of
employment-related issues with politicians and businessmen, including
Wal-Mart's H. Lee Scott and Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger, who have often
been hostile to unionism.

But Stern's ambitions have not been universally applauded. For
instance, the California Nurses Assn., the union representing 80,000
registered nurses across the country, has been a highly vocal critic
of and competitor to the SEIU, denouncing what it sees as Stern's
willingness to trade away nurse staffing ratios and other labor
standards for organizing agreements with hospital chains that are
viewed as anti-union.

In recent months, the CNA and the SEIU have competed for the
allegiance of nurses not only in California but in Las Vegas hospitals
and in medical facilities throughout Ohio. The clash has been bitter,
with the SEIU charging that the nurses organization is a "union
buster" at the same time the CNA claims that SEIU organizing tactics
pave the way for management-dominated "company unionism."

Within the SEIU itself, Stern is facing a revolt by United Healthcare
Workers West, the 150,000-member California local that is led by Sal
Rosselli, a former nursing home worker who has been a union leader
since 1988, when he won an insurgent campaign to rebuild what was then
Local 250 in the Bay Area. In the years since, Rosselli has been a
pioneering militant, organizing nursing homes, hospitals and home-care
workers throughout California.

Rosselli once worked cooperatively with Stern, but tensions have
arisen in recent years over what the UHW considers an SEIU effort to
sideline local leaders in hospital and nursing home contract
negotiations. Rosselli and others at the UHW are just as sophisticated
as Stern, but they take a darker view of their business and political
adversaries.

Thus Rosselli objected to Stern's endorsement of Schwarzenegger's
proposed health insurance plan, which the UHW chief, like many other
unionists in California, considered far too friendly to insurance
company interests. The plan was never enacted.

Stern and Rosselli are playing familiar roles in our labor history.
When American corporations became giant institutions more than a
century ago, trade unions were soon forced to mirror their centralized
structure in order to bargain for better wages and benefits. But
centralizing union authority in Pittsburgh, Detroit or Washington came
at a price. United Auto Workers President Walter Reuther, for
instance, who was every bit as ambitious and imaginative as Stern,
faced a constant rumble of discontent from the big auto locals in
Flint, Fremont and Dearborn. Local unionists insisted that regardless
of the success Reuther enjoyed bargaining with Henry Ford II or
planning the Great Society with LBJ, the union's first and most
essential duty was to make sure that dignity and safety did not vanish
from their arduous, if well-compensated, life on the assembly line.

Similarly, Rosselli and his supporters (not all of whom are in the
UHW) argue that the very meaning of unionism will be bleached out of
the SEIU unless local voices are once again made potent. "I want a
movement of workers governed by workers for workers," said Rosselli,
"to be in control of their relationship with their employer, to be in
control of the political direction of their union."

But Stern and his allies within the SEIU believe that with a
Democratic Party landslide in the offing this November, unions are on
the verge of an historic breakthrough. This is not the time for what
they label "Just Us" unionism devoted to the advancement of the wages
and working conditions of those already enrolled in a labor
organization.

All this will be fought out next week at the SEIU national convention
in Puerto Rico. Rosselli and his UHW supporters will put forward
resolutions calling for more local control of contract negotiations,
organizing and finances, as well as direct, union-wide election of
national SEIU officers (rather than selection by convention action).
They are unlikely to win any votes there, but if the issues they have
raised become part of the general discussion within the labor movement
and the larger progressive community, these rebels will have shown
that union democracy and union growth are not incompatible.

Nelson Lichtenstein is a professor of history at UC Santa Barbara,
where he directs the Center for the Study of Work, Labor and
Democracy.

Copyright 2008 Los Angeles Times
-- 
Jim Devine / "Segui il tuo corso, e lascia dir le genti." (Go your own
way and let people talk.) -- Karl, paraphrasing Dante.
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