Full at 
http://blog.cheapmotelsandahotplate.org/2011/09/17/hoffa-and-trumka-babble-while-the-house-of-labor-burns/
 "The Obama administration and powerful Democrats have been so consistently 
supportive of the demands of business, especially in finance, that their most 
liberal adherents have expressed disillusion. For example, some of our top 
labor leaders, whose unions spent hundreds of millions of dollars helping Obama 
and Democrats get elected, have recently criticized through deed and word their 
supposed political allies. James Hoffa, Jr., president of the International 
Brotherhood of Teamsters, the nation’s fourth largest union (with about 1.4 
million members), filed suit on September 2, 2011 against the federal 
government to block the end of a U.S. ban on Mexican trucks entering the United 
States. Much to the chagrin of labor, Obama has pushed for more "free trade" 
agreements, and the end of the truck ban is part of a deal with the Mexican 
government, which had filed and won a complaint against the United States under 
the North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA). NAFTA mandates access to U.S. 
markets by Mexican companies, including trucking firms, and when the United 
States forbade the entry of Mexican trucks on safety grounds, Mexico sued to 
force U.S. compliance with the agreement.Richard Trumka, president of the 
AFL-CIO, whose affiliated unions have more than 12,000,000 members, has 
verbally taken to task the Democrats and Obama. On August 25, 2011, Trumka 
promised that organized labor would scale back its support for the Democratic 
Party in 2012 and establish its own independent political organizations. A 
newspaper report quoted Trumka: "Let’s assume we spent $100 million in the last 
election. The day after Election Day, we were no stronger than we were the day 
before. If we had spent that on creating a structure for working people that 
would be there year round, then we are stronger." He also said about Obama, 
"He’s going to give a speech in a couple of weeks on job creation. If he’s 
talking about another percent or two break from a tax here and doing something 
with patent control, and doing three years down the road something with 
infrastructure bank, that’s not going to get the job done."  Much was made of 
Trumka’s pronouncements by the media, some suggesting that a labor-Democratic 
Party divorce and the formation of a labor party were imminent.Anyone familiar 
with the U.S. labor movement would be skeptical of these actions and 
pronouncements, understanding (to paraphrase Shakespeare) that they were full 
of sound and fury but signified nothing. And sure enough, within a few days of 
Hoffa’s lawsuit and Trumka’s tough talk, cooler heads prevailed." . . .         
                               
_______________________________________________
pen-l mailing list
[email protected]
https://lists.csuchico.edu/mailman/listinfo/pen-l

Reply via email to