King’s Fight for Unions Is Still Essential

In light of the clash of wills in Wisconsin, we should remember the
teachings of Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. One of King’s slogans that we
rarely hear is this one: “all labor has dignity.”

King spoke these words in Memphis on March 18, 1968, in the midst of a
strike of 1,200 black sanitation workers that had lasted over a month.
After rousing them to a fever pitch, King called for a general strike by
all workers to shut the city down on behalf of the sanitation workers.

What was the demand of these workers? Improved wages and benefits, yes,
but their key demand was that the City of Memphis grant collective
bargaining rights and the collection of union dues, without which they
knew they could not maintain their union.

These are the very two items that Wisconsin’s Gov. Scott Walker wants to
take away from public employees. He knows, as did Mayor Henry Loeb in
Memphis, that if you can kill union bargaining rights and dues
collection, you can kill the union.

Also like Loeb, Walker is a fiscal conservative. As he cuts taxes for
business he raises costs for workers and says ending union power will
benefit the fiscal health of the state. Walker wants to end the right of
public employees to bargain collectively, even though the workers have
accepted a tripling of their health-care costs and a wage cut to help
offset the state’s fiscal crisis.

In nearby Ohio, Gov. John Kasich wants to take away the right to join a
union for 14,000 state-financed child-care and home-care workers, among
the most overworked and underpaid of public servants. In other states,
Republicans want to adopt “right to work” (for less) laws that would
take away the requirement that workers in unionized jobs pay union dues.
This would undermine the unions while, in King’s words, providing “no
rights and no work.”

Even in Midwest states that have been union strongholds, Republicans now
have public-employee unions in their cross-hairs. This is the latest and
potentially most deadly phase of government assault on unions. Ever
since the Reagan counterrevolution, government policies joined with
private sector profiteers have vastly worsened racial-economic
inequalities, created a gambling casino on Wall Street and paved the way
for the current economic crisis.

Conservatives rationalize their attacks on unions by saying unionized
public workers are unfairly privileged. But they only look privileged by
comparison to the rest of the working class, which is suffering economic
catastrophe and has almost entirely lost the benefits of unionization.
Yet class envy is an easy means to divide and rule.

Racism is another part of the Republican arsenal of divide and rule.
Thanks to the destruction of manufacturing jobs and unions, black and
Latino workers in manual occupations have disproportionately suffered
high rates of poverty and incarceration as many of their families
disintegrate. The one toe-hold many black and minority workers (and
especially women among them) still have in the economy is in unionized
public employment. Now, the Republicans want to take that away.

In one stroke, by eliminating both bargaining rights and union dues,
Republicans can insure that organized, dues-paying workers and
particularly minorities and women will no longer provide a potent base
for the Democratic Party. There will be few grassroots organizations
left to counter the huge infusion of money into politics by the rich.

Workers in Wisconsin have agreed to make sacrifices to get state
government out of its budgetary hole. But it would be a huge mistake for
anyone to go beyond that and buy into attacks on public employee unions.
Loss of unions will further decimate the spending power of working
people, thereby intensifying the economic crisis while further removing
the voice of workers from politics. That’s a downward spiral.

Republicans most especially wants to undermine the American Federation
of State, County, and Municipal Employees (AFSCME). Founded in
Wisconsin, AFSCME flowered after King died in the fight for union rights
in Memphis in 1968. AFSCME became one of the largest unions in the
country, with King regarded as an honorary member and practically a
founder of the union.

In King’s framework, killing public employees unions today would be
immoral as well as foolish. He said the three evils facing humankind are
war, racism and economic injustice, and that the purpose of a union is
to overcome the latter evil. King said the civil-rights movement from
1954 to 1965 was “phase one,” to be followed by a second phase—the
struggle for economic advancement. We are not doing very well in phase
two, and unions remain essential to carry it out.

I’ve recently finished a new collection of King’s remarkable speeches,
titled “All Labor Has Dignity,” which shows that throughout his life,
King stood up for union rights. There is no more important time than the
present for us all to follow his lead.

Michael Honey is a historian and Haley Professor of Humanities at the
University of Washington, Tacoma. He is editor of “All Labor Has
Dignity” (Beacon Press, 2011) and author of “Going Down Jericho Road:
The Memphis Strike: Martin Luther King’s Last Campaign” (W.W. Norton,
2007).

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http://colorlines.com/archives/2011/02/its_1968_all_over_again_and_kings_fight_for_unions_is_still_essential.html
Via InstaFetch

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