Union busting

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Pinkerton guards escort strikebreakers in Buchtel, Ohio, 1884

Union busting is a pejorative term used by media, labor organizations, and others worldwide to describe a wide range of activities undertaken by employers, their proxies, and governments, which attempt to disrupt or prevent the formation or expansion of trade unions. The term "union busting" is used in current vernacular to describe activities in labor relations that do not favor unions. Union busting tactics can range from legal to illegal and subtle to violent. Labor laws exist country to country differing greatly in level and type of regulation or protection of unions, organizing, and other aspects of labor relations. These can affect such topics as posting notices/communications, organizing inside or outside employer property, solicitations, card signing, union dues, picketing, work stoppages, striking, strikebreaking, lockouts, dismissals or termination of employment, permanent replacements, automatic recognition, derecognition, ballot elections, employer-controlled trade unions[1] and more. Article 23 of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights declares that everyone has a right to form and/or join a trade union. (UDHR).[2]

History

Great Britain

Following the repeal of the Combination Laws in 1824, workers were no longer prohibited from forming organizations or collective bargaining, although significant restrictions remained. In 1832 the Friendly Society of Agricultural Labourers was formed in Dorset to challenge declining wages (members of the organization agreed to only work for wages of a set amount). In 1834 a landlord complained about the group and key members were subsequently charged and convicted under laws prohibiting the swearing of secret oaths and sentenced to seven years penal transportation to Australia. This sentence invoked a movement to defend the members, who were released in 1836 and 1837. The workers became known as the Tolpuddle Martyrs in reference to the village where the organization began and their treatment.[3]

Presently, UK labor laws are defined within the Employment Relations Act 1999 and the Trade Union and Labour Relations (Consolidation) Act 1992. There is no right to strike in UK law. But one of the most significant cases of mass-dismissals in the UK was in 2005 which involved the sacking of over 600 Gate Gourmet workers at Heathrow Airport[4][5] was viewed as a union busting tactic and caused a great deal of media scrutiny and outrage. The BBC Reported that "Gate Gourmet sacked more than 600 staff last week in a working practices row, prompting a walkout by British Airways ground staff that paralysed flights and stranded thousands of travellers" in the UK. The BBC additionally reported that Andy Cook, Gate Gourmet's director of human resources at that time, said "the company had not been looking to cut the size of the protests, only stop the minority engaged in harassment."[6] Cooke continues to direct labor relations activities from his U.K. labor relations consultancy.[7]

In the UK and EU, trade union opposition may occur during automatic recognition campaigns and ballot elections. Workers with individual and/or different union memberships working for the same employer may oppose a union to which they do not belong which is seeking recognition without a ballot for purposes of controlling collective bargaining at their place of employment. Workers in the UK working for the same employer may have different union memberships that they retain job to job. Although the Trade Union Congress (TUC) and their member trade unions oppose use of consultancies during recognition campaigns calling it a union busting tactic [18], the Advisory, Conciliation and Arbitration Service or Acas promotes that "Employee communications and consultation are the lifeblood of any business. Consultation is the process by which management and employees or their representatives jointly examine and discuss issues of mutual concern. It involves seeking acceptable solutions to problems through a genuine exchange of views and information. Consultation does not remove the right of managers to manage – they must still make the final decision – but it does impose an obligation that the views of employees will be sought and considered before decisions are taken".[19]

The Arbitration, Conciliation and Arbitration Service abbreviated Acas, is the UK government's independent agency for advice and conciliation.[8] which "aims to improve organizations and working life through better employment relations".[9]

Derecognition of a trade union may be referred to as union busting by trade unions although it is legal. Derecognition must be accomplished according to statutory guidelines. Workers may derecognize a union which no longer has support from members in the bargaining unit; also if a union memberhship falls below 50%. Employers may derecognize a union if they no longer have 21 or more workers. If the Central Arbitration Committee (CAC) accepts an application and the union in question has either lost support or the membership level falls below 50% of the workers, the CAC can declare that a derecognition ballot be held."[10]

United States

History of illegal union firings in the United States.

Union busting in the United States dates at least to the 19th century when a rapid expansion in factories and manufacturing capabilities caused a migration of workers from agricultural work to mining, manufacturing and transportation industries. Conditions were often unsafe, workers often toiled in dangerous environments, women worked for lower wages than men, and children were employed,[11] often for long hours. Because employers and governments did little to address these issues, labor movements in the industrialized world were formed to seek better wages, hours, and working conditions.[11] The clashes between labor and management were often adversarial and hostile and were deeply affected by wars, economic conditions, government policies, legislation, and court proceedings.[11]

Companies may influence unions through bargaining, labor relations, and by other means, but employer-controlled unions in the United States have been outlawed since the National Labor Relations Act of 1935, which prohibit supervisors from joining unions and requires that an employer may neither assist (as in the event of unions competing to organize the company), nor dominate any labor organization.[12] Additionally, the two laws, passed in 1947 and 1959, respectively, were the Taft-Hartley Act and the Landrum-Griffin Act. These statutes guaranteed the rights of private employees to form and join unions in order to bargain collectively. The vast majority of states have extended union rights to public employees.[13]

In 1962 US President John F. Kennedy issued Executive Order #10988 [14] which established the right for public sector employees to form trade unions with certain limitations regarding collective bargaining and a special caveat making it "illegal" to strike (United States Code: Title 5,7311, U.S.). In 1981 President Ronald Reagan exercised his power in that regard after public sector union PATCO or Professional Air Traffic Controllers Organization (1968) went on strike illegally in violation of EO #10988. Reagan fired them and the action caused the dissolution of the union. Although the firing was technically legal, he was criticized at the time by labor organization for union busting.[15] PATCO reformed to become the National Air Traffic Controllers Association.

In the U.S., unlike the UK and several other countries, the National Labor Relations Act or NLRA provides a legally protected right for private sector employees to strike to gain better wages, benefits, or working conditions and they cannot be fired. However, striking for economic reasons (i.e., protesting workplace conditions or supporting a union's bargaining demands) allows an employer to hire permanent replacements. The replacement worker can continue in the job and then the striking worker must wait for a vacancy. But if the strike is due to unfair labor practices, the strikers replaced can demand immediate reinstatement when the strike ends. If a collective bargaining agreement is in effect, and it contains a "no-strike clause", a strike during the life of the contract could result in the firing of all striking employees which could result in dissolution of that union. Although legal, it is viewed by labor organizations as union busting.

Derecognition and/or Decertification of Trade Unions

Derecognition (UK) or Decertification (US) of a trade union may be referred to as union busting by trade unions although it is legal and often initiated by members of the trade union. Derecognition/Decertification must be accomplished according to statutory guidelines. Workers in the UK may derecognize a union which no longer has support from members or if union memberhship falls below 50%. Employers may derecognize a union if they no longer have 21 or more workers. Generally in the UK an application for derecognition must be made to the CAC or Central Arbitration Committee which declares that a derecognition/decertification ballot election will be held.[10] However a company may decide to unilaterally derecognise - as long as it has a non CAC recognition agreement in force.[16]

The NLRB or National Labor Relations Board in the U.S. governs the NLRA or Act which contains a provision whereby employees or someone acting on their behalf can file a petition seeking a decertification election, which will determine whether a majority of the employees wish to retain the labor union. Like an election petition, a petition for decertification can only be filed during certain windows, when a contract has expired or is about to expire.[17]

In Canada all provinces have laws setting out provisions for employees to decertify unions. In most cases the governments have made it mandatory that employers post information for its employees on how to decertify the union.[18]

Union busters

The term “union buster” is a pejorative term used primarily by trade unions, media, and political organizations supportive of the labor movement to describe persons and organizations that represent management during union organizing, derecognition (UK), decertification (US) and labor disputes. Management representatives would be those persons that provide services known as union avoidance or preventive labor relations for remuneration to corporate management either anticipating or engaged in union activities such as a comprehensive campaign, card signing, union organizing US, organising model UK, card check, strike action, decertification and also certification elections.

Trade unions often refer to management consulting firms,[19][20][21] industrial relations consultants[22] labor law specialist,[23][24] Industrial psychology specialists,[25] and independent contractors such as unemployed industrial relations personnel and former union organizers[26][27][28] who represent management in non union environments or during ballot elections as union busters.

Labor relations consultants and attorneys specialize in multiple disciplines such as labor law, supervisory training, bargaining, arbitration and mediation, and compensation analysis. Because most management personnel and supervisors are untrained in labor law and its implications, they seek the advice of those who are. The specialty of counter organizing or preventive labor relations is not always evident from a management representative or attorney website. Firms and organizations which specialize in countering organizing campaigns typically work with company management and supervisors to focus on techniques intended to influence worker attitudes regarding collective action.[29]

Labor relations consultants and attorneys are not only employed by management during labor actions but often before any organizing is apparent. Contemporary consultancies have developed union avoidance programs aimed at non union companies which focus on training managers and supervisors in techniques called "preventive labor relations".[30][31] Non union corporations spend considerable resources employing professional consultancies to audit their organizations in order to keep a finger on the pulse to understand and solve issues before employees seek union representation. This practice of seeking information and doing supervisory training about how not to commit infractions and ULP's is termed by trade unions as union busting.

Additionally, during audits and supervisory training, consultants and attorneys may encourage employers to view union interest as a failure of management rather than interest in joining a trade union.[32] Consultants may advise management to solve workforce issues before labor unrest occurs in order to stem the tide of organizing activity with the intention of "making unions or third party representation superfluous."[33] Dr. John Logan, a labor expert currently at the San Francisco State University [34] who was commissioned to write about consultancies by the TUC[35] believes that while union avoidance consultants and law firms pay lip service to "preventive" or "positive" labor relations, most of them are actually hired for the specific purpose of counteracting union organizing efforts.[33]

Trade unions may also refer to non union employers as union busters when they undertake supervisory training to improve worker relations which often results in averting seeking of outside representation and/or new jobs.[36]

International focus

There are many Labor Relations consultancies in the United States and worldwide. They specialize in industries such as entertainment (radio, television and motion picture), hospitality (culinary and food service), communications, manufacturing, aerospace, utilities, healthcare, service (public and private) and more. Although many work only in the United States, trade union organizing takes place multi-nationally. According to the AFL-CIO "One of the largest U.S. firms, Labor Relations Institute (LRI)[37] offers a “Guaranteed Winner Package.” If the corporation doesn’t “win”—that is, smash workers’ efforts to form a union—it doesn’t pay.[38] In both the U.S. and Europe, organizing campaigns increasingly involve immigrant non English speaking workers. Some consultancies specialize in providing services in international markets. As John Logan pointed out one is “assisting clients whether represented by trade unions or not in all areas including transformative changes, collective agreements, labor disputes, works councils and union recognition campaigns with fluency in many languages including Chinese, Spanish, French, and Tagalog.[33][39]

Internationally, compliance with labor laws within developed countries can be vastly different from emerging countries going through rapid economic growth. Trade union organizers and management must not only know the law but must avoid unfair labor practice charges ULPs. Application and adherence to labor laws may differ worldwide but labor laws continue to expand such as the Labour Law of the People's Republic of China and Indian labour law. Due to the changing global and multinational employment environment and labor relations/employment laws, the modern labor movement turns more and more to professional guidance. Trade union organizing often starts with workers who are untrained or unaware of labour law and may cause unintentional infractions due to inexperience or ignorance of applicable law. Workers desiring trade union representation turn to experienced professional organizers from trade unions. Conversely, employer organizations and management may work with corporate counsel and sometimes temporary professional labor relations consultants which trade unions (fairly or unfairly) call union busters. Internationally, laws may be different in how a bargaining unit is defined for workers with job descriptions involving supervision or management. Because the operative word is “law”, trade unions and workplaces may retain legal counsel to navigate the complexities of local and/or international labor laws in order to avoid unfair labor practice charges (ULP).

Labor attorneys and consultancies

Organizations may retain labor/employment attorneys and consultancies based on experience, track record, language skills, and reputation. Since labor laws differ from one nation to another an organization will consider experience with international labor law within multinational corporations.

When trade union organizing occurs, labor attorneys are generally contacted for advise and often turn to consultants with whom they regularly work who can do supervisory training on site.[40][41] Some companies keep labor relations consultants and attorneys on a retainer and sometimes as full-time staff whether union or non union. Still others use external labor/employment lawyers and/or consultancies on an hourly per diem basis.

Conversely, many labor lawyers and consultants may find clients by monitoring government offices such as the NLRB regional offices where US trade unions are required to file RC (Representation Certification) or RD (Representation Decertification) petitions which are public record.[42] These petitions reveal the names of organizations undergoing concerted activity and the name of the union seeking recognition or an election.[43] These petitions are also used by organizations to conduct demographic studies of concerted activity regionally in order to prepare supervisory training in anticipation of organizing. Some companies maintain libraries and offer petition logs online as a courtesy for companies which cannot conduct the research for themselves.[44][45]

Similarly, UK trade unions are required by the ERA 1999 to adhere to specific procedures regarding trade union recognition such as filing a "Letter of Intent" to the CAC (Central Arbitration Commission) [46] which simultaneously notifies not only the CAC but the employer that statutory recognition is being sought and the filing then becomes public record which labor lawyers and consultancies can access in order to market their services.

Organizations may also use computer search engines such Google and YouTube along with sponsored advertising, websites, social media and professional referrals to find labor/employment lawyers and consultancies which specialize in organizing, counter organizing, and labor laws such as the ERA 1999 (UK) and NLRA (US).

Unions as Union Busters

The International Brotherhood of Teamsters “refused” to negotiate last year (2011) with a group of its own union organizers who voted to form a union called the Federation of Agents and International Representatives (FAIR), to negotiate with their employer, the Teamsters.[47] On 29 August 2012, after being found guilty of unlawfully union busting their own employees’ union, the Teamsters (IBT) posted a notice [48] “pursuant to a settlement agreement approved by a regional director of the Obama Administration's National Labor Relations Board NLRB,” that they will stop union busting. The notice assures Teamster employees that they will no longer be prevented from exercising their rights.

In Retail Clerks international Association, AFL-CIO, and Retail Clerks International Association, Local 880, AFL-CIO, petitioners vs. NLRB, they lost their case when the Board found that the Retail Clerks International Association violated the Act by refusing to bargain with the representative of certain of its employees and by threatening employees with loss of their jobs unless they resigned from the union. The Board further found that Retail Clerks Local 880 had violated Section 8(a) (1) by engaging in coercive conduct with respect to certain of its own employees. The controversy arose out of efforts of the Agents and Organizers Association (AOA) to organize three categories of union personnel: International Representatives, Council Organizers, and local union business agents.[49]

In a book called" Labor Organizations as Employers: Unions Within Unions", the author explored three different unions and the struggle of their workforces to organize. Prompted largely by the same concerns which motivate employees of private and public employers to seek union protection, employees within several unions (United Transportation Union, Garment Workers ILGWU, Textile Workers TWUA) were thwarted in their attempts to organize themselves within the unions they represented.[50][51]

Another recent example of union busting tactics used by one union against the other is the SEIU vs CNA conflict where each union was battling for the others members. In a press release dated March 10, 2008 Andy Stern of SEIU accused the CNA of union busting: "The California Nurses Association (CNA) has launched an anti-union campaign against nurses and other healthcare employees in Ohio, seeking to derail a three-year effort by the workers to unite in District 1199 of the Service Employees International Union (SEIU)."[52] Central to the SEIU-CNA dispute were accusations by both organizations of raiding each other’s members and campaigns, and disagreements about the direction of the labor movement. The SEIU is almost singular in its mission, organize workers at all costs, and provokes criticism for its consolidation of smaller locals into mega unions and that it is autocratic and top down."[53]

Intelligence operations

Either side in a labor negotiation performs better during confrontations if it is well-informed. Some corporations have sought to learn of union activities by employing informants, labor spies, and saboteurs.[54][55][56] the same way that unions employ salts to infiltrate a non union organization to gather propaganda and sow discord to get union support. A plant or salt can be used to disrupt meetings, question the legitimacy and motives of either the union or management, and report the results of the meetings to their superiors. Disruption or reporting on union meetings is illegal, but can be difficult to prove in ULP hearings.[57]

In 1980, the author of Confessions of a Union Buster named Martin J. Levitt reported that he conducted a counter-organizing drive at a nursing home in Sebring, Ohio. He assigned confederates to scratch up cars, then blamed it on the union. Although Levitt described his activities in his book, similar activities have not been reported by others. Levitt says he committed such deeds to portray the union as a threat to nursing home residents of his client. He said that creating and exploiting a prolonged climate of fear was key for him to destroy the union's credibility.[58]

Legal actions

Labor consultants, union organizers, and attorneys use rules and regulations to gain control of organizing drives. Most employers oppose union plans for card check elections and employ tactics to insure secret ballot elections instead.[59] If the union focuses on one division of the company, employment lawyers may disrupt such plans and dilute the vote by petitioning the National Labor Relations Board (NLRB) to include other divisions. If the union seeks to include foreman or "junior supervisor" positions in a bargaining unit to increase membership the definition of what constitutes a supervisor under the NLRA [60] will often be challenged by employment lawyers who may file on that issue. Even the jurisdiction of the NLRB to oversee an organizing drive may be challenged. Protracted delays can turn an organizing campaign into a war and according to Martin J. Levitt such battles are almost always won by management.[61] If the organizing struggle can be made to last long enough, it can act as a warning to workers that the union is not in control and they may lose faith in the process.

Many of the methods for defeating unions have been practiced for a very long time. Harry Wellington Laidler wrote a book in 1913 which reported the use of delaying tactics and provocation by an undercover operative of one of the largest known agencies of the time called Corporations Auxiliary Company. They would tell prospective employers,

Once the union is in the field its members can keep it from growing if they know how, and our man knows how. Meetings can be set far apart. A contract can at once be entered into with the employer, covering a long period, and made very easy in its terms. However, these tactics may not be good, and the union spirit may be so strong that a big organization cannot be prevented. In this case our man turns extremely radical. He asks for unreasonable things and keeps the union embroiled in trouble. If a strike comes, he will be the loudest man in the bunch, and will counsel violence and get somebody in trouble. The result will be that the union will be broken up."[62]

Lockouts

Employers may put pressure on a union by declaring a lockout, a work stoppage in which an employer prevents employees from working until certain conditions are met. A lockout changes the psychological impact of a work stoppage and, if the company possesses information about an impending strike, can be enacted prior to the strike's implementation.[63]

Use of public funds in the United States

Although nonprofit hospital workers were covered by the original Wagner Act of 1935, they were excluded in 1947 with the Taft-Hartley amendments. However, during the 1960s, hospital workers at nonprofit hospitals wanted to form unions and demand better pay and working conditions. Major American cities were also experiencing hospital strikes which raised the consciousness of labor leaders and government regarding the issue of how to continue life sustaining patient care delivery during work stoppages.[64] Hospital workers and labor leaders petitioned government to amend the NLRA. In 1974, under President Richard Nixon, the National Labor Relations Act was amended[65] to extend coverage and protection to employees of non-profit hospitals. “When the new legislation was considered by the Senate Committee on Labor and Public Welfare, it was recognized that labor relations in the health care industry required special considerations. The Senate Labor Committee sought to fashion a mechanism which would insure that the needs of the patient would be met during contingencies arising out of labor disputes. The new law represented a sound and equitable reconciliation of these competing interests.”[66]

Tax payer funds provide State treasuries the monies for public employee salaries from which public employees pay union dues. At one time State laws did not allow government contracts to provide public money to labor relations consultancies to represent management and was incongruent for taxpayers to fund public employee union activities but not management activities. One such law, passed in Wisconsin in 1979, was struck down by the United States Supreme Court in the decision Wisconsin Dept. of Industry v. Gould.[67] The 1986 Supreme Court decision means that it doesn't matter if the punishment for illegal behavior under federal labor law is limited, those punishments are the maximum allowed and states cannot eliminate such companies from government contracts. Critics charge that, in effect, "federal labor law forces states to hire unionbusters."[68]

Also in the 1970s, the Department of Defense partially financed union busting by its contractors. Such activities appear to be illegal, for they conflict with the NLRA.[69] In 1998, Catholic Healthcare West, the largest private hospital chain in California and a major recipient of state Medicaid funds, conducted a campaign against Service Employees International Union (SEIU) in Sacramento and Los Angeles at a cost of more than $2.6 million. After the Catholic Healthcare West campaign, the California state legislature passed a law prohibiting the use of taxpayer funds for anti-union activities.[33]

However, in a 2007 U.S. Supreme Court decision in Chamber of Commerce of the United States of America et al. vs. Brown, Attorney General of California et al., the court ruled 7-2 that federal labor law pre-empted a California law that limited many employers from speaking to their employees about union-related issues. Justice John Paul Stevens stated that Federal labor law had embraced "wide-open debate" about labor issues, as long as the employer did not try to coerce employees into accepting its point of view. Consequently, the state law is incompatible with federal labor law.[70]

Other efforts to restrict the use of tax dollars for union busting have also been struck down. A major recipient of state Medicaid funds, the Center for Cerebral Palsy in Albany, New York, hired a law firm to fight a UNITE organizing drive. In 2002 the State of New York passed a labor neutrality act prohibiting the use of taxpayer dollars for union busting. The law was passed as a direct result of the campaign against UNITE. In May 2005, a district court judge struck down the labor neutrality law in a ruling that the legal representatives of the Center for Cerebral Palsy described as "an enormous victory for employers."[33]

Workers assisting union busters

Workers may sometimes join union busting efforts for reasons of ideology, self-interest (such as bribes or aversion to union dues payments) or because of an identification with employers. Another possible reason is retribution for a non-union employee's firing due to expressing his frustration, in a private venue, regarding the iniquitous labor expectations between union and non-union workers by way of the union workers' abuse of their union's protection at his workplace. Conversely, there are unionists who form organizations seeking greater democratic control over trade unions,[71] form factions within trade unions (which may occur in relation to political parties or ideology) or may seek representation of a different trade union (demarcation dispute). Thus, worker involvement against a specific trade union may or may not fall under the usual definition of union busting.

Under United States labor law, if a union already exists in a workplace, workers may request a decertification election conducted by the National Labor Relations Board.[72] Employers and management are prohibited from interfering with employees' choice regarding trade union representation in the workplace,[73] and therefore the employer may not take a direct role in the decertification process. Employers, however, may support or sponsor third party organizations which advocate decertification and other anti-union measures. Because decertification elections depend upon a show of support from the workers, such as submitting dated signatures from 30 percent of a union's membership in support of an election,[72] employer-supported organizations direct their publicity towards workers.

Industrial psychologists as union busters

Nathan Shefferman introduced some basic psychological techniques into the union avoidance industry and the complementary service of union prevention. Building upon his work, professionally trained psychologists in the 1960s focused overtly on combating unionization and began using sophisticated psychological techniques to "screen out potential union supporters, identify hotspots vulnerable to unionization, and structure the workplace to facilitate the maintenance of a non-union environment."[33] These psychologists provided companies with psychological profiles and conducted audits concerning a firm's susceptibility to unionization.[33]

Between 1974 and 1984, one firm established by one industrial psychologist trained over 27,000 managers and supervisors to "make unions unnecessary" and surveyed almost one million employees in 4,000 organizations.[33]

Anti-union employers' organizations in the United States

In the United States shortly after 1900, there were just a few effective employers' organizations that opposed the union movement. By 1903, these organizations started to coalesce, and a national employers' movement began to exert a powerful influence on industrial relations and public affairs.[74]

For nearly a decade prior to 1903, an industrial union called the Western Federation of Miners (WFM) had been increasing in power, militancy, and radicalism as a response to dangerous working conditions, employer-employee inequality, the imposition of long hours of work, and what members perceived as an imperious attitude on the part of employers. In particular, members of the WFM had been outraged by employers' widespread use of labor spies in organizing efforts such as Coeur d'Alene. The miners' frustrations had occasionally exploded in anger and violence. But they had also tried peaceful change, and found that route impossible. For example, after winning a referendum vote for the eight-hour day with support from 72 percent of Colorado's electorate, the WFM's goal of an eight-hour law was still defeated by employers and politicians.[75][76]

In 1901, angry WFM members passed a convention proclamation that a "complete revolution of social and economic conditions" was "the only salvation of the working classes."[77] To employers the statement seemed tantamount to a declaration of war. Colorado employers and their supporters reacted to growing union restlessness and power in a confrontation that came to be called the Colorado Labor Wars.[78]

But fear and apprehension on the part of employers, who felt unions were threatening to their businesses, were by no means limited to Colorado. Across the nation, the first elements of a network of employers' organizations that would span the coming century were just beginning to arise.

Anti-union organizations played increasingly prominent roles in American politics. In April 1903, David M. Parry spoke to the annual convention of the National Association of Manufacturers (NAM)[79] and he delivered a speech critical of organized labor, asserting that trade unionism and socialism differ only in method, with both aiming to deny "individual and property rights". Parry asserted the natural laws which governed the nation's economy, and he decried any interference with those laws, whether by legislative or other means. Parry asserted that the goals of the unions would inevitably lead to "despotism, tyranny, and slavery", and the "ruin of civilization."[80]

To control this threat to the status quo, Parry advised that the NAM begin organizing employers and manufacturers' associations into a great national anti-union federation. The NAM convention agreed to the recommendation, and created an employers' organizing committee with Parry in charge. Parry began the organizing effort at once.[81]

The prospect of a federal eight-hour law was particularly objectionable to the NAM, which declared it a "vicious, needless, and in every way preposterous proposition."[82]

The NAM has fought against organized labor for more than a century through obliquely named affiliated organizations.[83] However, the organization once sought to moderate its image. After the 1937 La Follette Committee investigated employers and their anti-union allies, uncovering widespread abuses, the NAM denounced "the use of espionage, strikebreaking agencies, professional strikebreakers, armed guards, or munitions for the purpose of interfering with or destroying the legitimate rights of labor to self organization and collective bargaining." [84] The brief nod to union rights didn't last.

Other anti-union organizations have also made vocal contributions to anti-union discourse and union busting activities. The Citizens' Alliance was an employers' organization formed early in the 1900s specifically to fight trade unions. It worked with the NAM to strengthen anti-union movements in the early 20th Century in the United States. The Council on Union Free Environment (CUE) had the specific mission of defeating President Carter's labor law reform bill that was designed to make union-organizing efforts more successful by, among other provisions, allowing for elections to occur within 15 days of filing a petition.[83] The Labor Law Study Group, later called the Construction Users Anti-Inflation Roundtable introduced dozens of labor law reform bills in the U.S. Congress, but their primary focus was repealing state and federal laws that established minimum wage standards on publicly funded projects. Associated Builders and Contractors (ABC)[85] is the construction industry's voice and is funded chiefly by non-union builders and related businesses and promoted the "merit shop" which sought to pay each employee according to his qualification and performance.[86] While the group insisted it was not anti-union, the system would preclude workers from exercising many of the worker-related benefits of a union.[86]

Other groups, like the National Right to Work Committee, has lobbied for laws prohibiting compulsory union membership in union-organized shops. Similarly, the U.S. Chamber of Commerce's core purpose is to fight for free enterprise before Congress, the White House, regulatory agencies, the courts, the court of public opinion, and governments around the world and has actively lobbied against the Employee Free Choice Act.[87] The NLPC[88] makes a case for the end of the use of compulsory union dues for political purposes by exposing abuses in political and organizing activities. The Center for Union Facts maintains an anti-union website that provides financial and other records about unions.

Guide to modern union busting

Nathan Shefferman published The Man in the Middle, a 292-page account of his union busting activities, in 1961. Shefferman described a long list of practices which he viewed as tangential to union avoidance activities but which his detractors have labeled as support operations for these activities. Among these were the administration of opinion surveys, supervisor training, employee roundtables, incentive pay procedures, wage surveys, employee complaint procedures, personnel records, application procedures, job evaluations, and legal services. As part of his union busting strategies, all of these activities were performed with the goal of maintaining complete control of the work force by top management. Shefferman's book not only provided the concepts that animated all future union busting techniques, he also provided language that pro-labor supporters believe mask the intent of the policies.[89]

See also

References

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  86. http://www.uschamber.com/issues/letters/2007/070620efca.htm
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