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If only, Wal-Mart. If only

Posted on Fri, 08/01/2008 - 4:25pm by Markus Kolic

(Hello, everybody! Thus ends my prolonged blog-absence; I had rather more important things to do last week, and continuing intertube problems [for which I blame the angered Ted Stevens] this week. Apologies to my loyal readers -- both of you.)

The Wall Street Journal has a remarkable story today about Wal-Mart, whose profit margins depend largely on substandard wages and working conditions, quaking in fear at the thought that a 2008 Democratic victory will (via the desperately needed Employee Free Choice Act) force unionization on them. Look:

Wal-Mart Stores Inc. is mobilizing its store managers and department supervisors around the country to warn that if Democrats win power in November, they'll likely change federal law to make it easier for workers to unionize companies -- including Wal-Mart.

In recent weeks, thousands of Wal-Mart store managers and department heads have been summoned to mandatory meetings... The Wal-Mart human-resources managers who run the meetings don't specifically tell attendees how to vote in November's election, but make it clear that voting for Democratic presidential hopeful Sen. Barack Obama would be tantamount to inviting unions in, according to Wal-Mart employees who attended gatherings in Maryland, Missouri and other states.

"The meeting leader said, 'I am not telling you how to vote, but if the Democrats win, this bill will pass and you won't have a vote on whether you want a union,'" said a Wal-Mart customer-service supervisor from Missouri. "I am not a stupid person. They were telling me how to vote," she said.

Well... as heartening as this is to an old social-democrat crank like me, I have to caution: EFCA is just a small step toward restoring unions to the role they should play in the American workplace, a process which (if it happens at all) will take decades. Nothing will come overnight.

Besides, today's Democratic Party is hardly the working man's best friend; it is riddled with "business-oriented Democrats" like Chuck Schumer, Bill Richardson, and Mark Warner (not to mention Evan Bayh, and I should add that if he's chosen as Obama's VP I will have to consider ritual suicide). Once in power, it is an open question whether this party can overcome its ties to the business community and work to help the people who really need it.

Certainly from Wal-Mart's perspective, it's much less effective to fight and demonize Democrats than it is to just buy us. The very same WSJ article tells the tale:

So while I'm not going to say that this "RUN! DEMOCRAT REVOLUTIONARIES!" thing is just a corporate head-fake -- that's a level of mouth-frothing I'm not yet ready to embrace -- it's certainly true that one election and one new law won't bring unions into the retail market the way Wal-Mart (for whatever reason) wants people to think. We should work for even small steps in that direction, of course, but we shouldn't let our opponents define the debate.

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Dodd snares firefighers' endorsement

Posted on Wed, 08/29/2007 - 1:36pm by Garrett Dash Nelson

Chris Dodd today secured the endorsement of the International Association of Fire Fighters. I always thought Rudy Giuliani was supposed to be the Saint Mayor of All Firefighters or something like that? At any rate, good news for Dodd, who I maintain is the single most underrated Democratic candidate this cycle.

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Hunger strike open thread

Posted on Fri, 05/04/2007 - 8:26am by Garrett Dash Nelson

"For the love of Digest Subscribers" —Michael Robin

"millions of freaking e-mails." —Larry Arbuthotnott

"force ... administrators to ... roll over ... clog their ... boxes" —Daniel Kroop

This is an open thread for the slogging-out of the efficacy of the hunger strike, brought to you by the miracles of Teh Webternets.

Read the back-story: (1), (2), (3).

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The Harvard Carnival, Maine Islands, and the Ghost of Eugene V. Debs

Posted on Sun, 09/17/2006 - 9:33am by Garrett Dash Nelson
" ... I said then, and I say now, that while there is a lower class, I am in it ... " —Eugene V. Debs

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