Free Republic
Browse · Search
General/Chat
Topics · Post Article

Skip to comments.

Josh Hawley’s Labor Revolution
Compact ^ | April 17, 2024 | Sohrab Ahmari

Posted on 07/16/2024 2:23:32 AM PDT by definitelynotaliberal

The Republican Party’s recent pro-worker turn has too often amounted to little more than cultural posturing: going after “woke capital” but stopping well short of challenging corporate and Wall Street power as such. As Batya Ungar-Sargon has written in these pages, today’s GOP is a “working-class party without a working-class agenda.” But there are important exceptions to this trend, and few shine as brightly as Josh Hawley (R-Mo.) when it comes to standing up for wage-earners and forging alliances with organized labor.

Over the past few months, these efforts have earned Hawley justified praise—and donation dollars—from the International Brotherhood of Teamsters. Most recently, the Teamsters’ political action committee offered $5,000 toward Hawley’s re-election campaign in recognition of his support for striking auto workers, among other labor groups. It’s a rare feat for a Republican lawmaker at a moment when partisanship continues to divide the GOP from organized labor, even as the party under Donald Trump continues to consolidate its support among union households.

Defying progressive accusations that Hawley doesn’t really mean it, Hawley has walked the pro-worker walk. Consider a few highlights:

- This month, the Teamsters showered Hawley with praise for being the sole Republican to uphold the National Labor Relations Board’s determination that Amazon amounts to a “joint employer” in the case of its delivery drivers, given the degree of control and surveillance the mega-retailer exerts over their work. And in November, the Teamsters cheered Hawley for co-authoring a letter with Sen. Chris Murphy (D-Conn.) reproaching Amazon for mistreating its drivers.

- The previous month, the Teamsters thanked Hawley for joining striking Graybar Electric workers on the picket line, with Sean O’Brien, the union’s president, telling Fox News that with the senator’s “presence and his support … we settled the strike earlier this week.”

- Also in March, the Teamsters lauded Hawley for proposing to slap a 100 percent tariff on Chinese electric vehicles made in Mexico—a threat characterized by the Alliance for American Manufacturing as a potential “extinction-level event” for US auto industries and jobs. Hawley’s measure, said the Teamsters, would “deter Chinese automakers from trying to evade US trade laws.”

- The Teamster likewise warmly greeted a letter from Hawley urging the Treasury to modify a government loan to help preserve union jobs following the bankruptcy of the Yellow Corporation. “We thank Senator Hawley for standing up on behalf of hardworking Teamsters who sacrificed billions of dollars in wages, benefits, and retirement security to keep Yellow afloat for the last 20 years,” said O’Brien.

And on and on. Hawley, a contributor to Compact, also hasn’t shied away from calling out the greed of corporate and Wall Street honchos and the eye-watering disparities between executive compensation and the wages of ordinary workers. Last week, for example, he tweeted a Teamster meme noting that the top five executives at Coors had made the same amount as 420 striking workers at a Fort Worth plant, adding in his own words: “Shame on Coors.”

The Hawley-Teamster alliance demonstrates that it is possible for Republicans to win labor’s support, provided both camps are prepared to take trust-building steps. For Republicans, it isn’t enough to merely make vague pro-worker noises that amount to so much culture-war vibes. They have to stand with workers on material grounds, as Hawley admirably has. For unions, meanwhile, it likewise means a willingness to privilege bread-and-butter issues over the progressive shibboleths that too often lead the mainstream of the labor movement to act as slavish adjuncts of the Democratic Party.

Hawley’s pathbreaking alliance with the Teamsters is good news for workers, an exemplar to a GOP with an increasingly downscale voter base, and a win for the nation.


TOPICS: Business/Economy
KEYWORDS: joshhawley; labor; missouri; teamsters; unions

1 posted on 07/16/2024 2:23:32 AM PDT by definitelynotaliberal
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | View Replies]

To: definitelynotaliberal
The Republican Party’s recent pro-worker turn

The Republican Party’s recent pro-UNION-worker turn...The Republican party has always been pro-WORKER.

2 posted on 07/16/2024 4:09:42 AM PDT by Dixie Yooper (Ephesians 6:11)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: definitelynotaliberal

A working class agenda doesn’t mean an economy with high paying jobs that anttra and trains skilled workers and treats them properly. It means communism.


3 posted on 07/16/2024 4:59:51 AM PDT by AndyJackson
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: AndyJackson

Attracts


4 posted on 07/16/2024 5:00:27 AM PDT by AndyJackson
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 3 | View Replies]

To: Dixie Yooper

“The Republican Party’s recent pro-UNION-worker turn...The Republican party has always been pro-WORKER”

That is an important distinction. Unions use economic warfare to drive up wages. However, in driving up wages, they drive down employment. Is that good for workers?


5 posted on 07/16/2024 5:16:29 AM PDT by ChessExpert (Scarborough: "This is the Best Biden ever.")
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 2 | View Replies]

To: Dixie Yooper

“Republican Party has always been pro worker”

Sorry but that’s a load. Don’t be dishonest. Republican Pasty has not always been pro worker.

Currently the Oligarchy has moved to the left but make no mistake they were owned for a long time by wealthy people who wanted nothing more than keep workers down, the establishment GOP still very much is.

We didn’t go from where we were with capitol flowing throughout the economy and classes to where we are now, where a two income household can barely get by because Republicans were looking out for the workers.


6 posted on 07/16/2024 5:36:31 AM PDT by HamiltonJay (M)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 2 | View Replies]

To: ChessExpert

The only down moment last night was the Teamster thug spouting union propaganda. The Big Lie is that unions are pro-worker. They are for using political and physical force to distort the free market, to the economic disadvantage of non-union workers. Their work rules reduce productivity, which makes everybody poorer.

The existence of unions requires heavy handed government action to carve out an exemption to antitrust laws, making unions a legal conspiracy to restrain trade.

Acting against market concentrations of power is a separate matter and is ideal for Trump’s philosophy, but not with the mob.


7 posted on 07/16/2024 6:04:08 AM PDT by FirstFlaBn
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 5 | View Replies]

Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.

Free Republic
Browse · Search
General/Chat
Topics · Post Article

FreeRepublic, LLC, PO BOX 9771, FRESNO, CA 93794
FreeRepublic.com is powered by software copyright 2000-2008 John Robinson