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Sodexo Suit Against SEIU Uncovers Union Intimidation Manual
National Legal & Policy Center ^ | July 26, 2011 | Carl Horowitz

Posted on 07/26/2011 2:59:13 PM PDT by jazusamo

SEIU logo

The Service Employees International Union could have written the book on how to get corporations to surrender. In fact, it has written the book. Lawyers for Sodexo USA, a subsidiary of France-based food services and facilities provider Sodexo Inc., recently revealed as much during the discovery phase of the company's federal racketeering suit against the union: an SEIU manual on how to intimidate employers. By applying extreme pressure, the monograph argued, a union can extract concessions from management on virtually any issue. Section Three of the text, fully 88 pages, can be downloaded from www.workplacechoice.org. The lawsuit, filed in March, has yet to go to trial. Yet whatever the outcome, the manual unwittingly shines a spotlight on the lengths to which unions in this country will go to achieve victory in a corporate campaign.

Since the Seventies, the corporate campaign has been an increasingly indispensable organizing tool. Labor organizers, often working in concert with civil rights, religious, antiwar and other allied groups on the Left, have employed it to mobilize public opposition against business practices alleging harming workers and/or the larger society. Coca-Cola, Food Lion, Nike and Wal-Mart are among the major firms to feel union wrath in recent years. A corporate campaign should be understood not just as a way to organize workers at a particular site, but more importantly, as a multi-pronged attack on a company's reputation - its brand name, if one will - to achieve broad social goals. Through demonstrations, boycotts, media outreach, lawsuits, shareholder resolutions and other tactics, activists may win far more concessions than through collective bargaining.

A successful corporate campaign is a science. It requires not only coordinated action, but careful and time-consuming groundwork. Researchers assess the target company's centers of power and vulnerability, and decide whether a campaign will work, given existing resources. In his book, Biz-War and the Out-of-Power Elite: The Progressive-Left Attack on the Corporation, George Washington University political scientist Jarol Manheim explains:

The starting point and strategic key to the anti-corporate campaign is what its practitioners refer to as "power structure analysis." In conducting a power structure analysis, one identifies all the stakeholder relationships on which a targeted company depends in the conduct of its daily business; studies each relationship with an eye toward identifying the strengths and weaknesses and its centrality to corporate well-being; matches these observations up with the needs and capabilities of the antagonist itself, with its resources and with any special events or opportunities that may be available to use in support of the campaign; and arrives at a prioritized list of action items that will constitute the campaign plan.

Implementation of the plan requires attracting allies from a variety of organizations, developing a division of labor, and personalizing allegations against the target company as much as possible, making sure to publicize embarrassing facts. Unions, Manheim argues, usually run the show, though they may farm work out to seemingly benign front groups:

Sometimes the credibility of attacks on the target company is established not by the facts or the evidence but by the source of the allegation. In corporate campaigns undertaken by labor unions, this is often a special problem because the unions themselves are not held in especially high regard. They solved the problem by releasing information through allies or surrogates, which...is how many of the Progressive activists got into the campaign business in the first place.

National Legal and Policy Center over the last several years has documented a number of union-driven campaigns. Starting in 2006, for example, the United Food and Commercial Workers launched a full-scale attack on Smithfield Foods, prompting the company to file a federal civil racketeering and extortion lawsuit accusing the union of disseminating false information to depress the stock price. The two parties reached an out-of-court settlement in October 2008. UNITE HERE in 2006 initiated a multi-city boycott and media campaign against nonunion hotels across the U.S. and Canada, Hotel Workers Rising, that continues to this day. The unions also launched an aggressive campaign against Northern California health care network Sutter Health, mailing defamatory postcards to dissuade women from using allegedly deficient OB-GYN services; a jury eventually ordered the union to pay the company nearly $17.3 million in damages.

The Service Employees became a leader in corporate campaigns during Andrew Stern's reign as president. The union, which includes tens of thousands of security guards, launched a campaign to blacken the name of the UK-based security firm, Group 4 Securicor (G4S), which owns Wackenhut Services Inc., the largest security contractor for the U.S. government. SEIU activists issued press releases attacking Wackenhut's competence in guarding nuclear power plants as retaliation for the company's refusal to sign an exclusive representation agreement. G4S Wackenhut fought back in November 2007 with a civil racketeering suit. Union and company reached an out-of-court settlement in December 2008 that allowed employees in nine metropolitan areas to choose SEIU as their exclusive bargaining agent. The Service Employees also launched a campaign blitz, with at best limited success, against a pair of major private equity funds, The Carlyle Group and Kohlberg Kravis Roberts, in hopes of persuading them to abandon plans to acquire stakes in nonunion companies.

That brings us to the SEIU campaign against Sodexo, which like the Wackenhut campaign, has landed the union in federal court. Sodexo, or Sodexho Alliance, as it was known until a few years ago (it also would drop the "h"), is a multinational firm founded in 1966 and headquartered in Issy-les-Moulineuax (suburban Paris) with fiscal year 2010 revenues of 15 billion Euros ($US20 billion). With some 380,000 employees in 80 countries worldwide, 120,000 of them in North America, the company is a leader in food preparation and auxiliary facilities for a wide range of institutions including corporations, government agencies, schools, hospitals, nursing homes, prisons and military bases.

The Gaithersburg, Md.-based subsidiary, Sodexo USA, is far from averse to unionism. Its work force, in fact, is 15 percent unionized, more than twice the overall U.S. figure for the private sector. At least 300 separate collective bargaining agreements are in force. The company last April was named by Working Mother magazine as one of the nation's best employers for hourly compensation. "We lead our industry in expanding the range of benefits available to front line employees, and offer training to help employees excel in their current jobs, position them for career advancement, and contribute to their personal and professional growth," says Sodexo USA CEO George Chavel. That sounds like a plan.

Apparently, to the SEIU, it doesn't. Of Sodexo USA's 120,000 employees, about 98,000 are paid by the hour. About 18,000 of the latter belong to a union; the other 80,000 don't. The SEIU for years has eyed the non-unionized portion as an organizing bonanza. Toward that end, its leaders for well over a year allegedly have engaged in a campaign of extortion, blackmail, trespassing and illegal lobbying designed to steer business away. Sodexo USA responded on March 17 by filing a civil lawsuit in Alexandria, Virginia federal court, charging the union with racketeering and extortion. SEIU officials, the suit asserted, threatened Sodexo executives in face-to-face meetings to undermine company operations. They made good on their vows, too. The lawsuit states that union members and/or allies engaged in the following tactics:

The action seeks an injunction against the Service Employees International Union, its executives and certain locals engaging in further disruptive activity, plus unspecified monetary damages. The company insists it was willing to negotiate, but that the SEIU's campaign had made this impossible. "We work constructively with unions every day but the SEIU had crossed the line by breaking the law," said Robert Stern, general counsel for Sodexo USA, in announcing the suit. "We will not tolerate the SEIU's tactics any longer."

The union has responded by calling the lawsuit a diversionary tactic from the real issues. SEIU officials accuse Sodexo and its legal counsel, Hunton & Williams, of launching a "dirty tricks" campaign against American workers by retaining three cyber-security vendors to discredit the SEIU and other unions with fraudulent documents. The lawsuit, says the union, is "bogus litigation meant to deprive workers of the right to bargain collectively with their employers and undermine the middle class in the United States.

How did the union pick Sodexo as a target? And why did it choose certain tactics of intimidation, despite being noxious and possibly illegal? More than a few clues may be found in the aforementioned internal SEIU monograph, titled "Contract Campaign Manual." The monograph serves as a veritable bible for waging guerrilla warfare against recalcitrant employers. The Washington, D.C.-based free-market think tank, the Competitive Enterprise Institute, obtained a copy from the Public Access to Court Electronic Records (PACER) system.

The manual argues that pressure - from as many sources as possible and aimed at as many targets as possible - is of the utmost importance. "Outside pressure," the authors explain, "can involve jeopardizing relationships between the employer and lenders, investors, stockholders, customers, clients, patients, tenants, politicians, or others on whom the employer depends for funds." Legal and regulatory pressure can be especially beneficial, as it can "threaten the employer with costly action by government agencies or the courts." Community organizations also serve a key function, as they can "damage an employer's public image and ties with community leaders and organizations." Such pressure is not an option. "Assume that pressure tactics will be necessary and start planning for them in advance," counsels the manual.

Much of the monograph is in the spirit of the Left's dictum: "The personal is the political." Toward that end, it recommends going after company officials and board members in personal ways, hopefully with the intent of embarrassing or harassing them. Legality doesn't seem to be an object here. Here is how the SEIU puts it:

It may be a violation of blackmail and extortion laws to threaten management officials with release of ‘dirt' about them if they don't settle a contract. But there is no law against union members who are angry at their employer deciding to uncover and publicize factual information about individual managers.

Bank of America Deputy General Counsel Greg Baer two months ago got a taste of the SEIU treatment. Union and allied demonstrators - more than a dozen busloads - rode to Baer's suburban Washington, D.C. home. After they arrived, they assembled in front of his house, several shouting through bullhorns and waving signs. If this was a demonstration, it felt more like a riot about to happen. The effort proved a waste anyway, as only Baer's teenaged son was home.

The union emphasizes using the media to find other organizations in the community with grievances of their own. "Such organizations," states the monograph, can include environmental groups, student organizations, consumer groups, women, minorities, poor people, senior citizens, and doctors." Isolating the employer from its everyday associations, by way of bad publicity, is crucial. In the section "Using the Media," the SEIU advises: "Give customers, clients, investors, and other in the community reasons to cut off economic ties with the employer. Media attention can convince the community of the justice of your cause, or can make businesses or individuals feel that they don't want to be involved with the employer while it is getting such bad publicity." The monograph calls upon activists to enlist politicians, regulators and other unions to join the struggle.

What we have here, in short, is a manual not just for union organizing, but for enterprise destruction. And the monograph is a logical result of organized labor in the U.S. retooling itself as a political as well as economic force. The crude and possibly illegal tactics employed by SEIU leaders, members and allies against Sodexo may or may not have been inspired by the union's "Contract Campaign Manual." But it's worth finding out in court.



TOPICS: Business/Economy; Conspiracy; Miscellaneous
KEYWORDS: alinskytactics; bustseiu; communism; communistunions; corporatecampaign; corruption; crushseiu; democratcorruption; democrats; fascism; fascistunions; fraud; leftwingextremism; liberalfascism; liberalism; liberalprogressivism; liberals; liberalviolence; marxism; mediabias; nlpc; obama; obamasminions; progressives; purplefascism; racketeeringlawsuit; seiu; socialistdemocrats; sodexo; sodexousa; soros; tyranny; unionbrownshirts; unioncorruption; unionmedia; unions; unionthugs; unionviolence
Hopefully Sodexo nails the SEIU on this.
1 posted on 07/26/2011 2:59:22 PM PDT by jazusamo
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To: jazusamo

bump


2 posted on 07/26/2011 3:02:54 PM PDT by B.O. Plenty (Give war a chance...)
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To: jazusamo

The unions today are not at all interested in the rank and file they claim to represent. Their only interest is thuggish power, and destroying the corporations that employ their membership. The unions do not give one bit of concern if the companies go under, resulting in the rank and file becoming unemployed, in fact, I suspect that this is one of the goals if the higher leadership of the unions. The rank and file are merely pawns, cannon fodder.


3 posted on 07/26/2011 3:10:20 PM PDT by Fred Hayek (FUBO, the No Talent Pop Star pResident.)
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To: jazusamo

To be simple, SEIU is a communists organization. And most of its members are supportive of communists like activities.


4 posted on 07/26/2011 3:12:17 PM PDT by Logical me
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To: Fred Hayek

You’re absolutely right. The unions want more members to increase their coffers which in turn gives them more power. They could care less about the membership as long as the dollars are rolling in. The leaders of all the larger unions are nothing more than thugs and the King Thug is Richard Trumka, The Won’s buddy.


5 posted on 07/26/2011 3:17:32 PM PDT by jazusamo (His [Obama's] political base---the young, the left and the thoughtless: Thomas Sowell)
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To: Fred Hayek

” The rank and file are merely pawns, cannon fodder.”

And they are too stupid to realize it.


6 posted on 07/26/2011 3:17:51 PM PDT by EQAndyBuzz (As long as the MSM covers for Obama, he will be above the law)
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To: jazusamo

Please bump the Freepathon or click above and donate or become a monthly donor!

7 posted on 07/26/2011 3:18:19 PM PDT by jazusamo (His [Obama's] political base---the young, the left and the thoughtless: Thomas Sowell)
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To: Logical me
“To be simple, SEIU is a communists organization. And most of its members are supportive of communists like activities.”

The same goes for most unions, which is why I am supremely unconcerned when a bunch of union thugs lose their jobs. Do feel for the non-union employees and owners, but for the union leeches? Nothing.

8 posted on 07/26/2011 3:18:19 PM PDT by piytar (The Obama Depression. Say it early, say it often. Why? Because it's TRUE.)
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To: jazusamo

We should use their intimidation tactics on them. Let’s go after SEIU members!!


9 posted on 07/26/2011 3:20:09 PM PDT by Fledermaus (I'm done with political parties. The GOP is useless. Anarchy is perferable to this CRAP!)
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To: Fred Hayek

You are not there yet. The unions are nothing but the money laundering branch of the Democrat Party. They force people to join unions and then force them to pay dues and then turn around and give hundreds of millions of dollars to the Rats.


10 posted on 07/26/2011 3:50:41 PM PDT by Blood of Tyrants (Islam is the religion of Satan and Mohammed was his minion.)
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To: Fred Hayek

You are not there yet. The unions are nothing but the money laundering branch of the Democrat Party. They force people to join unions and then force them to pay dues and then turn around and give hundreds of millions of dollars to the Rats.


11 posted on 07/26/2011 3:50:53 PM PDT by Blood of Tyrants (Islam is the religion of Satan and Mohammed was his minion.)
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To: jazusamo

OK, all together now... RI-CO RI-CO RI-CO RI-CO RI-CO


12 posted on 07/26/2011 4:01:56 PM PDT by Kenton (No hope, loose change - Buck Ofama)
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To: Fred Hayek

I can’t understand why unions such as the SEIU aren’t prosecuted under the RICO statues.


13 posted on 07/26/2011 4:03:44 PM PDT by jmacusa (Political correctness is cultural Marxism. I'm not a Marxist.)
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To: Fred Hayek

I can’t understand why unions such as the SEIU aren’t prosecuted under the RICO statues.


14 posted on 07/26/2011 4:03:57 PM PDT by jmacusa (Political correctness is cultural Marxism. I'm not a Marxist.)
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To: jazusamo
these SEIU scumbags make the Teamsters look like Eagle Scouts...
15 posted on 07/26/2011 4:16:25 PM PDT by Chode (American Hedonist - *DTOM* -ww- NO Pity for the LAZY)
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To: jazusamo

bkmk


16 posted on 07/26/2011 4:30:21 PM PDT by Sergio (An object at rest cannot be stopped! - The Evil Midnight Bomber What Bombs at Midnight)
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To: Kenton

No question that went through my mind over and over reading the article. If their actions are not a conspiracy then what is? I do however see the justice department meddling in this if it starts to come to this.
Once Palin is in and the NLRB finds themselves short of funds we’ll see the final death knell of the unions.


17 posted on 07/26/2011 4:30:38 PM PDT by wiggen (The teacher card. When the racism card just won't work.)
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To: jazusamo

And we whine...

What the hell do we do. Is there ANY site that can list who the left is boycotting, so I know who to buy from? Maybe, I hope so, but I haven’t heard of it.


18 posted on 07/26/2011 5:54:20 PM PDT by BobL (PLEASE READ: http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/f-news/2657811/posts)
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