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Dis-Union in Iowa - Did the AFL-CIO die Monday night in Iowa?
FrontPageMagazine.com ^ | 1/20/04 | Lowell Ponte

Posted on 01/20/2004 12:39:21 AM PST by kattracks

ORGANIZED LABOR WAS THE BIGGEST LOSER IN IOWA’S caucuses on Monday night. 


Despite the polls, pundits had assured America, in this strong union state labor would prevail by marching in the minions under its command to dominate these lightly-attended gatherings of neighbors.


The blue collar unions had bet their chips on longtime AFL-CIO puppet Rep. Richard Gephardt of neighboring Missouri. The mostly-government-employee white collar unions AFSCME (the American Federation of State, County and Municipal Employees) and SEIU (the Service Employees International Union), after much soul-searching, bet their credibility and future on former Vermont Governor Howard Dean. (Shortly after endorsing Dean, one of the leaders of AFSCME declared at a New York City conference that “we are fighting for socialism.” Read all about it in the Journal of the Obvious, “Duh!”)


Both union sides lost badly on Monday night, watching as their chosen candidates were rejected by the overwhelming majority of Iowa Democratic caucus-goers. Their much-vaunted muscle never materialized. The resulting display of union impotence was worse than humiliating. These caucuses have revealed to millions of Americans that the once-formidible power of organized labor that half a century ago represented nearly half of American workers is now nearly spent.


Today more Americans are employed by government at some level than are employed manufacturing things. The only growing part of the labor movement – which altogether now represents less than 14 percent of American workers – has been the unionizing of government workers, the bureaucrats and others who live parasitically on us taxpayers.


Government workers never worry that their jobs might get shipped off to Taiwan or Malaysia. They see their future success in making government bigger and taxes higher.  This puts these white-collar bureaucrats, most of whom shuffle paper in air-conditioned offices, at odds with blue collar workers who sweat.


Millions of blue collar industrial workers were lifted to middle class incomes and lifestyles by older unions, and because of this they now feel a Republican-like resentment at seeing the fruits of their labor snatched by greedy governments and big-government advocates.


And most of these workers want a different life for their children. The power of labor unions backed by Democrat-run government was, after all, merely the power of monopoly backed by both the force of law and the threat of goon violence.


This monopoly, along with tariffs and other barriers to prevent the importation of cheaper and better competing products, has forced American consumers to pay artificially high prices for goods made by uneducated workers whose unions extorted $20, $30, $50 dollars or more in hourly wages and benefits from companies. It was a socialist system paid for by the coercion and theft that exploited and robbed consumers. It was a system inherently incompatible with and unable to compete in a free society.


This is why in the long run organized labor is doomed, a doom sealed for all to see on Monday night in Iowa.


Somewhere between 30 and 40 percent of blue collar union workers nowadays vote Republican. If allowed, without fear of retaliation, to direct the share of their union dues now laundered back to Democratic politicians, these union members could sink what remains of the sorts of unions that supported Gephardt, who after Monday night’s catastrophe has become a politically-extinct species of Big Labor dinocrat Demosaur.


If the Iowa caucus-goers rejected Gephardt and Dean, what did they endorse by overwhelmingly favoring Massachusetts Senator John F. Kerry and North Carolina Senator John Edwards?  For one thing, they favored candidates less prone to the rhetoric of class warfare.


Both Senators Kerry and Dean have been members of the moderate Democratic Leadership Council and of the rhetorically-centrist Senate New Democrat Coalition.


Kerry in particular in 2000 signed the Hyde Park “Third Way” Declaration that supports “expanding trade and investment because we must be a party of economic progress, not economic reaction….the Democratic Party’s mission is to expand opportunity, not government.”


Senator Kerry denounced Howard Dean as a protectionist, defended the North American Free Trade Agreement, voted for “Fast Track” trade authority for President Bill Clinton, and voted to support extending free trade in the Andes, Vietnam, China and the Third World. These are not necessarily positions favored by organized labor.


Senator Edwards has been less friendly towards NAFTA and “fast track,” at least as an authority for President Bush, but on the other free trade issues above he voted as Senator Kerry did.


Both these Iowa winners give voice to the default soft-socialist positions of the Democratic Party, as we might expect, on a range of job and regulatory issues.


But these two politicians were deemed too weak or tepid on labor issues to win major union endorsements. Those endorsements, which went instead to Gephardt and Dean, have proven to be worth far less politically than we were misled to believe. Pay no attention to that wizard behind the union curtain. The power of organized labor to command or to intimidate was shown Monday in Iowa to be largely an illusion. Its Democrat minions no longer do as the union fat cats command.


It would be surprising to see either Kerry or Edwards grovel for union support in the wake of their Iowa wins and labor’s Iowa defeat. It is now the unions that will come hat in hand to make peace with Kerry and Edwards.

And with this shift in power, we might on Monday have seen American politics change forever.  It’s time for organized labor to repudiate socialism, disentangle itself from the Democratic Party, recommit itself to what was good in its origins, or die.


Mr. Ponte hosts a national radio talk show Saturdays 6-9 PM Eastern Time (3-6 PM Pacific Time) and Sundays 9 PM-Midnight Eastern Time (6-9 PM Pacific Time) on the Liberty Broadcasting network (formerly TalkAmerica). Internet Audio worldwide is at LibertyBroadcasting .com. The show’s live call-in number is (888) 822-8255. A professional speaker, he is a former Roving Editor for Reader’s Digest.



TOPICS: Editorial; News/Current Events; Politics/Elections
KEYWORDS: 2004; gephardt; iowa; unions

1 posted on 01/20/2004 12:39:21 AM PST by kattracks
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To: kattracks
Only in our dreams.

Every Democrat spends tons of time kissing up to the unions, because they have $$$.
2 posted on 01/20/2004 12:41:45 AM PST by TheAngryClam (Don't blame me, I voted for McClintock.)
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To: kattracks
Did the AFL-CIO die Monday night in Iowa?

---------------------

The AFL-CIO died when Iowa industry died.

3 posted on 01/20/2004 12:46:53 AM PST by RLK
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To: TheAngryClam
Every Democrat spends tons of time kissing up to the unions, because they have $$$.

It's more a question of habit than money. The 'rats get their $$$ these days from the likes of Soros, not unions.

4 posted on 01/20/2004 12:59:05 AM PST by Salman (Mickey Akbar)
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To: RLK
Ding! Ding! I live in what used to be considered the second most radical union county in Iowa, after Ottumwa. The union has screwed the workers over so many times that they have no credibility.

Case and point: Keokuk Steel Castings here is in deep financial trouble. They make exceptionally good wages for here, $15 per hour on up. They told the union to take a 90 cent per hour pay cut or they would have to move to Mexico. The union turned them down flat. That will mean 500 jobs, and they will take their sanctimonious moral victory right to the unemployment line.

It isn't like they will find another job that pays close, and they could care less. Hell or high water they are going to 'screw the man,' even if it means leaping on their own flaming sword. You simply can't maintain popular respect if you are willing to sacrifice your family's future for some self-righteous moral high road.
5 posted on 01/20/2004 1:25:59 AM PST by Free Vulcan
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To: kattracks
The sound of one union sobbing.
6 posted on 01/20/2004 2:04:57 AM PST by aardvark1
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To: Free Vulcan
Same idiotic thinking in SC. Here the Union workers refused to save their jobs at Georgetown Steel. M. Sanford, SC Governor tried to help, he got concessions from the Electric Power company and arranged to assist in negotiating with all parties including the union "Leadership". Appears the workers were actually asked for only minimum concessions, but no no,no, who can believe the lying oppressive Capitalist...now after the shutdown the local "news"papers are full of the whining, blaming screed from these workers and their "Leadership", they (the workers)are faced with, maybe, finding local jobs at 33% of their previous GS wages and no/minimum benefits.....it sure is a hard lesson to learn....ie; coming to terms with one's own stupidity.
7 posted on 01/20/2004 2:45:41 AM PST by iopscusa (El Vaquero)
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To: Free Vulcan
Keokuk. Vacationed there close to 55 years ago on the Illinois side. Swam in the Mississippi at a place called Chutes Beach.

I'm originally from up the line, Davenport. I can remember during WWII and shortly afterwards it was one of the important industrial areas in the country.

8 posted on 01/20/2004 3:06:12 AM PST by RLK
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To: kattracks
They have been dead for some time and just too stupid to realize it. Union "leadership" is what killed them.
9 posted on 01/20/2004 3:11:55 AM PST by freeangel (freeangel)
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To: RLK
Keokuk...< snip >... I can remember during WWII and shortly afterwards it was one of the important industrial areas in the country.

The Down-River area still is. By the way, Keokuk was probably the last area served by a 25Hz Utility Generator at the old UE Station (Now Ameren UE). It was one of two low freq systems I had ever seen. The other served the roller mills at Inland Steel in Hammond IN. I recall these were very popular in the textile industry down south.

10 posted on 01/20/2004 3:37:34 AM PST by woofer
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It is now the unions that will come hat in hand to make peace with Kerry and Edwards.

Yep.

Big labor went over the cliff last night.
11 posted on 01/20/2004 3:58:15 AM PST by George W. Bush
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To: Free Vulcan
The union has screwed the workers over so many times that they have no credibility.

A dozen or so years ago, the union lads/lasses thought they would call the shots at a number of factories here in NE Iowa, and most of those facilities have either shrunk, moved, or had the work outsourced to Asia. The loudmouths now have to go hat in hand seeking lower paying jobs because some activist asses just had to be bellicose. Whether the old firebrands are reflective enough to see that they screwed themselves remains a mystery to me.

There is always some fresh fool that doesn't get it though- the hospital my wife works at just voted in the SEIU because a majority of the nurses were pissed off at "the man" (this not long after the hospital unknowingly hired a nurse who was revealed to be a professional union agitator, BTW). Now, they will not only have to still contend with "the man," but they will find out how much fun it is to also contend with "the goons."

And I doubt that Howard Dean will be giving them any refunds.

12 posted on 01/20/2004 4:15:00 AM PST by niteowl77
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To: kattracks
Here are few thoughts on the Iowa campaigns I have not seen mentioned elsewhere.

Click here for yet another take.

13 posted on 01/20/2004 4:17:59 AM PST by Common Tator
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To: kattracks
bump
14 posted on 01/20/2004 4:23:10 AM PST by foreverfree
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To: kattracks
BTTT
15 posted on 01/20/2004 4:26:28 AM PST by nicmarlo
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To: kattracks
Unions and taxes have driven almost all busness out of Iowa. Those that have not left already are packing, thanks to taxem to death Vilesack.
16 posted on 01/20/2004 5:53:14 AM PST by Piquaboy
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To: nicmarlo
Going to offer up my 2 cents here.

Politics is about winners and losers. You choose a side and if they win, you get goodies and if they lose you get screwed.

When you enter into the game, you are quickly made aware of the ruthlessness of it. Factory workers for years have supported the union, which in turn supported democratic, candidates. When the dems won, unions negotiated higher wages with management, which in turn lowered corporate profits, while raising the prices which Americans paid for goods. Very nice when you are winning.

When reps win, well guess who gets screwed? Yup, the same people that held up management for raises and bennies in previous administrations. Basically, as long as a Rep holds the key to the executive washroom, unions, who didn't support the Reps will get screwed and rightfully so. To bring back the profits that were taken away by higher wages, higher benefits and loss of revenue, products are made overseas with cheaper labor.

This is the political game the union bosses choose to play, using its membership as pawns. While I do have sympathy for the people that lose their jobs to cheaper imports, the only people to blame for this are the unions themselves.

Don't blame Bush, don't blame the administration. You threw your support behind your candidate and he lost. Deal with it!


17 posted on 01/20/2004 5:56:46 AM PST by EQAndyBuzz (Gore Lost! Deal with it!!!)
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To: RLK; woofer
In 1972 this county was one of the top 3 places to move in the world for a job, it was a scorching hot economy then. It was a helluva place to live and grow up.

The farm crisis really did us in, as did the unions in subsequent years. Can't believe how many times they and the pro-union elected officials drove away jobs during the 80's and early 90's with the deep farm crisis going on and people begging for jobs. Now we have a reputuation and business won't come here.

The dam is still pumping out 25HZ, and there are heavy load factories that still use it. It is an engineering marvel, built in 1913 by the same guy who built the Hoover I think. Started at both sides, he constantly measured and remeasured, and when the sides met they were only 1/4" off. Took a tour of the plant and was down in one of the intakes they were fixing when I was a kid. Freakin' cool. Amazing example of old school craftmanship.
18 posted on 01/20/2004 10:50:37 AM PST by Free Vulcan
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To: kattracks
If the Iowa caucus-goers rejected Gephardt and Dean, what did they endorse by overwhelmingly favoring Massachusetts Senator John F. Kerry and North Carolina Senator John Edwards? For one thing, they favored candidates less prone to the rhetoric of class warfare.

The union leadership a few years ago began to take up with a little honey on the side (socialism), leaving the rank and file to sit home and wonder. The Fox News, internet, talk radio "axis of truth" has served to slowly but surely expose the spin, the lies, the denial of who they really are, for all to see.

The unions, that is to say, their leadership and their rank and file, are no longer monolithic in their politics.

19 posted on 01/20/2004 11:31:31 AM PST by wayoverontheright
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