By Bob Mattingly
In a post-election statement,
AFL-CIO president John J. Sweeny said organized labor did its job, but workers were let
down by the Democratic Party that didnt have a plan to strengthen the
economy
.[T]he Democrats, he complained, needed to be crystal clear about
what they stand for, and to present an alternative vision to the country that creates
excitement among disenfranchised voters and inspires hope.
What Sweeney didnt offer
was an explanation as to why the Democrats didnt promise the nations workers
that they would end joblessness, make sure that the elderly have secure retirement years,
and that no American would ever again be without medical care. Surely, such a program
would create excitement and inspire hope, along the lines that Sweeney says he would like
to see.
Sweeney, who has lobbied on
Capitol Hill for decades and knows, only too well, the extent of corporate dominance of
both major parties, didnt lash out at corporate Americas famously Tweedle-dum,
Tweedle-dee political scam. In fact, he propped the scam up, when he said that
todays labor unions run an issues-driven program and look at where officials
and candidates stand on issues without regard to party label. We support pro-working
family Republicans wherever we can.
Nevertheless, Sweeney said that
organized labor wasnt going to wait for either party, and the AFL-CIO is going
to lead an economic, working families agenda. Were going to drive a program of
legislation and politics thats rooted in what matters most to working people. Good
jobs. Health care. Retirement security.
But he didnt
say what the AFL-CIO was going to do thats different from what they have been doing.
For example, Sweeney didnt say that organized labor was going to stop rewarding the
so-called friends of labor, a policy that has led workers to the present
political dead-end. Nor did he even level the threat of forming a labor party, as unions
sometimes did, even when George Meany ruled atop organized labor. Nor did Sweeney say that
labor would return to its winning 1930s strategies of fighting back at the point of
production and mobilizing millions of workers in the streets, actions that forced the
corporate politicians of that time to enact most of the social legislation that
constitutes much of what left of societys safety-net.
Sweeney and Co. will not even
mention resistance at the point of production to speed-up and downsizing.
There will be no street-heat of the 1930s variety. Under Sweeney and Co.
there will be no move toward political independence; instead Sweeney will continue the
labor officialdoms political partnership with the Democrats, the equivalent of
electing a superintendent to be the shop steward and the front office boss to be the
business agent
In short, workers can expect
from Sweeney more of the same-old, same-old, no matter what guise its
dressed in.