Printable Version
Tell a friend
UNION GROUPS DEMAND FEDS ACT VS. WAL-MART ANTI-OBAMA VOTING ORDER
Friday, August 15, 2008
(PAI)UNION GROUPS DEMAND FEDS ACT VS. WAL-MART
ANTI-OBAMA VOTING ORDER
By Mark
Gruenberg
PAI Staff
Writer
WASHINGTON (PAI)--The AFL-CIO, American Rights
at Work, Change to Win and WakeUp Wal-Mart
formally asked the government to probe and
punish Wal-Mart for its order to its managers
and supervisors to work against and vote
against Sen. Barack Obama (D-Ill.), because of
his support of the Employee Free Choice
Act. They called the order illegal under
federal election
law.
Their August 14 request to the Federal Election
Commission said the retail monster broke
federal election law with mandatory meetings
with its store managers and department
supervisors in seven states to push its
threat. The meetings were first reported
in the Wall Street
Journal.
The labor groups’ request may not get very
far. The FEC is known as a toothless
tiger in enforcing election law
violations. Its decisions, when they come
at all, are years after the law-breaking occurs
and its fines are usually
small.
The meetings were confirmed by other Wal-Mart
workers, who spoke on condition of anonymity,
fearing retaliation, but who nevertheless
called another organization that probes the
retailer, Wal-Mart Watch, to discuss the
sessions.
Wal-Mart, the Journal story said, specifically
warned managers and supervisors that working
and voting for Obama for president is a vote
for the Employee Free Choice Act. The
act, beaten by a Senate GOP filibuster this
year, will come up again in the next Congress.
Federal law lets corporations “communicate
express advocacy about federal candidates,”
such as Obama “only to a restricted class”
of employees, the labor groups’ complaint
says. That class has to be salaried, not
hourly, and it is only “employees who have
policymaking, managerial, professional or
supervisory
responsibilities.”
The Wal-Mart store managers and department
supervisors, summoned to the meetings about
Obama and EFCA, are hourly workers. Even
Wal-Mart’s spokesman calls them
“associates”--the behemoth’s name for
rank-and-file
workers.
The Employee Free Choice Act, which Wal-Mart
hates, would level the playing field between
workers and bosses in organizing and bargaining
by--among other things
--outlawing the
very “captive audience” meetings Wal-Mart
held. Firms hold those with workers in
almost all organizing drives, featuring
anti-union harangues with no rebuttals and
workers must attend or face discipline.
The act would not only outlaw those sessions,
but it would legalize
card-check
recognition of unions as an
option for workers to choose, increase fines
for labor law-breaking--another action Wal-Mart
is notorious for--and makes it easier to get
court orders against violators, especially
repeaters such as Wal-Mart.
Wal-Mart, which with 1.4 million workers is the
world’s largest private company, says it
talks with workers about EFCA but does not
pressure them how to vote on candidates who are
for or against it. The workers who called
Wal-Mart Watch say that’s ridiculous, given
the firm’s
history.
So does AFL-CIO Organizing Director Stewart
Acuff. He called Wal-Mart “guilty of
trying to bully" its workers and the U.S.
political system, reported a Canadian union
federation allied with the UFCW--which has been
trying to organize the monster retailer.
Wal-Mart Watch said the Journal story
"demonstrates once again Wal-Mart intimidates
its workers." The story was "consistent"
with many reports it got from Wal-Mart workers
in the last week, the organization added.
One Missouri supervisor who called flatly said
Wal-Mart was ordering them how to
vote.
“Some reports we received were even more
egregious than what was described in (the
Journal) story. In one case, a worker said they
were shown a slide that said 'Obama = union'
and then were told why unions were bad...All of
these tactics seem to be designed to keep
workers from demanding better wages, decent
benefits or fairer working conditions,”
Wal-Mart Watch
said.
Added Michael Whitney of American Rights at
Work: “Unfortunately for Wal-Mart workers,
this kind of intimidation is nothing new.
It's actually part and parcel for Wal-Mart's
business plan. When Wal-Mart employees stand up
for themselves and try to form a union, they
face threats, propaganda, discrimination,
intimidation, and even firings in
retaliation. What Wal-Mart is doing for
November's election is what it, and hundreds of
other anti-union companies, do all the time
when workers say they
want an union:
Intimidating them to go against their own
self-interests.
But while the FEC may be a toothless tiger,
Wal-Mart faces a more real threat north of the
border. Next year, the Canadian Supreme
Court will hear arguments by two workers in a
Wal-Mart store in Jonquiere, Quebec, that the
firm broke provincial labor law and freedom of
association by
union-busting.
Wal-Mart closed Jonquiere in April 2005, after
workers voted to unionize with UFCW Canada and
when Quebec law required Wal-Mart to bargain to
a first contract. Wal-Mart called
Jonquiere “unprofitable” and fired all 190
workers. Few believed that
explanation. "When the Supreme Court
accepts to hear you, it's because the case is
of national interest," said Louis Bolduc,
executive assistant to UFCW Canada's
president.
