Saturday, May 28, 2011

New Jersey Dem puts the muscle against union decertification drive

Union card check, what I call "free-to-peek" intimidation, makes it much easier to join a union. And if you have a muscle-bound goon handing you that union petion, you're more likely to sign it.

Kicking a union out of a workplace is difficult, but do-able. But a congressman from state known for producing wise-guys, New Jersey, wants to make it even harder, as Freedom@Work tells us.

On Capitol Hill, New Jersey Congressman Rush Holt is a prominent Big Labor enabler: He's cosponsored the notorious "card check" forced unionism bill, taken tens of thousands of dollars from union bosses who use their forced-dues powers to funnel money into politics, and generally opposed expanding workplace freedom at every turn. His latest stunt? A heavy-handed attempt to block a decertification election that would have thrown an unwanted union out of a New Jersey workplace.

Recently, Holt wrote a letter (pdf) urging the NLRB to block a decertification election that would have removed Teamster bosses from the Durham School Bus offices in Middletown, New Jersey. Holt claims that the company's unfair labor practices tainted the election, but even if his assertion were true, workers attempting to eject unwelcome union bosses shouldn't be punished for management's mistakes. Moreover, Big Labor operatives frequently resort to frivolous legal challenges to prevent employees from getting rid of unions.

Although the election was held as scheduled and Teamster officials ultimately held on to their forced-dues privileges, Holt's letter demonstrates Big Labor's staggering political influence. Union bosses will stop at nothing to push more workers into their forced-dues paying ranks. Getting a sitting Congressman to intervene in what was supposed to be an even-handed union decertification election is just the latest example of their political pull. After all, they've done it before, and they'll surely do it again.
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