Under unrelenting pressure from major corporations, unions have experienced a precipitous decline in their numbers in recent decades. Only about 11.3% of workers belong to a union, and most work for government. Among the nation’s largest unions are the National Education Association and the American Federation of Teachers. Rightwing provocateurs have gone to the Supreme Court repeatedly to strip these unions of their power to defend the rights of their members.
Despite the decline in union membership, public opinion of unions is almost at the highest point ever at 71%, according to the latest Gallup poll.
Just in the last few days, unions won an important victory before the National Labor Relations Board. This victory was possible because Biden was elected in 2020, not Trump. Trump would have appointed people to squash unions like pesky bugs.
Harold Meyerson wrote about the ramifications of the latest NLRB decision:
Hot Labor Summer just became a scorcher.
Last Friday, the National Labor Relations Board released its most important ruling in many decades. In a party-line decision in Cemex Construction Materials Pacific, LLC, the Board ruled that when a majority of a company’s employees file union affiliation cards, the employer can either voluntarily recognize their union or, if not, ask the Board to run a union recognition election. If, in the run-up to or during that election, the employer commits an unfair labor practice, such as illegally firing pro-union workers (which has become routine in nearly every such election over the past 40 years, as the penalties have been negligible), the Board will order the employer to recognize the union and enter forthwith into bargaining.
The Cemex decision was preceded by another, one day earlier, in which the Board, also along party lines, set out rules for representation elections which required them to be held promptly after the Board had been asked to conduct them, curtailing employers’ ability to delay them, often indefinitely.
Taken together, this one-two punch effectively makes union organizing possible again, after decades in which unpunished employer illegality was the most decisive factor in reducing the nation’s rate of private-sector unionization from roughly 35 percent to the bare 6 percent at which it stands today.
In the Board’s press release outlining its 121-page decision in Cemex, it explained:
“… the revised framework represents an effort to better effectuate employees’ right to bargain through their chosen representative, while acknowledging that employers have the option to invoke the statutory provision allowing them to pursue a Board election. When employers pursue this option, the new standard will promote a fair election environment by more effectively disincentivizing employers from committing unfair labor practices.”
“This is a sea change, a home run for workers,” said Brian Petruska, an attorney for the Laborers Union who authored a 2017 law review article on how to effectively restore to workers their right to collective bargaining enshrined in the 1935 National Labor Relations Act, which was all but nullified by the act’s weakening over the past half-century. Taken together, Petruska added, last week’s decisions recreate “a system with no tolerance for employers’ coercion of their employees” when their employees seek their legal right to collective bargaining.
Petruska’s 2017 article explained how an attorney’s misstatement in a 1969 case before the Supreme Court (NLRB v. Gissel Packing Co.) led to the abandonment of a previous Board ruling in the case of Joy Silk Mills, which had required employers to recognize their workers’ union and enter into bargaining if they’d refused to recognize the union after a majority of workers had voted for affiliation. The article didn’t draw wide notice; at least, until President Biden’s appointee as the NLRB’s general counsel, Jennifer Abruzzo, sent out her initial memo to the 500 NLRB attorneys across the country whom she supervised. In the memo, Abruzzo laid out the kind of cases those attorneys could pursue, and suggested that they consider cases based on the long-forgotten Joy Silk standard, which she viewed as erroneously discarded, with demonstrably catastrophic consequences for workers’ right to unionize and bargain.
How catastrophic? In the profile I wrote of Abruzzo in the April 2022 print issue of the Prospect, I cited numbers from Petruska’s article that showed “in the five years before Joy Silk was struck down, charges of employer intimidation totaled about 1,000 cases a year. Once the softball remedies of Gissel became the standard, charges exploded to a peak of 6,493 in 1981, after which they fell along with unionization efforts generally.” As the new post–Joy Silk tolerance for employer coercion became the norm, interest in organizing withered.
By the time Abruzzo became general counsel, “even labor lawyers had forgotten about Joy Silk,” which had then been a dead letter for 52 years, UC Berkeley law professor Catherine Fisk told me for my Abruzzo profile. Abruzzo, however, had had a long career as an NLRB attorney and had also served as a special counsel for the Communications Workers of America (CWA), a consistently militant union. Even within the community of pro-labor attorneys, she was known for her exceptional dedication to worker rights and her knowledge of how the laws that once afforded them their rights could be revived and renewed. The brief she presented to the Board in the Cemex case promoted a ruling that differs in some respects from the standards promulgated in Joy Silk, but its effect is essentially comparable.
The Cemex decision secures Abruzzo’s place as the most important public official to secure American workers’ rights since New York Sen. Robert Wagner, who authored the NLRA in 1935 (the same year he authored the Social Security Act).
Since the days of Lyndon Johnson, every time that the Democrats have controlled the White House and both houses of Congress, they’ve tried to put some teeth back into the steadily more toothless NLRA. But they’ve never managed to muster the 60 votes needed to get those measures through the Senate. The Cemex ruling actually goes beyond much of what was proposed in those never-enacted bills.
Still, there’s one crucial element to restoring workers’ rights that has yet to be accomplished: Companies can still indefinitely refuse to agree on a contract. Some of the failed labor law reform bills included provisions mandating that an arbitrator impose a contract if no agreement has been reached after a specified period of time (say, 90 or 180 days). Absent such a provision, workers’ rights can still be thwarted, which we’re seeing happen in real time with the inability to complete a first contract at hundreds of Starbucks shops and Amazon’s warehouse in Staten Island.
Nonetheless, Cemex should open the door to more organizing campaigns than American labor has seen for decades, at least among those unions (SEIU, CWA, the Teamsters, National Nurses United, the private-sector wings of AFSCME, and the American Federation of Teachers, to name just some) that still have robust organizing departments. It could help the Steelworkers, the newly led United Auto Workers, and the Machinists to organize the federal incentive–driven factories springing up in the historically anti-union South.
One reason that these two landmark decisions came down last week was that the term of one of the three Biden appointees to the Board, Gwynne Wilcox, is about to run out. Board terms normally last for five years, but Wilcox was appointed for just two years to fill out the balance of the term of a member who had retired early. Once she’s off the Board, there will be just three members, since one of the Board’s Republican seats has now been vacant for nearly a year. (By mutual consent, the Board is composed of three members from the president’s party and two from the opposition.) And when it has only three members, the Board is forbidden from making decisions that change its rules.
The normal procedure for filling seats on the Board (like with many multimember commissions) is that an appointee from one party comes before the Senate for confirmation in tandem with an appointee from the other party. However, hoping to thwart the now Biden-dominated Board from making decisions like those of last week, the Republicans, backed by the U.S. Chamber of Commerce, have declined to put forth a nominee to fill the vacant Republican seat, plainly hoping that Democrats would adhere to the custom of not bringing up an unaccompanied Biden appointee for a vote. More precisely, they’ve wagered that the anti-worker duo of Sens. Manchin and Sinema would deny that nominee the 51st vote required for confirmation, using the fig leaf of the absence of a Republican nominee to justify their opposition.
The White House renominated Wilcox for a five-year term some time ago, and Bernie Sanders’s Senate Labor Committee has sent her nomination to the floor, with all the committee Democrats plus Alaska Republican Lisa Murkowski voting to do so. For whatever reason, however, both the Biden administration and Democratic Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer have put the floor vote on hold, perhaps in the vain hope that Senate Republicans will put forth their nominee, which Republicans have made obvious that they have no intention of doing. As a result, the Board is about to go down to three members, and become effectively inert.
Hence, the timing of last week’s one-two punch on the eve of Wilcox’s departure, even if just temporary. It will require the vote of any one of Manchin, Sinema, or Murkowski to restore the Board to its rulemaking authority.
Despite that drama, last week’s punch was historic. “Congress passed the NLRA to give workers the right to deal with their work issues immediately, not to have them delayed and denied by employers who feel free to violate the law,” says Jules Bernstein, the doyen of the D.C. union-side bar. “A ruling that restores that right—and that’s what the Cemex ruling does—is terrific, and long overdue.”

Now if only the UFT and other unions would stop trying to harm their own retirees in exchange for bigger paychecks for active workers. The major city unions along with the Adams administration have lost in court several times in their attempts to force retirees into a deplorable Medicare Advantage Plan. Randi Weingarten has publicly supported Mulgrew’s efforts to harm retirees. Enough said.
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Biden is an American hero. He’s actively protecting individual freedom by curbing exploitation by the rich. He heeded Lincoln’s warning about the threat from those who will eat the bread for which others toil.
And, he’s expending great effort to preserve separation of church and state and women’s rights which are under unrelenting attack by the American Catholic Church.
Diane, thanks for posting this union win information.
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Agree with you, Linda! 👍
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Except that Biden maintained Trump’s policies and assault on Medicare until pressured by retiree/medical groups to lessen the assault but still maintained part of Trump’s awful policies.
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Michael Brocoum
There is no doubt that Medicare is not solvent . The question is why does that matter. Something most Politicians are reticent to admit . So until the American People understand that in the words of that astute (okay not quite ) VP “deficits don’t matter ” nor National debt. We are stuck with Biden trying to appease fiscal conservative politicians in both parties .
But try explaining that to the American people. Explain that the Debt Clock went up in 1989 after Peter G Peterson ranted for a decade or more starting when the debt was under a trillion. Ranting that the end was near. 32 times a trillion later and the US Economy and Currency is stronger today than it was in the early 80s.
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In NYC the retirees cost the city less that 1/2 of 1% of it’s budget. The UFT negotiated a deal back in 2014 with de Blasio to use money from a health fund for active worker health insurance to pay for their raises and the unions agreed to cut retiree healthcare to in order for the city to replenish the fund. Three court cases so far have ruled in favor of the retirees.
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He surprises me every day, Linda.
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Linda
Biden is a Catholic 😁
Now all he needs is for those Union Members to appreciate what he has tried to do. To appreciate what he has accomplished. That includes members of those Rail Unions whose asses he saved from the disaster of a Republican House imposing a contract. While the Biden Transportation Secretary( out of character for Pete McKensey &Co. Buttigieg ) twisted the arms of the major Rail Carriers to provide the sick days they had been asking for. 4 of the 5 largest have now post contract added those sick days. Of course sick days was never really the issue but you get what you ask for. The real issue was staffing cuts that created absurd overtime requirements . But you can’t have your cake and eat it too. Restored staffing levels would have eliminated overtime and workers did not want that either.
Unfortunately the Leadership of the Union movement put very little effort into mobilizing their members to push for the PRO Act something that would have required abandoning the filibusterer and at least some Repulican support to overcome the 5 Democratic Senators who were hesitant to support it. 3 switched over when it had no chance.
The AFL-CIO and most of its International Unions and Locals knowing it was going to fail , put almost no effort into mobilizing to pass it. No effort into educating the membership about it. No effort into explaining to its members why it was going to fail and exactly who killed it and how they caused the failure. Going so far as asking Virginia State AFL-CIO Union members who showed up weekly at Sen Tim Kaine’s Virginia House to stop dropping off large sheet cakes asking for support. The cakes were harassment , while the Right shows up at School Boards Locked and Loaded.
That was a profound failure, Abortion would still be a Constitutional Right if the Right was led by the leaders of Organized labor. It took close to 45 years to overturn the will of the people on Abortion . But they never gave up. Bombing Clinics not delivering cakes
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Joel-
If the Catholic Church is successful with its school privatization campaign, speculate the quantitative effect on union membership in the US.
Biden’s religious sect is irrelevant. His political actions are unrelated to church policy or agenda unlike right wing Catholics who are inextricably linked to the Bishops’ vision for the the US.
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“The Cemex decision secures (Biden’s nominee) Abruzzo’s place as the most important public official to secure American workers’ rights since New York Sen. Robert Wagner, who authored the NLRA in 1935 (the same year he authored the Social Security Act).”
I’d say the most important ruling since 1935 is pretty important. Go Joe!
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Biden is trying hard to help labor get back on its feet. In the construction of the new chip factory in Arizona, the Taiwanese company building the factory has wanted to bring over 500 of their people to work on the construction. Their claim is that US workers lack the skills, but US workers feel the company intends to bring in cheaper labor. To avoid similar disputes, Biden signed an executive order requiring contractors on federal projects of more than $35 million have a labor/wage agreement in place before starting the projects. While there are some other requirements in his order, Biden is attempting to ensure that workers are paid a reasonable wage. https://www.courthousenews.com/biden-mandates-union-work-in-federal-construction-projects/
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I agree about Biden However the issue in Arizona is not covered in the Biden Executive Order which applies to Infrastructure work in the Infrastructure act, not the Chips Act.
The problem at the Arizona Plant are multifaceted . You have a company used to working in a completely different corporate environment . A Non Union environment in a country where Corporations are God. Now they are running into Union Workers and Local , State and Federal Regulations. Being in the Industry I am very sympathetic to the argument made in this article by the workers .
https://www.businessinsider.com/tsmc-phoenix-arizona-chip-factory-taiwan-semiconductor-management-safety-workers-2023-8
I was paid to install what you tell me to, in the manner that you prescribe. I can offer to explain to you what is wrong with your design or will not pass Local inspections. In the end I will get paid again very nicely to correct the non functional designs like Pipe work that interfered with other systems being installed by other contractors or violations of Local and National Building codes.
On the other hand things reached a boiling point because of boiling weather and the lack of Federal OSHA Regulation.
When Temperatures rose to ungodly amounts. Instead of the Job being closed ,OSHA merely states that the contractor shall take steps to make sure that workers know how to mitigate the risk of heat stroke… The workers many if not most of them not being local Union members residing near the project took matters into their own hands. They moved on to GREENER COOLER pastures. To attract replacements the Union and Contractors agreed to a Per Diem bonus to be paid to Union workers from out of town coming to work at the Plant when the bill was handed to TSMC the company used to dealing with wage slaves in Taiwan and elsewhere freaked out and threatened to bring in Taiwanese workers.
They workers would be brought in under a Multi Nation Treaty from the late 1800s that allowed investors to come into the country on a visa.
The Unions started a letter writing campaign to congress. Show us the documentation that these workers are on the Board of Directors of TSMC or significant investors and then and only then should they be granted Visas by the State Dept. !!!!!!
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Thanks for the correction.
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These gains will only last as long as Biden or someone similar to Biden is in the White House without a Republican majority in at least one or both Houses of Congress.
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Catholic News Agency about Labor Day 2023, “The Catholic Church (and) Labor Day”
A Priest in Beaumont Texas describes his experience, Catholic parishes often neglect to provide unemployment insurance to employees if the law allows them to opt out…Catholic institutions often act as “at-will” employers…They may show preference for non-union labor …for construction projects.
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Makes me wonder why he threw the rail workers under the bus. The answer is that Biden and the Democratic party are wholly owned subsidiaries of Big Ag, Big Pharma, and Big Whatev.
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Really? If Trump is re-elected, there won’t be any more unions. Biden’s PRO Act would have strengthened all unions. It was blocked by Manchin and Sinema, corporate tools.
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Agree.
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