Senator Sanders of Vermont is leading a campaign to restore collective bargaining rights. [CORRECTION!]
He wrote today:
As we celebrate Labor Day, 2024, there is some very good news.
Public approval of labor unions, at 70%, is higher today than it has been in decades. Over the last year major unions like the UAW have won some highly publicized strikes, while many other unions have negotiated trail-blazing contracts for their members. Young people at Starbucks and on college campuses are now more involved in labor organizing than ever before. And, for the first time in American history, a president of the United States, Joe Biden, walked a picket line with striking workers.
It is not an accident as to why we are now seeing more militancy and growth in the labor movement. The working people of our country are increasingly aware of the unprecedented level of corporate greed and power we are now experiencing, and the outrageous level of income and wealth inequality that exists. They understand that never before in American history have so few had so much, while so many continue to struggle. And they are fighting back. They know that workers in unions can negotiate contracts that give them better wages, working conditions and benefits than non-union workers. They appreciate that when you’re in a union you have some power against the arbitrary decisions corporate bosses.
Working people today are more than aware that, over the last 50 years, there has been a massive transfer of wealth from the bottom 90% to the top 1%. They are disgusted that, despite huge increases in worker productivity, real inflation-accounted for wages for the average American worker are lower now than they were over 50 years ago as 60% of Americans live paycheck to paycheck. They are insulted that CEOs of major corporations make almost 350 times as much as their average employee. They are concerned that the American dream is ending and that their kids may have an even lower standard of living than they do. And they worry that with the rapid growth of Artificial Intelligence and robotics, they have no power as to what will happen to their jobs as the economy undergoes major transformations.
The average American worker also understands that his/her political power has been significantly diminished as billionaires pour huge amounts of money into both political parties as they undermine our democracy. It is no great secret as to who now has the clout in Congress. It is the billionaires, the corporate CEOs, the campaign donors and their well-connected lobbyists.
Bottom line: The average American worker is sick and tired of status quo economics and politics. He/she knows that in the richest country on earth we can and should have an economy and political system that works for all, and not just the wealthy few, and that a strong union movement is the vehicle for bringing about the changes that we need.
On this Labor Day, as we reaffirm our support for the trade union movement and for labor solidarity throughout the world, as we continue to fight the day to day struggles against corporate greed, it’s important that we not lose sight of our vision for the future and what kind of country we want to become. Here, in my view, are just a few components of the agenda we need to fight for.
We must establish a vibrant democratic political system. One person, one vote. We must end the disastrous Citizens United Supreme Court decision and the billionaire funding of campaigns through super-PACs. We need to move to the public funding of elections and give political power back to ordinary Americans.
We need to pass the PRO Act and end the ability of companies to illegally intimidate and fire workers who want to join a union. Corporate interests spend an estimated $400 million a year on anti-union consultants who do everything possible, legal and illegal, to fight the right of workers to join unions.
We need to end starvation wages in America and raise the $7.25 an hour federal minimum wage to a living wage. People should not have to work two or three jobs just to pay the bills for their families.
We need trade policies that benefit workers in the U.S. and abroad, not just the CEOs and stockholders of major conglomerates. We need to rebuild our manufacturing sector and create good paying jobs here.
We need to join the rest of the industrialized world and guarantee health care to all people as a human right through a Medicare for All, single payer system. No one should go bankrupt because of a hospital stay. Everyone in America, regardless of income, should have the right to see a doctor.
We must finally guarantee paid family and medical leave to every worker in America. New moms and dads should be able to spend the first few months after delivery with their newborn child. Family members should be able to care for a loved-one who is sick without having to worry about missing a paycheck.
Like health care, education and job training must be considered a human right from childcare to graduate school. At a time when, in a highly competitive global economy, we need the best-educated workforce in the world, no one should be forced to go deeply in debt to get the education and training they need to be productive members of our society.
At a time when 50% of older workers have nothing in the bank for retirement, and 25% of seniors are trying to live on $15,000 a year or less, we must re-establish Defined Benefit Pension plans and increase Social Security benefits. Workers are entitled to a secure and dignified retirement.
And finally, we must address the unprecedented and outrageous level of income and wealth inequality that currently exists. No. It is not acceptable that three multibillionaires own more wealth than the bottom half of American society. It is not acceptable that many billionaires pay an effective tax rate that is lower than truck drivers or nurses. We need a progressive tax system that demands that the wealthiest people in our country finally start paying their fair share of taxes.
Let’s be clear. None of these progressive concepts are “radical.” While they are opposed by the Big Money interests and marginalized by the corporate media and the political establishment, they are strongly supported by a majority of the American people. Most of these ideas, in one form or another, are already in place in other wealthy countries around the world.
So, on this Labor Day, let us redouble our efforts to grow trade unionism in America and create the kind of grassroots movement we need to take on the power of the Oligarchy. Let us, in the wealthiest nation in the history of the world, create an economy that provides a decent standard of living for all, and not just massive and obscene income and wealth inequality.
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And let us never forget: When we stand united, and not let authoritarians and bigots divide us up, there is nothing that we cannot accomplish.
Happy Labor Day!
Bernie

So he, a wealthy US senator, complains about corporate greed, and then asks me to send him $$$$$$. How hypocritical!
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Jim,
No matter how much money Senator Sanders has (he is not a billionaire), he cannot single-handedly finance a multi-state campaign to restore the right of collective bargaining.
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Hi Diane: Not a word, however, about PUBLIC education. And these are WORKERS and not CITIZENS? Though I know he is speaking on LABOR DAY.
Also, Jim Waters’ note about Bernie’s hypocrisy only betrays Waters’ own wealth of ignorance. He might want to look at what the money is used for, not only that Sanders asked for help. CBK
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From Town and Country magazine: Sanders’s wealth, though substantial, hardly makes him rich by congress’s standards. Several Capitol Hill lawmakers have net worths in excess of $100 million; Sanders isn’t even among the top 100 most affluent in congress. end quote
A lot of his wealth came from his best selling books which brought in millions. Though much of his royalties from the books goes to charity.
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New Hampshire? They’d be pretty surprised to hear that!
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Vermont’s Bernie Sanders.
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Jersey Joe, I must have had a brain lapse for a moment. I got Senator Bernie’s letter about 10:47 am. I had to rush to post it at 11 am. Thanks for catching my error!
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I make goofs every day. I don’t know how you do what you do, making multiple posts every day, many very long and complex issues and still not make any errors or rarely make an error. Thank you for what you do for public schools, democracy and sanity.
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Thank you, Jersey Joe.
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No matter how old Bernie gets, he continues to work for a more inclusive economic system. He knows how flawed our current laws and programs are, but he continues to work for changes that will help working families. The only way we can continue to work towards Bernie’s vision is to elect Harris and Walz. Trump and company will do everything they can to crush unions and social safety nets while they transfer even more wealth to the ultra-wealthy.
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What Senator Sanders says rings true like a clarion bell crossed with a Tibetan singing bowl so huge — so YUGE it seems like a perpetual Newton’s Cradle. For years, every Labor Day and every day, Bernie has thundered from the mountaintop the truths needed to be heard. Bernie said ’em, and Bernie meant ’em, and it created Berniementum, and it was good! Blessings on that man, and for the sake of goodness, get him some stadiums to rock.
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Remember the age of the Robber Barons in the US. Never forget.
There’s a reason Traitor Trump named his youngest son Baron. Traitor Trump was planning ahead.
Project 2025 put those plans into print.
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Lloyd: Publishing the 2025 plan equates to a thief calling up and telling the proposed victim: “Hay, I’m going to break into your house and rob you on November 5.”
Their “too bad for you” and “in your face” attitude, ala Stephen Millier, however, and Steve Bannon’s glee, make me wonder about what violence they have planned. CBK
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CBK,
Project 2025 is not only advance warning of what they plan to do but is quite detailed. It’s like telling the homeowner: I plan to rob you; I have the code to your security device. I will rob you on this date and at this time.
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Diane: Their gleeful “letting the cat out of the bag” however, is not working to their advantage. CBK
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These Repugnicans ALWAYS make the mistake of thinking that more people are with them on the issues than is actually the case. That’s because they live in their protected, walls and gatehouse bubbles where everyone else thinks (if one can call it that) as they do, among people who think that The National Review is a journal for intellectuals.
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Bob: I couldn’t agree with you more. I remember when Obama was running, there were people in the south who said it WILL NEVER HAPPEN, not realizing how the rest of the country was thinking. Such is the echo reverberating in the rabbit hole.
BTW, Trump is not a Republican–never was, never will be. CBK
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Sorry, CBK, but I can’t go with you there. The Republican Party that you and I both remember no longer exists. It is not Trump’s party.
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Bob: That’s exactly what I was saying. For one thing, even if one was not a Republican of the last half of the last century, I don’t remember ever thinking that being Republican meant being insane–and it’s not even being “Republican,” though that’s how the “ticket” reads. It’s about being either MAGA bat-sxxt stupid, or ultra-capitalist e.g., not wanting to pay one’s fair share of taxes; or still hoping Trump will change; or being a religious zealot.
A non-starter argument anyway. It depends on what you or I or the guy next door mean by “Republican” or democrat, for that matter. . . . again, non-starter. CBK
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PRO Act
Kamala has pledged that she will work to enact the PRO Act — the Protecting the Right to Organize Act. Enactment of PRO is absolutely essential to the renewal of The American Middle Class because PRO will return to Middle Class Americans the collective power to win fair wages, good health insurance, and reliable fixed-benefit retirement plans to replace bank-friendly 401(k) plans.
The American Middle Class has greatly declined because of the corporation-sponsored Taft-Hartley Act which severely restricted the constitutional right of American workers to organize into unions and to take job actions to protest unfair wages and treatment. The corporate Taft-Hartley Act (Labor Management Relations Act) tilted power in favor of corporate management and made it possible for corporations to buy political influence in state legislatures to pass so-called “Right to Work” laws that are actually “Right to Fire Union Workers” laws. The PRO Act will end all of that.
If We the People elect Kamala and elect Democratic majorities to the House and Senate in November, passage of the PRO Act will put America on course to rebuilding the great American Middle Class and to restoring The American Dream.
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Exactly.
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If We the People elect Kamala and elect Democratic majorities to the House and Senate in November, passage of the PRO Act will put America on course to rebuilding the great American Middle Class and to restoring The American Dream.
YESSSSSS!!!
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