Health care reform isnft the
only issue dealt a major setback by the stunning political upset in
Massachusetts. A bill that would make it easier for workers to form
a union now faces longer odds in the Senate.
When Sen.-elect Scott Brown, R-Massachusetts, is sworn in to the
seat once occupied by the late Sen. Edward Kennedy, he will be in a
position to deliver a potentially decisive vote against the Employee
Free Choice Act.
Brown will become the 41st Senate Republican, which gives the
caucus precisely the number of votes it needs to sustain a
filibuster. Republicans used the parliamentary tactic to kill EFCA
in 2007. The number of Senate Democrats will drop to 59 after Brown
joins the body.
Brown, who beat Democratic Massachusetts Attorney General Martha
Coakley in a Tuesday, January 19, special election to replace
Kennedy, opposes the bill.
The measure has stalled since its March introduction. Even when
the Democratic Senate caucus numbered 60, EFCA supporters couldnft
bring enough moderate Democrats on board to overcome a
filibuster.
Organized labor is signaling that it wonft back down on EFCA,
even though leaders didnft mention the bill by name in their
reaction to Brownfs election.
gThe American people are urgently expecting RESULTS from
Washington,h AFL-CIO president Richard Trumka said in a statement
Tuesday. gIf elected officials want the support of working families
they need to fight to win legislation on jobs, health care and
financial regulations.h
Labor supporters argue that EFCA should be part of the economic
recovery conversation because it would give workers leverage to
increase their wages and benefits through collective bargaining.
gWe believe that Congress will be anxious to consider legislation
that will help rebuild the middle class as part of its focus on jobs
and the economy,h said a labor official who didnft want to be quoted
on the record talking about EFCA strategy.
Labor has been battling fiercely with business interests for
nearly a year regarding the bill.
Employer groups arenft letting their guard down. Theyfre wary of
labor trying to use jobs legislation to pass EFCA.
gThe margin against EFCA still remains razor thin,h said Glenn
Spencer, executive director of the Workforce Freedom Initiative at
the U.S. Chamber of Commerce. gWefre going to remain vigilant on any
effort to ram EFCA through, especially any effort to cram any
provisions into a jobs bill.h
In its original form, the measure would enable a union to form
once a majority of workers signed cards authorizing one, effectively
eliminating secret-ballot organizing elections. It also would impose
mandatory binding arbitration on first-contract disputes and
substantially increase penalties against employers for violating
workersf rights.
EFCA is the top priority of organized labor, which is seeking
ways to increase its numbers. Currently, about 7 percent of the
private-sector workforce is unionized.
With midterm elections looming, the challenge to pass EFCA will
only get tougher after this year. Democrats might lose more Senate
seats in November.
In a January 11 speech at the National Press Club in Washington,
Trumka
said that the measure would gain congressional approval by
April.
gItfs kind of now or never for them,h said Brett McMahon, vice
president of Miller & Long, a concrete subcontractor and a
member of Associated Builders and Contractors. gIf the chances are
[lower] now to get something done, they may become truly impossible
in the next Congress.h
—Mark Schoeff
Jr.
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