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Some Common Sense in Minnesota
Minnesota, for one reason or another, has quickly become the epicenter of the debate about the deceptively-named Employee Free Choice Act (EFCA). Earlier this summer, the Minnesota Democratic Farmer Labor party (DFL) Chairman called us liars for suggesting that the bill would eliminate secret ballot elections in workplace unionization elections. We, in turn, challenged him to [more...]

Posted Wed, 27 Aug 2008 .

I don’t know where to start
Folks, its been one hell of a morning here. First of all, Home Depot founder Bernie Marcus was on CNBC talking about the deceptively-named Employee Free Choice Act. As I mentioned yesterday, Marcus had an Op-Ed in yesterday’s Wall Street Journal. I think it was safe to say he was definitely fired up and ready [more...]

Posted Wed, 27 Aug 2008 .

 Read more at LaborPains.org

Common Misunderstandings

In addition to misleading statistics generated by union-affiliated organizations, there are a few union “talking points” that confuse the issue.

One of the most common misunderstandings is that, under the card check plan offered by labor-friendly politicians, employees could decertify their representation by the same mechanism. The legislation clearly avoids that possibility.

Union officials continue to promote the idea that, even if a card check bill were signed into law, employees could still have a private vote if they wanted one. This is at best misleading. Simple logic suggests that union officials would have no reason to call for a vote if they are able to achieve the simple majority of signatures in a bargaining unit. It would be tantamount to a politician winning an election and then asking for a recount.

Perhaps the most pernicious misstatement is that signing a union authorization card should be viewed the same as joining a voluntary association. Former Senator John Edwards gave a representative sample of his pro-card check stump speech in Las Vegas, where the Las Vegas Review-Journal quoted him in April 2006 saying, “If someone can join the Republican Party by putting their name on a card, then workers in the workplace all across America ought to be able to join the union by doing exactly the same thing.” But political parties do not have the equivalent power of a union official’s ability to tax, represent, or reprimand members. And signing up for a political party doesn’t force anyone else to start paying dues.