Archive for July, 2010
Card Check: Still Unpopular, After All These Years
Shopfloor has the latest poll showing Ohioans are no fans of the misnamed Employee Free Choice Act. They are in good company. Check out our long list of posts covering polls that show just how unpopular the card check bill is with Americans of just about every stripe.
Card Check: So Lame (Duck Session)

If you can’t beat ‘em, sneak it through the back door at the 11th hour when the world has rejected you and your agenda.
That’s the potential scenario envisioned by The Wall Street Journal’s John Fund, who is doing great reporting to highlight these statements by leading Democratic politicians:
In the House, Arizona Rep. Raul Grijalva, co-chairman of the Congressional Progressive Caucus, told reporters last month that for bills like “card check”
Marco Rubio Talks Card Check

For a seemingly endless time we have been discussing the ways in which some politicians want to avoid the issue of card check (because their support for such an ill-conceived and unfair plan would be highly unpopular) while others are happy to bring it up (because their opposition matches the opinion of the vast majority of Americans).
The latest evidence comes from sunny Florida, where Senatorial candidate Marco Rubio discussed card check on Fox Business. Transcript here –
SULLIVAN: We have seen some victories. Health care obviously comes to mind. What do you think the unions want now? What is their big agenda? Is it maybe reinvigorating card check?
RUBIO: Oh, absolutely. I think that
“Mini Card Check” Is Major Problem
John Gizzi over at Human Events writes about efforts by the Obama Administration and others to push “mini card check” — his term for the effort by the National Mediation Board to approve a regulation that would change the way in which majorities airline and railroad workers approve a new union:
In other words, only those airline and railway workers who choose to vote on whether they want to organize a union will make that decision. One does not have to be an authority on union organizing to guess that this change of rules makes it much easier for labor leaders to expand union membership, thus enhancing their powers.
ABC Chairman: Obama Admin’s Card Check Will Kick Construction Industry When It’s Down
ABC 2010 national chairman Jim Elmer writes about project labor agreements and card check over at the Seattle Times. Pertinent to our interests:
The Employee Free Choice Act (EFCA) would strip a worker’s fundamental American right to a federally supervised secret-ballot election when deciding whether to join a labor union and replace it with a “card check” system. This would leave the worker vulnerable to coercion and harassment by union officials. EFCA could also force workers and businesses into binding wage and benefit contracts. These contracts would be set by a government bureaucrat with no required knowledge of the industry and would be binding for two years. Studies have shown that if EFCA became law, 600,000 jobs would be lost in the first year alone.
Entire article here.
Card Check: California Schemin’
California’s card check bill — yes, the one that was vetoed by the Governator — is saying, “I’ll be back,” according to the Capital Press.
The Governor was to be commended for vetoing the bill last time because card check is just plain bad.
Then again, unions in California aren’t known for being great on the economic outlook:








