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   1. 2014. From Coldwar Communism to the Global Justice Movement:
   Itinerary of a Long-Distance Internationalist.
   <http://snuproject.wordpress.com/2015/01/02/1987-e-reader-ed-by-peter-waterman-on-labour-social-movements-and-internationalism-the-old-internationalism-and-the-new/>http://www.into-ebooks.com/book/from_coldwar_communism
   _to_the_global_emancipatory_movement/
   <http://www.into-ebooks.com/book/from_coldwar_communism_to_the_global_emancipatory_movement/>
(Free).

   2. 2014. Interface Journal Special (Co-Editor), December 2014. 'Social
   Movement Internationalisms'. (Free).
   <http://www.interfacejournal.net/current/>
* <http://www.interfacejournal.net/current/>*
   3. 2014. 'The Networked Internationalism of Labour's Others', in Jai Sen
   (ed), Peter Waterman (co-ed), The Movement of Movements:
   <http://www.into-ebooks.com/book/the_movements_of_movements/>Struggles
   for Other Worlds  (Part I).
   <http://www.into-ebooks.com/book/the_movements_of_movements/> (10 Euros).
4. 2012. EBook: Recovering Internationalism
   <http://www.into-ebooks.com/book/recovering_internationalism/>.  [A
   compilation of papers from the new millenium. Now free in two download
   formats]
   5. 2013. EBook (co-editor), February 2013: World Social Forum: Critical
   Explorations http://www.into-ebooks.com/book/world_social_forum/
   6. 2012. Interface Journal Special (co-editor), November 2012: *For the
   Global Emancipation of Labour  <http://www.interfacejournal.net/current/>*
   7. 2005-?
   <http://interfacejournal.nuim.ie/wordpress/wp-content/uploads/2010/11/Interface-1-2-pp255-262-Waterman.pdf>
   Ongoing. Blog: http://www.unionbook.org/profile/peterwaterman.???. Needed:
   a Global Labour Charter Movement (2005-Now!)
   <http://interfacejournal.nuim.ie/wordpress/wp-content/uploads/2010/11/Interface-1-2-pp255-262-Waterman.pdf>
   8. 2011. Under, Against, Beyond: Labour and Social Movements Confront a
   Globalised, Informatised Capitalism
   <http://www.into-ebooks.com/book/under-against-beyond/>(2011) (c. 1,000
   pages of Working Papers, free, from the 1980's-90's).


---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: Sid Shniad <[log in to unmask]>
Date: Sun, May 3, 2015 at 9:08 PM
Subject: Just a whisper now: a look back at the AFL-CIO New Voice after 20
years
To:








*http://stansburyforum.com/just-a-whisper-now-a-look-back-at-the-afl-cio-new-voice-after-20-years/
<http://stansburyforum.com/just-a-whisper-now-a-look-back-at-the-afl-cio-new-voice-after-20-years/>Stansbury
Forum     April 27, 2015Just a whisper now: a look back at the AFL-CIO New
Voice after 20 yearsBy Peter Olney and Rand Wilson*

In November 2014, Teamsters Local 25 succeeded in uniting more than 1,500
parking lot attendants in Boston. As reported by the Boston Globe, the
workers were almost all immigrants, many from Afric
<http://www.bostonglobe.com/business/2014/11/09/teamsters-organizing-parking-attendants/8HXoKxbdwcWzWN1qgbE6NO/story.html#>a.
As organizers, we believe that when thousands of immigrant workers win
collective bargaining rights and rise out of the lowest tier of the working
class it’s important news. Yet their organizing victory was virtually
unknown to most of Boston’s labor community because it was quietly brought
about over several years of patient organizing. It was not part of the “Fight
for $15″ <http://fightfor15.org/april15/> or the OUR Wal-Mart
<http://forrespect.org/> mobilizations, and had none of the bold, public
ambition of organizing millions of fast food workers or the 1.3 million
workers employed by Wal-Mart.(1)

The parking lot attendants’ victory — and hundreds of similar organizing
and collective bargaining achievements — are too often ignored by pundits,
academic observers and labor movement insiders. Their mantra seems to be
that with membership plummeting in both the private and public sectors
labor faces “an existential crisis” and needs “bold new approaches and
initiatives.”(2)

However, the “crisis” is hardly new. Twenty years ago, in 1995, labor was
also in crisis. In 1994, Newt Gingrich had led the Republicans to victory
and seized control of the House of Representatives, just two years into
Bill Clinton’s first term. Even sleepy old Vice Presidents of the AFL-CIO
woke up in the Executive Council meeting to ask long-time President Lane
Kirkland, “What’s going on?”

Then as now, labor was indeed in crisis. Union density was lower than any
time in the postwar period at 17 percent and Gingrich’s “Take Back America”
movement meant that the AFL-CIO’s political program was stymied.

What was to be done? Kirkland was increasingly seen by union leaders as
having no answers. Rank and file local union leaders were openly restless.
National union leaders were worried too, and for the first time since the
formation of the AFL-CIO in 1955, an active challenge to the incumbent
president was launched, led by the Service Employees International Union
(SEIU) and the Teamsters
<http://www.multinationalmonitor.org/hyper/issues/1995/06/mm0695_03.html>.

Teamsters?? Weren’t they on the cutting edge of the Cosa Nostra, not the
labor movement? The union that always endorses Republicans? Those stodgy
old, mobbed up Teamsters weren’t so stodgy anymore. In 1991, Ron Carey
<http://www.uniondemocracy.org/UDR/22-vindication%20of%20Ron%20Carey.htm>,
a reformer from the big New York City UPS local, joined a slate led by
Teamsters
for a Democratic Union (TDU) <http://www.tdu.org/> reformers and beat a
divided old guard in the first one member, one vote election. At his
January 1992 inauguration as new International President at the Teamster’s
“marble palace” in Washington DC, he was surrounded by newly elected
Teamster leaders, progressives from throughout the labor movement, and
hundreds of long time, dedicated TDUers. Overnight the Teamsters went from
reactionary to the leading edge of the labor movement. The Carey election
was the “game changer” for the restless forces growing in opposition to
Lane Kirkland and his chosen successor, Tom Donahue.

Hope — and the promise of significant change — was in the air. A year
earlier, the Justice for Janitors
<http://www.seiu.org/division/property-services/justice-for-janitors/>
blockade of the 14th Street Bridge in Washington, DC became the
revitalizing metaphor for the New Voice movement
<http://articles.latimes.com/1995-10-26/business/fi-61364_1_labor-federation>.
A movement that envisioned a more active “street heat” unionism, mobilizing
at the grassroots to organize the millions necessary to return labor to its
35 percent postwar membership in the private sector.(3)

The New Voice wasn’t just about growth, it envisioned a labor movement that
reclaimed its place as a powerful force for justice in the community and
strongly allied with the country’s progressive intelligentsia. But
organizing was the magic word.

SEIU President John Sweeney, at the time head of the most aggressive and
successful organizing union in the country was the consensus choice to lead
the New Voice slate. The Teamster reformers infused the coalition with
enough votes to make the election a foregone conclusion in November of
1995.

After the votes were counted, over 500 organizers (many of them old
comrades and student radicals from the New Left who had cast their lot with
labor) celebrated in a raucous dancing and drinking party that lasted until
the wee hours. A sense of promise and rebirth was in the air. As the
refrain from the labor anthem, Solidarity Forever goes, “We would bring to
birth a new world from the ashes of the old!”

After the party was over, it was time to get to the task of organizing
millions of new members. To its enduring credit the New Voice program
highlighted many of the elements necessary to launch successful large scale
organizing. To re-energize support for organizing and collective bargaining
with members and leaders, the New Voice launched an ambitious agenda to:

*• Increase AFL-CIO affiliates’ budgets for organizing to 20-30 percent of
union resources with the objective to organize millions of new members(4)*

* • Adopt policies that were more inclusive of the immigrant labor force(5)
• Commitment to diversify the leadership of the AFL-CIO with a more
prominent role for women and people of color(6) • Engage community and
civil rights groups, academics and intellectuals to support organizing,
collective bargaining and the mission of the labor movement(7) • Assist
with coordinated campaigns and cooperative organizing between affiliates
(and increase resources from the Federation for affiliates to engage in
strategic organizing campaigns)(8) • Deploy more research assistance to
affiliates to “bargain-to-organize” and “organize-to-bargain” campaigns(9)
• Transform politics by electing thousands of union members to political
office(10) • Engage members and supporters in grassroots “Street Heat”
mobilizations led by local labor councils to support workers’
organizing(11) • Recruit and train thousands of new organizers to build
strong worker-led committees and deal with aggressive interference by
management(12) *

*• Launch a broad “America Needs a Raise” campaign to raise wages for all
workers.(13)*

Then as now, a very ambitious program. Using the Stansbury Forum, the
authors plan to provide a “look back” at the New Voice program on its
twentieth anniversary. We want to ask what was accomplished and what went
wrong? What were the obstacles and impediments to progress?

Finally, what have we learned from the New Voice experience and what
lessons from those twenty years can be applied to the “crisis” today(14).

While many well-meaning progressives repeatedly say “we can’t organize,”
“we can’t strike,” and “we can’t win”; they haven’t convinced us. Despite
the sharp attacks against organized labor, there are still over 15 million
members and considerable resources. We intend our “look back” to stimulate
debate and discussion on what, in concert with the remaining membership,
should be done with those considerable resources going forward. We believe
it is the cardinal question for union leaders, organizers and labor
activists today.




















*Footnotes: (1) “Boston’s parking attendants unionizing,” by Katie
Johnston, Boston Globe, November 10, 2014
http://www.bostonglobe.com/business/2014/11/09/teamsters-organizing-parking-attendants/8HXoKxbdwcWzWN1qgbE6NO/story.html
<http://www.bostonglobe.com/business/2014/11/09/teamsters-organizing-parking-attendants/8HXoKxbdwcWzWN1qgbE6NO/story.html>
(2) “Why Workers Won’t Unite,” by Kim Phillips-Fein, The Atlantic, March
16, 2015
http://www.theatlantic.com/magazine/archive/2015/04/why-workers-wont-unite/386228/
<http://www.theatlantic.com/magazine/archive/2015/04/why-workers-wont-unite/386228/>
Phillips-Fein writes, “Labor has grown so weak by now that whatever form of
organizing might come next will have to start almost from scratch anyway,
to build something entirely new… What that something might be—what it will
look like, and how it might help us remake our society together—is an
unavoidable question of the 21st century.” (3) “Justice For Janitors: A
look back and a look forward: 24 years of organizing janitors,”
http://www.seiu.org/a/justice-for-janitors/justice-for-janitors-20-years-of-organizing.php
<http://www.seiu.org/a/justice-for-janitors/justice-for-janitors-20-years-of-organizing.php>
(4) In April of 1997, the International Longshore and Warehouse Union
(ILWU), at its International Convention in Honolulu adopted a resolution
mandating that the union would spend 30% of its budget on organizing. This
was a direct result of the New Voice program. (5) Spurred by the Bay Area
Labor Immigrant Organizing Network (LION) the AFL-CIO at its convention in
Los Angeles in 1999 voted to reverse its position in support of Employer
Sanctions and the 1985 Immigration Reform and Control Act. (6) This
commitment was reflected in the selection of Linda Chavez Thompson of
AFSCME as Executive Vice President of the Federation, the first female
executive officer in the history of the AFL-CIO. (7) Falling in Love Again?
Intellectuals and the Labor Movement in Post-War America, Nelson
Lichtenstein, New Labor Forum, No. 4 (Spring – Summer, 1999)
http://www.jstor.org/stable/40342220 <http://www.jstor.org/stable/40342220>
(8) Examples: AFL-CIO Capital Stewardship and Center for Strategic Research
(9) “Bargain to Organize, Organize to Bargain,” Matt Luskin, Labor Notes,
September 22, 2010,
http://labornotes.org/2010/09/bargain-organize-organize-bargain
<http://labornotes.org/2010/09/bargain-organize-organize-bargain> and
Bargain to Organize: From Boon to Embarrassment, Steve Early
http://inthesetimes.com/working/entry/13710/bargain_to_organize_from_boon_to_embarrassment
<http://inthesetimes.com/working/entry/13710/bargain_to_organize_from_boon_to_embarrassment>
(10) McEntee said unions affiliated with the AFL-CIO began pooling
resources in the 1996 election cycle and did so again for the 1998 and 2000
elections. He said that as a result, 4.8 million more union household
members turned out to vote in 2000 than in 1992. Union household members
represented 26 percent of the vote in 2000, up from 19 percent in 1992. He
said the AFL-CIO program also resulted in 2539 union members now holding
elective office and that the labor movement’s goal is now to elect 5,000
union members. (11) “John Sweeney’s New-Old AFL-CIO,” Jane Slaughter,
http://www.solidarity-us.org/node/801
<http://www.solidarity-us.org/node/801> (12) About the Organizing Institute
http://www.aflcio.org/Get-Involved/Become-a-Union-Organizer/Organizing-Institute/About-the-Organizing-Institute
<http://www.aflcio.org/Get-Involved/Become-a-Union-Organizer/Organizing-Institute/About-the-Organizing-Institute>
(13) AFL-CIO “America Needs a Raise” Campaign Builds Pressure Around
Country on Minimum Wage
http://www.aflcio.org/Press-Room/Press-Releases/AFL-CIO-America-Needs-a-Raise-Campaign-Builds-Pr
<http://www.aflcio.org/Press-Room/Press-Releases/AFL-CIO-America-Needs-a-Raise-Campaign-Builds-Pr>
(14) Richard Sullivan’s retrospective on the 15th anniversary of the
AFL-CIO’s New Voice campaign in New Labor Forum (Spring 2010) titled, “Why
the Labor Movement is not a Movement,” merits re-reading in the 20th
anniversary year.*


Peter Olney

Peter Olney is retired Organizing Director of the ILWU. He has been a labor
organizer for 40 years in Massachusetts and California. He has worked for
multiple unions before landing at the ILWU in 1997. For three years he was
the Associate Director of the Institute for Labor and Employment at the
University of California. View all posts by Peter Olney →
<http://stansburyforum.com/author/peter-olney/>
Rand WilsonRand Wilson has worked as a union organizer and labor
communicator for more than twenty five years and is  currently an organizer
with SEIU Local 888 in Boston. Wilson was the founding director of
Massachusetts Jobs with Justice.  Active in electoral politics, he ran for
state Auditor in a campaign to win cross-endorsement (or fusion) voting
reform and establish a Massachusetts Working Families Party.  He is
President of the Center for Labor Education and Research, and is on the
board of directors of the ICA Group, the Local Enterprise Assistance Fund
and the Center for the Study of Public Policy.