Townhall.com, Where Your Opinion Counts
Talk Radio:   Bill Bennett   Mike Gallagher   Dennis Prager   Michael Medved   Hugh Hewitt   
BREAKING NEWS  LeftArrow - Townhall.com : Conservative, Political, Republican   RightArrow - Townhall.com : Conservative, Political, Republican  
Columns, funnies & more in your inbox!
  • Check the boxes and send us your email address to receveive your free newsletter
  • Your daily must-read of conservative columns, cartoons and news. Coulter, Sowell, Krauthammer and more.
  • Townhall.com’s weekly inside scoop on what’s happening behind the scenes in the world of politics. When news breaks, we report.
  • Signup to receive the latest daily Townhall cartoons
Sunday, November 23, 2008
David R. Stokes :: Townhall.com Columnist
What Would the Sage of Fair Lane Think?
by David R. Stokes
Vote on It:
Average Vote:
[+] Text [-]
 
Poll
Will the Dems' health care Christmas Present to America be an improvement or detriment to our health care system?


As the big boys from the big three pressed their case this week for a taxpayer funded bridge or bailout (pick your metaphor), the role of big labor in Mr. Obama’s coming administration is being seriously tested even before the guy gets to say “so help me God.”

Of course, at issue is the fact that he promised the proverbial moon to an interest group not really known in recent years for its capacity to pack too much of an electoral punch. Whether or not he will be able – or inclined – to actually keep his pledges is quite another thing.

It is likely that many months ago, when Barack Obama was assuring various union dense audiences of his support for them, he never anticipated having to really do anything about it so soon.  But it will be on his plate on day one and the issue may just keep him up some nights until 3:00 a.m. – in case the phone rings in the wee hours.

The problems with the American automobile industry are legion, but likely the most glaring is the cost of labor and management.  Bloated salaries in the boardroom and borderline outrageous wages on the assembly lines have pretty much brought the entire U.S. auto industry, once the envy of the world, to its knees - if not the brink of disaster.

Workers at a Toyota plant in Kentucky, a non-union shop, receive about $47.00 per hour in wages and benefits.  That translates to about $98,000.00 per year (not counting overtime).  Those doing essentially the same job at GM, Ford, or Chrysler – whose assembly line workers are members of the United Auto Workers union – receive roughly $71.00 per hour – or about $150,000.00 annually (again, minus any overtime).

Public school teachers across the country make, on the average, no more than a third of that.

Detroit has been losing money on every car sold for quite some time.  The easy criticism is that they have been building “gas guzzlers.”  But that dog won’t hunt because one of the reasons they have had difficulty shifting gears (so to speak) to smaller, cheaper, and more fuel efficient models is that they would lose more money per unit on them.  They have not been competitive for a long time and there isn’t a bailout number big enough to fix the problem without changing management (getting rid of the guys who ran the place into the ground) and renegotiating labor contracts downward.

And there’s the rub.  The United Auto Workers is a formidable foe with a new best friend moving into the White House.

The irony is that this union looks and acts these days more like the guys they fought against back in the 1930s and 1940s.  It began as an advocate for hard working people who had been getting the shaft.  Who’s holding said shaft now?

I grew up in the suburbs of Detroit hearing the legendary stories about “sit down” strikes and an epic encounter called “the battle of the overpass” - where Ford Motor Company “muscle” beat up Walter Reuther, his brother, and other union organizers who were passing out leaflets. 

My father was a long time member of the Teamsters (same local as Mr. James Riddle Hoffa) and all the kids on the block had dads who loved and depended on the unions.   I know that back in the day the UAW did some good stuff for those who had no real influence or voice.  The union effectively helped its members “to free them from the tyranny of arbitrary decision or discriminatory action in the work place,” as Neil Chamberlain wrote nearly half century ago.  I get that.

But we have come along way since those days.  This is an age of change – remember?

Ford Motor Company was the last of the big three to agree to let its employees organize after a lengthy and brutal battle.  Led by Harry Bennett, a close confidante of old Mr. Ford (who later wrote a book about his boss entitled, We Never Called Him Henry), a “goon squad” spied on and intimidated workers for years, keeping them in line and out of the UAW. 

In the spring of 1941, as the nation was reluctantly preparing for inevitable involvement in the growing global war, Bennett fired several employees unwittingly creating the catalyst for the first real strike (exclusive of episodic “wild cat” actions) the company ever experienced.  For ten days, work at the massive River Rouge Plant was at a standstill and tension was in the air.

Through surrogates like Bennett, Henry Ford insisted that the strike was the work of communist agitators.  He had been working closely on the sly with a key, though out of favor, labor leader - Homer Martin.  The first president of the UAW, Martin was, in fact, on Ford’s payroll, retained ostensibly as an in-house liaison to the increasingly restless workers.

Homer Martin is now little more than a footnote in the story of the rise of the UAW, having been outmaneuvered by the Reuther brothers and largely written out of the “official” history of the movement.  A former Baptist minister, he had been fired by his rural Missouri congregation for outspoken support of workers who were pro-union.  He then went to work in a Kansas City automobile plant and soon rose to the top of the fledgling labor movement.  Known as “an orator of the evangelical, stem-winding school,” he could “draw fire from an audience.” 

Under Homer Martin’s leadership, union membership experienced exponential growth in its early years.  A strong anti-communist in a movement rife with socialists, Martin is largely characterized today as an incompetent leader and erratic personality. The truth may actually be that he was bitterly opposed by the Reuther brothers because of his religious faith and the strong support he had from southern workers who connected with his “preacher” persona.  Whatever the case, though out of power he continued to spend significant time and energy on the labor cause in the auto industry.  And he played an ironic role in the Rouge Plant strike.

As the walkout continued during the first week of April in 1941, Martin – at the urging of Harry Bennett - used his rhetorical skills to try to persuade strikers to quit and get back to work.  Meanwhile, the Reverend J. Frank Norris, a fiery and controversial fundamentalist Texas preacher who was also pastor of a mammoth Detroit congregation, preached a sermon that was broadcast on WJR radio in the city, as well as being printed word for word in the Detroit Times.  Norris called the Rouge Plant strike the work of “revolutionaries” and “Bolsheviks,” and suggested that anyone participating in it was not being patriotic in light of the war clouds looming on the international horizon.  

But on April 10th, Michigan Governor Murray Van Wagoner intervened and the strike was suspended.  Mr. Ford was beat.  For a brief time he pouted and moped around his 1,300-acre Fair Lane Estate in Dearborn - even threatening to shut his whole company down.  But his wife Clara disabused him of the notion.  And in a secret ballot – emphasis on that word secret – Ford workers elected to go into the UAW by a 97 percent vote. 

Now, fast-forward sixty-seven years to current day.  There is a curious and ominous piece of legislation floating around Washington, D.C. called the Employee Free Choice Act (EFCA), which has been nicknamed the “card check” bill.  In effect, it would eliminate the idea of using the sanctity of the secret ballot for elections when employees of a company vote on the issue of whether or not to join a union. 

So imagine you are working one day – and a guy comes along and says, “sign this.”  Would you feel the pressure and the potential for intimidation? 

Sadly, the UAW has in some ways become what they used to fight against – autocratic, coercive, intimidating, and manipulative.  If such a bill passes and is signed by our 44th president, Harry Bennett wannabes will be back on the job, only this time they will twist arms for the unions.  Even someone whose liberal bona fides are as unimpeachable as George McGovern thinks this is a terrible idea.

President –Elect Obama supports the EFCA.  I would hate to think that democracy in America might one day find itself on a slippery slope toward becoming a “thugocracy.”

We are now at a crossroads.  Labor unions grew during the Great Depression and peaked just after the Second World War.  They have been in decline for years, but now as the economy tanks they seem to be getting another lease on life.  The current scenario with the auto companies asking for money in Washington with one hand, while in the grip of the UAW with other, is going to yield powerful and revealing clues as to what the future will look like for American businesses.

The corporatism that came out of the New Deal, and took decades to even begin to undo, is knocking at the American door once again.  And the man who, after January 20th, will be in a position to let labor back into the economic living room has already given every indication that he has a pro-union welcome mat in the moving van. 

Be prepared to hear much more talk about “fair” competition than “free” competition.   They are both four-letter words, but that’s where the similarity ends.

Long after the 1941 strike was settled (by the way, the company offered more generous terms than those the union was seeking), Henry Ford met with UAW leader Walter Reuther to congratulate the man now representing his workers.  During an odd exchange, he told Reuther, “It was one of the most sensible things Harry Bennett ever did when he got UAW into this plant.”  Caught by surprise by the comment, he asked, “How do you figure it?”

Henry Ford then told the man who became for a generation - Mr. UAW: “Well, you’ve been fighting General Motors and the Wall Street crowd. Now you are here, and we have given you a union shop and more than you got out of them.  That puts you on our side, doesn’t it? We fight General Motors and Wall Street together, eh?”

His analysis may have been flawed – but then again, maybe the old man was on to something.  I wonder what Henry Ford would think about company executives jetting privately to Washington to beg for money to “save” an industry he invented in his little backyard shop? 

Share:
Vote on It:
Average Vote:
 
About The Author
David R. Stokes is a minister, writer, and broadcaster. His weekly talks at Fair Oaks Church in Fairfax, Virginia and host of Loud on Purpose, heard Monday to Friday in Washington, D.C. on WAVA 105.1 fm.
 
TOWNHALL DAILY: Sign up today and receive Townhall.com daily lineup delivered each morning to your inbox.
Our pussyfied Auto Execs
Our problem is not that the auto should survive, our problem is that we have pussyfied auto execs. How about this, give us auto execs or any other execs, for that matter, that have cojones big enough to tell congress, here are the keys to my plant. Either you let me run it and get out of the way, or you run it and I'll go home. We have a government that can't pour p!$$ out a boot, with a hole in the toe and instructions on the heel, telling businessmen that have done this job all their lives, how to run their business. If we only had those type of businessmen, we would have solved this problem a long time ago.

Turophile
Back in the '60s a group of union people successfully sued a union (I think in California) for giving money to politicians they did not personally support. And they won. At that time it was only possible for the unions to give money where particular members wanted it to go - and only at a rate appropriate for those members. In other words if only ten people for the union wanted the money to go to a certain politician, they could give only ten percent of the money those ten union members paid the union. And not a penny more.

I think that has been "overlooked" I think I should say the last decade or two.

svpallava
I think you missed it on the Gremlin. Ever own one? I did - and I'd like to own one again. I had almost no problems with it while I had several serious problems with my two previous Ford products (Maverick and Pinto). I had few problems - and the repair crew was available for appointment and completed what repairs that were needed in a fast - and correct - way. None of the others would.

CA Jim @ 2008/11/23 14:00 wrote
"Who needs that. If they would build a quality Vega, Falcon, Gremlin, and my ‘51 Plymouth, how much better off we would be."

It seems rather odd that you've included in the analysis two models not exactly known for quality--the Astre/Vega (base engine was unsleeved aluminium for block, head and pistons--which oft siezed; some replaced these with engines from Citation such as "iron duke" and 2.8-litre V6) and Gremlin, which were considered more in line with the Edsel quality-wise.

PRIVATE JETS

What all the blather about private jets? There’s no way the twits in Congress can understand the management of time or budgets. Their criticism of a corporate decision of the best way to manage the time of corporate officers would be laughable if not so serious. These are the same people that had spent us, and our grandchildren, into bankruptcy. The fact they have confiscated a major portion of the private sectors assets and mismanaged the federal budget should give us all a clue that a Socialist is, by any other name, is a Socialist.

As I see it there are few if any in the Congress that have a clue on how to produce a tangible product. Their idea of competition is partisanship. Don’t expect them to understand that allocating a CEO’s time around a commercial airline schedule and the time wasted standing in line a TSA security check are far more costly than operating the company aircraft.

I hope some
GOP congressman or Senator adds an amendment to the Card Check bill that says that unions have to collect annual written permission from each employee before withholding money from that employee for political purposes, that is, anything except collective bargaining, contract administration or grievance procedure administration. That would go a long way to cutting off the corrupt money pipeline from Big Labor to the Democratic Party. At very least it would put the control of that pipeline in the hands of the members rather than the corrupt Big Labor bosses.

BARRY WILL GIVE A LOT OF MONEY !
BARRY WILL GIVE A LOT OF MONEY TO MOTOWN!50CENT WILL GET A WHOLE FLEET OF ESCALADES FREE!

so jimmy hoffa went to prison !
and the big three,big dogs make about 10,ooo dollars a hour !and fly to dc in their private jets,and ask for 25 billion!where are the uaw pension funds!?

Obama and the unions
Obama's got a big problem with the big 3 bailout. In the end, he has got to support the group that contributed over 100 million to help get him elected. Problem is, outside a few economically despressed states in the midwest, unions are considered outdated, corrupt, and against economic progress. I can assure you the Republicans will have a good time letting the folks know that these overpaid union slobs are getting a underserved govt handout while the rest of us are busting our butts

To Roadmaster
During the 50s in Wyoming, my Dad had to work outside our sheep ranch to make ends meet. He went to work in construction and a union organizer was determined to force the workers in joining. Dad, and some other workers finally tired of it and threatened to toss the guy into the Wind River where the were working. He finally got the message. Wyoming is a right to work state to this day.
Vitaglubet, I think you may be onto something. The question is would the unions be willing to create the problems for themselves that they do with present ownership?

Do any of you remember this story.

Henry Ford (owner of the company) and Walter Ruther (head of auto workers union) were walking through a new auto plant, with a lot of automated machines.

Henry said, “Walter, I’d like to see you collect union dues from those machines. “

Walter replied, “Henry, I’d like to see you sell a car to one of those machines.” So you see, it depends on which side of the fence you are on.
============
Look out your window, and watch the cars going by. Did you see a Chevy, a Chrysler, a Ford? There is no way to tell. The Auto companies not only have built the most ugly cars ever seen, they are ashamed to put their name on them.

Ten years ago I went to a GM dealer to buy a used car. They pointed to one and said, “There’s a Toyota.” I said I did not want to buy a Jap car, I wanted a GM car. Someone else said, “That’s not a Toyota, that is an Oldsmobile.”

Since I had owned and was happy with other Olds cars, I bought it. But the only place where the name appeared was in small print under the radio. I found I could understand that, the car was an uncomfortable bunch of junk.

Fifty years ago you could look out the window and tell exactly which make of car had just driven past, now they are so ashamed, they don’t put their name on them.

And while you think of it, next time you go for a drive, try to find another car exactly like yours. Almost impossible. Last time I heard, GM could build a half million cars in any year, with out making two exactly alike.

Who needs that. If they would build a quality Vega, Falcon, Gremlin, and my ‘51 Plymouth, how much better off we would be.

Couple the . . .
so-called "Employee Free Choice Act" with national "right to work".
This could be a viable compromise.

Unions reconsideration
I owe a good pension to the unions, which may now go the way of the industry.

Yet, I have learnt that unions can not and never did survive without speacial regulation.

The trucking industry: Had authority to purchase and barred others from the same route. Therefore, with no competition workers could ask of their employers anything. Just charged back to customers. When Reagan deregulated. So went the industry.

That was true of many industries deregulated in his reign.

Why do you think government jobs are coveted?

Teachers are often overpaid in big cities and small towns survive. Unions with regulation to keep them alive and well paid.

These regulations allow companies to pay high management wages and other luxuries everywhere. Inflating costs that others pay.

When government regulations add enough luxuries to the system. Ussually spending money of the many on a few for their indulgence. Then capitalism works and brings the national house down. Because there is not much value in the price. So deflation reigns.

A Union would kill my job, right now
The little company where I work is just now starting to show a little progress, thanks to better management and higher production, especially in the department I work in, because of no small effort on my part. Wages could be better, but until overall efficiency and quality improve, two things unions don't worry about, we could go down hill when the New Great Depression hits.

Myself any a few other former military people have vowed to resist any effort to unionize. We can and will out-thug the thugs. Our jobs depend on it.

What would Clinton do?
That's the question, since most of the 42nd President's people are back in power. 3rd term or what?

Unions are dinosaurs which could have been extinct long ago, if not for preferential treatment by dhimmicrats when they were in power.

Not many big mining operations in Western, Right to Work states are unionized because the companies were smart enough to pay above union scale and treat workers right - GOOD workers, that is. Lazy, disruptive, frequently absent workers are sent packing leaving a highly productive work force which works closely with management to make things better and maximize profits - the exact opposite of what the UAW have done.

In the early 80's I was present when the UMW shut down the Atlantic City iron ore mine in WY. The union refused to take a 10% pay cut for one year in order to bring the company balance sheet into the black. The mine closed and all jobs were lost.

I didn't feel sorry for them in the least after listening to some of them brag in the bar after work about which one got more nap time, on the job in a 8 hour shift.

An interesting and informative column
And right on target. Despite inevitable corruption ("Power tends to corrupt. . . ." -- Lord Acton), unions did a lot of good in the early days. Now they serve roughly the same purpose as a fireman on a diesel-electric locomotive. The largest and least moribund unions comprise public employees, who have no right to strike and should have no license to do so. A union that cannot strike is no union at all, just another fundraising arm of the Democratic Party and the Mob.

Obsolete institutions die hard, however. The UAW is fighting for its life, and the pressure to bail it out is intense. One hopes that Congress won't prolong the agony by yielding.


Union Brethren
It is curious that the AFL/CIO members haven't suggested that they take the "chump change" out of their pension and health insurance funds and buy into the big three. It seems that employee ownership would be a feasible alternative to the slow death they have fostered thus far.
Sign Up to Post Your CommentsSign Up to Post Your Comments
If you are already registered, click here to login. Otherwise, please take a few seconds to register with Townhall.com. Once you sign up, you’ll be able to post your comments immediately, use the action center, get podcasts, and more!
Note: Fields marked with a red asterisk (*) are required.
Salutation:
First Name:
*
Last Name:
*
Email:
*
Nickname:
*
Note: Nick name will be shown when you post comments.
Address 1:
*
Address 2:
City:
*
State:
*
Zip:
*
Phone:
      
Your daily must-read of conservative columns, cartoons and news. Coulter, Sowell, Krauthammer and more.
(Bi-Weekly) We highlight the best opportunities from our partners for surveys, action items and more.