Populist Unity Can Overcome the Establishment's Supermajority
Populist Unity Can Overcome the Establishment's Supermajority
Back in 2012 we published an article entitled “The Forgotten 33%,” which included a graphic entitled “American Voter Breakdown 2012.” It depicted the U.S. electorate as comprised of 46% who pay zero net taxes, 20% who work for the government and are net tax consumers, the 1% “super rich,” and the “forgotten 33%,” who work in...
By Edward Ring
Union In The News – Weekly Highlights
Union In The News – Weekly Highlights
San Joaquin County workers strike By Team Staff, July 5, 2016, ABC 10 The San Joaquin County workers union began their strike with a press conference and rally at the County Administration at noon Tuesday, July 5. Instead of reporting to work Tuesday morning, nearly 4,400 San Joaquin County workers — represented by SEIU 1021 —...
By Sean O’Striker
Union In The News – Weekly Highlights
Union In The News – Weekly Highlights
Does California shutdown mean the end of nuclear power? Not so fast. By Jessica Mendoza, June 28, 2016, Christian Science Monitor When California’s largest electric utility announced last week that it would close the state’s last operational nuclear power plant, supporters were quick to call the moment a potential game changer for America’s energy future....
By Sean O’Striker
Union In The News – Weekly Highlights
Union In The News – Weekly Highlights
In Step with California’s Evolving Energy Policy, PG&E, Labor and Environmental Groups Announce Proposal to Increase Energy Efficiency By Pacific Gas and Electric Company, June 21, 2016, Business Wire Reflecting California’s changing energy landscape, PG&E today announced a Joint Proposal with labor and leading environmental organizations that would increase investment in energy efficiency, renewables and...
By Sean O’Striker
A Kinder and Gentler Teachers Union?
A Kinder and Gentler Teachers Union?
The unions are trying to take the “we’re in it for the kids” shtick to a new level by declaring that they now collectively bargain for “the common good.” Last week, The American Prospect posted “Teacher Unions Are ‘Bargaining for the Common Good,’” which claims that unions across the country are “expanding their focus to...
By Larry Sand
Union In The News – Weekly Highlights
Union In The News – Weekly Highlights
$450K Cap Proposed on Hospital CEO Salaries in California By Michelle Leming, June 14, 2016, NPQ One of America’s largest labor unions is taking a third attempt at capping hospital CEO salaries. The latest proposal by Service Employees International Union (SEIU)-United Healthcare Workers West would give authority to the California attorney general’s office to oversee...
By Sean O’Striker
Californians Overwhelmingly Support New Local Bonds and Taxes
Californians Overwhelmingly Support New Local Bonds and Taxes
Two weeks ago, using information supplied by the California Taxpayers Association, we called attention to “$6.2 Billion in New Borrowing on June 7th Primary Ballot.” As noted, “Next week voters will be asked to approve 46 local bond measures totaling $6.18 billion in new debt, along with 52 local tax proposals. If history is any...
By Edward Ring
Union In The News – Weekly Highlights
Union In The News – Weekly Highlights
Rift Between Unions, Democratic Party Is Not Just Awkward As Campaign Season Nears By Dan Haar, June 6, 2016, Hartford Courant Sometime in the next couple of days, Sen. Danté Bartolomeo will sit in a closed room with leaders of the AFL-CIO. The Meriden Democrat will ask the labor coalition to endorse her for re-election...
By Sean O’Striker
Populist Candidates Still Ignore Government Unions
Populist Candidates Still Ignore Government Unions
Nearly every objection that supporters of presidential candidates Trump and Sanders raise to the establishment are intimately associated with government unions. But neither the people’s voice, or that voice as it is reflected back to them by their populist heroes, articulates this fact. (1) Do you want to reform Wall Street? You’ll have to go...
By Edward Ring
No Teachers Union in Clovis
No Teachers Union in Clovis
San Joaquin Valley’s Fresno County can boast about more than its raisins. Clovis, a city of about 100,000 located right next to Fresno in California’s fertile San Joaquin Valley, has a particular distinction: the city’s schools have never been unionized. Of course, the California Teachers Association dons pretend that Clovis doesn’t even exist because the...
By Larry Sand
Union In The News – Weekly Highlights
Union In The News – Weekly Highlights
Santa Clara County’s campaign finance records provide glimpse of Silicon Valley’s political landscape By Saurabh Datar, May 31, 2016, Peninsula Press Santa Clara County is one of just 17 counties in California that provide campaign finance records online in a form that is easy to analyze. Those records provide a glimpse of the political landscape...
By Sean O’Striker
Los Angeles Teachers Union Sinks to Unmitigated Depths
Los Angeles Teachers Union Sinks to Unmitigated Depths
The union war on charter schools has become even uglier, courtesy of UTLA. On May 4th, the United Teachers of Los Angeles, in concert with the Alliance to Reclaim Our Schools (AROS) – a radical union front group – planned a major protest to be held outside schools where charter schools share a campus with...
By Larry Sand
Legislative Surveys & Questionnaires Influence Policy-Making and Labor Agendas
Legislative Surveys & Questionnaires Influence Policy-Making and Labor Agendas
The eight-page document reads like a contract, asking candidates seeking a seat in the Legislature to pledge support for workers organizing unions. It lists priority issues – including health care, immigration and retirement benefits – and asks if the candidate will be a “supporter,” “champion” or “partner” as the union pursues its agenda in Sacramento....
By Laurel Rosenhall
Unions and Corporations Both Want to Build Stuff as Rift Grows In California Labor Movement
Unions and Corporations Both Want to Build Stuff as Rift Grows In California Labor Movement
There’s a rift in the American labor movement, and enterprising Republicans might be able to exploit it. Here’s Politico this week, documenting the disagreements between service-sector and labor unions as highlighted in a letter published recently by leading labor unions: “The labor federation and many of its member unions have embraced environmentalism as a pillar of...
By Luke Phillips