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 Sept. 30, 2008


Sept. 26: Strike support for Boeing Machinists

Sept. 25: Bailout must benefit Main St.

Sept. 24: IAM strike at Boeing: Day 19
 

WSLC Reports Today
Updated DAILY... Almost Every Day!™ by 9 a.m. Pacific

Links are functional at date of posting, but sometimes expire. 
WSLC Reports Today links to stories of interest to organized labor; 
some positive, some negative. The intention is to inform.


 

TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 30

When Madmen Reign
 
(a column by NY Times' Bob Herbert) -- I’m not holding my breath, but I'd like to see the self-proclaimed conservative, small government, anti-regulation, free-market zealots step up and take responsibility for wrecking the U.S. economy and bringing about the worst financial crisis since the Depression. Bush should say that he, his irresponsible Republican colleagues and their running buddies in the corporate and financial sectors, put the entire economy in danger. And McCain and his economic main man, Phil (“this is a mental recession”) Gramm, were right there with them. Read more.

Boeing Machinists strike: Day 25  -- Learn more at www.iam751.org
Click here to learn what you can do to assist striking Machinists.
▪  In the Everett Herald -- Machinists' health benefits end Wednesday -- It's unlikely to push the union or Boeing back to the table soon.  
▪  In the Seattle Times -- Simmering Boeing strike scorching both sides --
The 2008 strike is shaping up to be long, costly and damaging. Extrapolating from company documents detailing the cost of the last strike, Boeing's lost profits from even a one-month strike would be at least $1.3 billion -- earnings that won't be recouped for years. Likewise, an extended strike will bite deeply into the living standards and retirement plans of thousands of Machinists.

  

Local news: 
▪  In today's Olympian -- Largest state workers' union OKs deal -- The WFSE, representing some 33,000 workers, approves a two-year deal that includes annual raises of 2%, plus an extra day off each year. But Teamsters Local 117, which represents 6,400 prison workers, reject a similar deal, pushing negotiations down to the wire as a Wednesday deadline approaches.
▪  In yesterday's Olympian -- Legislators might revisit state worker contracts -- Some state legislators are already talking about changing the contracts that unions negotiated with Gov. Chris Gregoire.
▪  In today's Seattle P-I -- Seattle Times to outsource distribution --
Teamsters Local 174, the union that represents its truck drivers, voted Sunday to approve an outsourcing deal after 10 months of bitter negotiations and threats from both sides. It allows The Times to hire Penske Logistics Inc.
▪  In today's Olympian -- Wal-Mart wins in court -- The retail giant clears another hurdle in its four-year effort to build a 187,000-square-foot supercenter in Tumwater.
▪  In today's Everett Herald -- Gloomy picture for Snohomish County finances -- The next two years could be even bleaker than first predicted for county workers and those who rely on their services.
▪  In today's Seattle Times -- Mayor's proposed budget cuts administrative jobs -- The city will avoid the shortfalls King County and the state are facing because its revenue sources are more diverse.

 

The Bailout:
▪  At AFL-CIO Now -- Wall Street bailout won't work without aid to workers -- The rejected package does far too little for homeowners and vests far too much power in the Bush administration -- whose policies and lack of oversight are at the root of the crisis, says AFL-CIO's John Sweeney.
▪  In today's LA Times -- Fear, caution rule in Congress -- Constituents vent fury at House members jittery about losing their jobs. Even supporters of the rescue package are tepid.
▪  In today's NY Times -- What's worse than a flawed bailout? (editorial) -- After nearly eight years of voting in virtual lock step with President Bush on everything from tax cuts to torture, House Republicans decided on Monday to break ranks on the survival of the nation’s financial system. The imperfections in this bill can be rethought, revisited and reworked. It is better than nothing, which is what some backward-looking Republicans gave Americans on Monday.
▪  In today's Seattle P-I -- How the state's House members voted -- Republican Reps. Reichert, Hastings and McMorris-Rodgers, and Democratic Rep. Jay Inslee voted no. The rest voted yes.
▪  Today from AP -- Bush again urges Congress to pass bailout -- (Does this help or hurt? Discuss.)

 

McCain Revealed:
▪  In today's Dayton Daily News -- McCain is fundamentally wrong on the economy (op-ed by AFL-CIO President John Sweeney and Ohio AFL-CIO President Joe Rugola) -- Soon after McCain touted the economy's strength on Sept. 15, he backtracked, saying that he meant that workers are strong, and workers are the fundamentals of the economy. In fact, the way that McCain and Bush's policies and plans treat workers is fundamentally what's wrong with the economy today. That's what has driven our nation's financial system off the rails, and that's why regular people are losing their homes, their savings and their futures.
▪  In today's NY Times -- McCain makes misleading claims about Obama's tax plans -- Republican John McCain has characterized Obama’s position on taxes in ways that proved to be demonstrably inaccurate.

 

Election 2008:
▪  In today's Seattle Times -- Rossi ad in error on state deficit -- there isn't one yet -- Republican Dino Rossi is airing statewide radio and TV ads suggesting Gov. Gregoire has ignored a $3.2 billion budget deficit. The ad is inaccurate for this reason: The state has a projected $3.2 billion budget hole next year, but it does not have a deficit today.
▪  In today's Olympian -- Good reason for wall between pulpit, politics (editorial) --
If a church essentially becomes an arm of a political party, why should it continue to get tax-exempt status? Instead of donating to political parties and individual candidates -- donations that are not tax deductible -- people could just give to churches and get a write-off. Churches could serve as untaxed contribution collectors that funnel donations to the causes and candidates of their choice. It’s a can of worms best left unopened.

 

National news:
▪  In today's LA Times -- Union trusts must provide financial data -- They must disclose detailed financial information under new federal rules designed to root out corruption, DOL officials say. The Bush administration cited several cases in recent years of union officers stealing from trusts established for retirement funds, job training and disaster relief. (Imagine the same rules being applied to failed, corrupt corporations and their billionaire CEOs. But no. They are "deregulated.")
▪  At AFL-CIO Now -- World Bank rewards worst record on workers' rights -- The bank's top-rated country this year is Belarus, where labor practices are so bad the ILO condemned the country’s dictators and the European Union withdrew trade preferences. Last year’s “winner” was Georgia, which did away with most of its worker-protection rules and nixed collective bargaining rights.
▪  In today's LA Times -- SAG seeks to rekindle bargaining with studios -- The guild sends a letter to studio executives in hopes of jump-starting the stalled negotiations, but its overture is rejected.

 

TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 30, 2008
When madmen reign

The following column by Bob Herbert of The New York Times appears in today's edition: (WSLC Reports Today urges everyone to subscribe to that fine newspaper and/or visit their web site and purchase things from companies that have advertisements posted there. Terrific paper. Just terrific.):

WHEN MADMEN REIGN
By Bob Herbert

Madness.

I’m not holding my breath, but I would like to see the self-proclaimed conservative, small government, anti-regulation, free-market zealots step up and take responsibility for wrecking the American economy and bringing about the worst financial crisis since the Depression.

Even now, with the house on fire, the most extreme among them won’t pick up the fire hoses and try to put it out.

With the fate of the Bush administration’s desperate $700 billion bailout of the financial industry hanging in the balance, Representative Darrell Issa, a Republican from California, stuck to his political playbook like a man covered in Krazy Glue. He pronounced himself “resolute” in his opposition to the bailout because to be otherwise would amount to a betrayal of party principles.

To deviate from those principles, in Mr. Issa’s view, would be like placing “a coffin on top of Ronald Reagan’s coffin.”

We are in very strange territory here.

George H.W. Bush warned us about “voodoo economics” in 1980, but the ideologues clamped a gag on him and put him on the Gipper’s ticket. For much of the time since then, the madmen of the right have carried the day. They were freed of their remaining few restraints with the ascendance of George W. Bush in 2000.

These were the reckless clowns who led us into the foolish multitrillion-dollar debacle in Iraq and who crafted tax policies that enormously benefited millionaires and billionaires while at the same time ran up staggering amounts of government debt. This is the crowd that contributed mightily to the greatest disparities in wealth in the U.S. since the gilded age.

This was the crowd that cut the cords of corporate and financial regulations and in myriad other ways gleefully hacked away at the best interests of the United States.

Now we’re looking into the abyss.

When President Bush went on television last week to drum up support for the bailout package, he looked almost dazed, like someone who’d just climbed out of an auto wreck.

“Our entire economy is in danger,” he said.

He should have said that he, along with his irresponsible Republican colleagues and their running buddies in the corporate and financial sectors, put the entire economy in danger. John McCain and his economic main man, Phil (“this is a mental recession”) Gramm, were right there running with them.

Credit markets have frozen almost solid, banks are toppling like dominoes and brokerage houses are vanishing like props in a magic act. And who was one of the paramount leaders of the manic anti-regulatory charge that led to this sorry state of affairs? None other than Mr. Gramm himself, a former chairman of the Senate Banking Committee.

Where is Mr. Gramm now? Would you believe that he’s the vice chairman of UBS Securities, the investment banking arm of the Swiss bank UBS? Of course you would. A New York Times article last spring noted that the “elite private bankers” of UBS “built a lucrative business in recent years by discreetly tending the fortunes of American millionaires and billionaires.”

Toadying to the rich while sabotaging the interests of working people was always Mr. Gramm’s specialty. He was considered a likely choice to be treasury secretary in a McCain administration until he made his impolitic “mental recession” comment. He also said the U.S. was a “nation of whiners.”

The tone-deaf remarks in the midst of severe economic hard times undermined Senator McCain’s convoluted efforts to reinvent himself as some kind of populist. But they were wholly in keeping with the economic worldview of conservative Republicans.

The inescapable disconnect between rhetoric and reality is often stark. Senator McCain has been ranting recently about the excessive pay and “bloated golden parachutes” of failed corporate executives. And yet one of his closest advisers on economic matters is Carly Fiorina, who was forced out as chief executive of Hewlett-Packard. Her golden parachute was an estimated $42 million.

Voters have to shoulder a great deal of the blame for the economic mess the country is in. Too many were willing, for whatever reasons, to support politicians who spat in the eye of economic common sense. Now the voodoo that permeated conservative economic policies for so many years has come back to haunt us big-time.

The question voters should be asking John McCain is whether he has stopped serving his party’s economic Kool-Aid, which has taken such a toll on working families, and is ready to change his ways. Is his sudden populist transformation the real thing or just a mirage?

In the gale force winds of a full-fledged economic hurricane, it’s fair to ask Senator McCain whether he still considers himself a conservative, small government, anti-regulation, free-market zealot. Or whether he’s seen the light.

Copyright © 2008 --  Washington State Labor Council, AFL-CIO