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AFL-CIO TAKES CASE VS. BUSH NLRB
TO INTERNATIONAL LABOUR ORGANIZATION
Saying the Bush administration’s National Labor Relations Board “has turned its back on workers precisely at the moment it should be
invigorating the protections” of U.S. labor law, the AFL-CIO filed a massive complaint against the Bush board with the International Labour Organization on
Oct. 25.
Due to the actions of the Bush-named GOP majority on
the 5-person board, “The National Labor Relations
Act”--the nation’s basic labor law--“has now become a
regulatory regimen that enshrines the so-called rights
of employers to oppose the efforts of their employees
to engage in freedom of association,” the federation
states.
"Under Bush, America's labor board has so failed our
nation's workers that we must now turn to the world's
international watchdogs to monitor and intervene,"
said AFL-CIO President John Sweeney. "The Bush board
is kryptonite for America's workers. There is no
historic precedent for such aggressive efforts by the
board to curtail workers' rights of freedom of
association and collective bargaining."
The complaint went to the Brussels-based
international group for investigation and the agency
typically asks the accused government to respond. But
there is no time frame for the probe and ILO has no
enforcement powers against the Bush regime or its NLRB
if it finds wrongdoing that violates international
labor conventions.
But the AFL-CIO paints a damning picture of the
concerted effort by the Bush board majority to weaken
and deny workers’ rights, refuse labor law coverage to
large groups of workers and generally curb the freedom
of association. It cites a pattern in 61 NLRB rulings
since Bush took office.
That includes the right to organize and the right to
strike, according to ILO conventions, the AFL-CIO
said. And though the U.S. has never formally ratified
those pacts, as an ILO member, the U.S. is supposed to
obey their guidelines, the fed said.
The NLRB pattern the AFL-CIO cited has five facets:
- Denial of rights to large groups of workers.
- Curbs on the workers’ fundamental right to strike,
which the ILO says is “an intrinsic corollary to the
right to organize.” The federation said recent Bush
NLRB decisions “have given employers greater ability
to deny reinstatement to returning strikers under a
doctrine this committee has already concluded ‘entails
a risk of derogation from the right to strike.’”
- Despite an ILO convention that says organizing is
to be protected, the fed said that “a host of Bush
board decisions expanded employers’ license under the
NLRA to threaten, harass, and intimidate workers who
seek to organize or join a union, or participate in
collective activities to further their goal of
achieving representation.”
- The Bush board makes it easier to “fire or
otherwise discriminate against” workers who try to
unionize.
- “While the government is responsible for preventing
all acts of anti-union discrimination and it must
ensure complaints of anti-union discrimination are
examined in the framework of national procedures which
should be prompt, impartial and considered as such by
the parties concerned, the Bush board has severely
curtailed the already weak remedies available under
the NLRA against employer misconduct,” the fed noted.
“While the government is responsible for preventing
all acts of anti-union discrimination and it must
ensure complaints of anti-union discrimination are
examined in the framework of national procedures which
should be prompt, impartial and considered as such by
the parties concerned, the Bush board has severely
curtailed the already weak remedies available under
the NLRA against employer misconduct,” the fed noted.
“In a system replete with all the appearance of
legality and due process, workers’ exercise of rights
to organize, to bargain, and to strike in the U.S. has
been frustrated,” the fed said.
“We do not rely on any single case or dispute to
demonstrate the extent to which the NLRB has
eviscerated workers fundamental rights during” the
Bush government. “Rather, the cases, each taking at
least a ‘smallish nibble’ out of the NLRA’s worker
protections, have produced the eviscerated…organism.
This denies workers their fundamental rights of
freedom of association and collective bargaining.”
The AFL-CIO cited the ILO panel’s own conclusion that
U.S. labor law sets up “an elaborate system for the
hearing and adjudication of unfair labour practices
before the NLRB.’” And the panel--and the fed--noted
board decisions were “frequently very complex…weighing
the respective interests of the parties and
interpreting the domestic labor legislation and
jurisprudence as applied to a given set of facts.”
But the federation declared “complexity is no excuse
for the board consistently to ‘resolve the doubts in
borderline cases in the wrong direction,’” according
to an academic study of the board’s 70-year history.
“Nor should it provide the occasion for the board to
strain to decide issues not presented by the parties
in order to rule against workers’ rights, shift the
burdens of proof to make it more difficult to
establish unlawful-ness of employer conduct, or craft
rules that enshrine double standards for union and
employer conduct, or delay decisions until they become
ineffective,” the AFL-CIO said.
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