Once again my representative, Dr. Phil Roe, has some words of wisdom regarding the unions push for Check Card.
Secret Ballot Protection Act Will Protect American Workers
Last
Friday evening, Volkswagen employees in Chattanooga voted 712 to 626
not to join the United Automobile Workers (UAW) labor union.
Volkswagen’s Chattanooga plant began production in 2011 and employs
around 1,600 Tennesseans. The company is reportedly weighing the
possibility of manufacturing a new midsize SUV at its Chattanooga plant,
a move that would likely bring more jobs to the state.
Last
year, labor unions represented only 11.3 percent of U.S. workers, and
the private-sector membership rate was just 6.7 percent. In 1983, unions
represented 20 percent of American workers. With union membership on
the decline, many fear the administration and union leaders will
continue their push for legislation to authorize union organizing by
card check. Under this system, a union would be recognized if a majority
of workers sign a card indicating their desire to be unionized—a secret
ballot vote is never taken. Some workers have indicated this leads to
intimidation during union elections or retribution for workers that
publicly oppose the union.
To
me, there is no right more precious for any American than the right to a
secret ballot. It’s how we elect the President of the United States,
members of Congress and even some union leaders. Without secret ballots,
workers can be pressured to vote a certain way. Card check causes a
high pressure, one-sided sales pitch, and union leaders have been very
vocal in their desire to grow their memberships.
To
ensure union elections are fair and transparent, we must a worker’s
right to a secret ballot is protected. Last June, I reintroduced H.R.
2346, the Secret Ballot Protect Act (SBPA). My legislation isn’t pro- or
anti-union; it sides with every American worker. H.R. 2346 will require
a secret ballot election before a union can be certified or
decertified—protecting the rights of all workers. The SBPA will also
protect workers from being negatively affected by any deals cut between
union leaders and management by prohibiting such negotiations.
I
have no problem with employees who vote to form a union, but the
unionization process must be open, transparent and fair.
Transparency
and openness begins with ensuring every worker the right to make his or
her own decision about whether they want to be in a union, free from
intimidation or coercion—by the union or the employer. In an
increasingly global marketplace, workers need to know the benefits—and
costs—of unionizing.
Card
check is an invasion of privacy on the individual worker, and the right
to a secret ballot should be protected. Had card check been used in the
Volkswagen election in Chattanooga, the outcome might have been very
different. As Chair of the Health, Employment, Labor and Pensions
Subcommittee, I will continue to protect jobs and the rights of the
American worker.
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