33/88 C762p Bo. /38 THE DRIVE AGAINST LABOR An analysis of recent legislative proposals to restrict union activity Congress of Industrial Organizations WASHINGTON 6, D. C. INDEX — Answering Arguments Against Labor — Page "Unions Are Monopolies" "Prohibit Industry- Wide Bargaining" 9 "The Closed Shop Is Un-American" 14 "Make Unions Suable" 17 "Make Unions Bargain Collectively" "Let's Have A Cooling Off Period" 20 "Amend The One-Sided Wagner Act" 25 "Stop Coercive Picketing" 29 "Limit The Right To Strike" 32 This analysis of anti-labor legislation was prepared by the CIO Legal Department. Lee Pressman, General Counsel Eugene Cotton, Assistant Counsel Frank Donner, Assistant Counsel /, -rt- ^-^ ^ A Time of Crisis This Nation faces a real crisis today. During the war monopoly groups tightened their hold on every major industry and on our entire national econ- omy. As a Senate Committee recently reported, their power is such that a handful of bankers can now exert tremendous pressures on the well-being of all the people. This small group spearheaded the destruction of the national program of control of prices and living costs. Now they seek to arrogate unto themselves even more complete power over the living standards of the American people. Only the labor movement has acted effectively to assert the right of the people to a decent share of the product of our national economy. With the government having ca- pitulated on prices and profit-regulation, only labor — with its demands for wage increases — stands as a major force actively striving for a proper distribution of purchasing power. Labor's success or failure in this struggle will determine whether our people can live in decency, our econ- omy function freely, our nation avoid the debacle of de- pression and chaos. Powerful monopoly interests hope to restrict the effec- tiveness of labor by legislation to curb, harass — yes, even destroy — American unionism. In the midst of this gather- ing crisis for our Nation, these monopoly interests have adopted the tactics of tyranny everywhere and at all times. Through their press, their reactionary radio commentators, through every means of communication available to them, industry and its spokesmen have sought to divert attention from their own unconscionable position by seeking to divert popular anger toward the organizations of the American workers. It is understandable that powerful corporations and their organizations hate and resist the challenge of the workers' union; but it would be tragic for our country if they succeed, with their propaganda of wilful distortion, of oft- repeated calumnies and falsehoods, in turning the public against the very organizations which truly act in the people's interest. To cut through the tissue of fabrications, false issues, and deliberate distortions of labor's thoughts and action, I have directed the Legal Department of the CIO to pre- pare this analysis of the slogans of the current anti-labor campaign, and to set forth the facts and the truth. I com- mend it for careful reading, both by the general public, by members of our organizations, by the elected representa- tives of the people. It will help them better to understand the campaign against unionism, and to turn aside this attack of reaction. For only forceful action and intelligent understanding by labor and the public as a whole can stay this vicious campaign. President, CIO January, 1947 The Same Old Theme There is a determined effort in our country today to draw our people into a crusade against labor. Propaganda flows in a steady stream from the press and from most radio commentators and newspaper columnists for legisla- tion to shackle labor. It is a campaign based upon misrepresenta- tion and deceit. During the early part of this century the witch hunt against labor was carried on under the slogan of the "open shop plan". This high-sounding phrase meant little more than the arrogant insistence of American employers that while they were to be free to organize and to pit their economic strength against the workers, the workers were to be denied the freedom to organize. The "open shop plan" was not merely a slogan. It was a call to battle. With this as a battle cry the organized employers in this country prior to the first World War systematically set about not merely to destroy the labor organizations already in existence through economic and physical weapons, but so to terrorize em- ployees as to drive the organizational process underground. The courts also freely lent their aid to the employers engaged in carrying out the "open shop plan". Anti-labor judges promptly issued injunctions to prevent workers from defending themselves against the aggression of their employers. In addition, the anti- trust laws were used to break unions and to ruin them financially. In contrast powerful business monopolies were permitted to thumb their noses at the anti-trust laws and to gain a powerful hold upon American economic life. The Private War After the first World War the open shoppers again resumed their own private war against the democratic rights of American workers. This time they changed their battle cry; they called it the "American plan". But only the words changed; the tune re- mained the same. In addition to the usual weapons of the strike-breaker, the lockout, the labor spy, the discriminatory discharge, and the whole arsenal of devices which had been developed for destroying unions, the employer-sponsors of the "American plan" more than ever turned to the courts for help in their battle against labor. The campaign against labor was so brutal and lawless that fair-minded citizens were shocked; they realized some action was necessary to create an atmosphere in which working people could raise their heads and lift the banners of their labor organizations on high. To this end a number of laws were passed for the protection of labor. The cornerstones of the new policy with respect to labor were the Norris-LaGuardia Act, passed in 1932, which limited the power of courts to issue injunctions in labor disputes, and the Wagner Act, passed in 1935, which protected labor in the right to organize and to bargain collectively. Recognizing Labor's Rights At the same time many of the judges began to recognize that it was wrong and un-American for courts to permit themselves to become the tools of employers in labor disputes. The courts thus came to recognize that the right to strike, the right to engage in peaceful picketing, the right to assemble in con- nection with labor matters, the right to distribute leaflets — all of these rights are fundamental rights of workers which may not be arbitrarily invaded. The courts came to realize that these rights were nothing more than the rights safeguarded to all of the people by the Constitution — that the right to strike is nothing more than the right protected by the Constitution to be free of involuntary servitude; that the right to picket is nothing more than the consti- tutionally protected right of free speech, and that the right to go to a union meeting is nothing more than the constitutionally pro- tected right of free assembly. What has happened in the short period during which these stat- utes and decisions have been the law of the land? Has the old bloody dream of the open shop died out? Have the forces respon- sible for the "American plan" laid aside their weapons and their propaganda? Have they accepted in good faith the principle of federal law that workers' rights are to be respected and that col- lective bargaining is the true path to industrial peace? Of course not! 75 Short Years It is about 15 years since the Norris-LaGuardia Act was passed and about 11 years since the Wagner Act was passed. During that period of time labor organizations, their members and their leaders have been subjected to an unremitting campaign of sniping and attack on the part of powerful American industrial- ists. These groups have sought in every way to weaken and destroy the Norris-LaGuardia Act. When the Wagner Act was passed they formed the infamous Liberty League to fight the Act, and obtained literally hundreds of injunctions against its enforcement until 1937, when it was held to be constitutional by the Supreme Court. The voice of these employers is by no means quiet in our country today. The working people of America still do not enjoy the benefits of the federal labor program which has been 15 years in the making. Today in the United States there are many powerful employers who still regard the Wagner Act as a temporary embarrassment; who still fight the organization of their workers, and use their economic strength to destroy the efforts of their workers to organize. Corruption And Terror There are many areas in the United States in which labor or- ganizers are beaten and maimed by mobs instigated and paid by employers. There are areas in the United States in which em- ployers have corrupted the peace officers of entire communities and erected vast open shop citadels in defiance of their government. Similarly, these same employers are still able to find judges who will issue injunctions to smash peaceful picketing. These same employers, through their control of political ma- chines even in large cities, have even recently succeeded in unleash- ing police brutality against workers of a type which carries one's memories back to the darkest days of our labor history. At this moment in our history the stage has once again been set for a new "open shop" movement, for a new "American plan". Of course, those who are directing the present day crusade against labor realize that they can no longer be as open and flagrant as those who directed the anti-labor drives of the 1920's The slogans today are more subtle, but the purpose is the same. The organized employers of this country, who have never surrendered their dream of an open shop America, pay lip service to collective bargaining and to the right of self -organization. They protest that they are merely in favor of certain basic "correc- tions", certain "minor" amendments. The present-day attack on labor has a very special and funda- mental additional purpose. It comes at a time when we have just finished a war during which, in every industry, monopoly interests succeeded in tightening their stranglehold on the nation. The enormous profits gained by these monopolistic groups during the war already have begun to be exposed to the people. And now, having succeeded in killing price controls, these same monopolies are preparing for a gigantic profit killing at the expense of the American people. Unions Challenge Monopoly The only groups challenging these all-powerful monopolies are the organizations of their workers. These workers in early 1946 asked that their wage losses be remedied by a wage increase, and pointed out that the profits amassed by American monopolies were so tremendous that wage increases could and should be given without any price increases. The monopolies had a one-word answer to their employees, "No". The workers, however, refused to take "No" for an answer. They fought back, and they won. Today, the monopolists have beaten the government into sub- mission. Price controls are off, prices have spiralled, and profits are at levels higher than any in our history. Once more the American workers are insisting that the monopolies loosen their death-grasp on the nation's income, and allow the wage-earners enough to give them a decent standard of life. The monopolists again are preparing to say "No". But this time, it is their aim to make the workers take "No" for an answer. And all of the anti-labor Congressmen, radio commentators, news- paper columnists and editorial writers are rallying to support the National Association of Manufacturers to help the monopolists squeeze the American people dry. Today's anti-labor campaign is a smoke-screen to conceal the most outrageous monopolistic plundering in our history. It is a flank attack designed to force the labor movement to give up on its wage demands. Some of today's labor-baiters boldly admit their goal is amend- ment or repeal of the Wagner Act and the Norris-LaGuardia Act. Most, however, pretend to preserve these laws while at the same time advancing proposals to chop the heart out of them. They conceal their intent in meaningless and misleading slogans which are oft repeated in press and radio to create the impression that these falsehoods and empty phrases are accepted truths. 8 Examine The Facts Every American owes it to himself and his country to examine a few of these phrases and the facts behind them and not to be swept away in a tide of manufactured falsehood and slick propa- ganda. Some of the catch phrases of today are: "unions are monopolies", "make unions suable", "the closed shop is un-Ameri- can", "stop coercive picketing", "amend the one-sided Wagner Act", "limit the right to strike". In some of these slogans, not even the words have changed from those of the "open shop" and the "Amer- ican Plan" campaigns. In all, the tune remains the same. The aim continues as before to destroy organized labor and to terrorize workers into an aban- donment of their right of self -organization. They Say "Unions Are Monopolies" . . . "Prohibit Industry-Wide Bargaining" • • • These slogans have become a very fashionable way of attacking labor. To the labor-haters these sound like good slogans, because the fight against monopolies is a good and progressive fight. The labor- baiters consider it a good idea to develop a slogan which confuses the anti-monopoly fight with the anti-labor fight by making it appear that organizations of working men and women are just as dangerous as the giant trusts and international cartels. The NAM, however, gives the show away when it clarifies the proposal a little more. The NAM would make it illegal for "a union or unions representing the workers of two or more employers to take joint wage action or engage in other monopolistic practices". We must keep in mind that under the anti-trust laws today it is illegal for any group to set up a conspiracy to control the trade in any commodity or to control prices. A labor union which joins with employers in such a conspiracy is just as liable as the em- ployers. The Supreme Court made this clear in a number of de- cisions, and particularly in the case of Allen-Bradley Company v. Local Union No. 3, IBEW, 325 U. S. 797, decided June 18, 1945. The Corporate Monopolies But this is not what the NAM is talking about. They are not concerned about monopolies among the trusts or among employers. The NAM is not bothered, for example, by the fact that more than 500,000 small business concerns were eliminated from the market during the war. They are not worried about the fact that 250 of the largest corporations in this country now hold approximately two-thirds of all the usable manufacturing facilities in the nation. Of these 250 largest manufacturing corporations which thus have a strangle- hold on the nation's production, 31 are controlled by 5 banking groups — the Morgan, Mellon, Rockefeller, duPont, and Cleveland banking groups. The 8 largest banking groups directly control 100 of the largest non-financial corporations. The NAM is not troubled by the fact that as of January 1, 1945, the 4 largest steel corporations controlled almost 63% of the total steel ingot capacity in America. Three of the banking groups men- tioned (Morgan, Rockefeller and the Cleveland banks) control 7 of the 10 largest steel producers in America and account for nearly three-fourths of the total ingot capacity in the United States. This is only a small part of the picture of growing industrial monopoly in this country, in which the flow of the life blood of the nation is controlled by small groups of powerful bankers. But this picture holds no terrors and brings forth no denunciation from the NAM. The NAM sees danger only in the fact that American working men are attempting to meet the power of these gigantic trusts by joining into labor organizations. Whaf Does If Mean? What does the NAM proposal mean? What does it mean to forbid a union from taking "joint wage action" against two or more employers, or to forbid "industry-wide bargaining"? In the steel industry this means that the United Steelworkers of America may not formulate a unified wage policy to be presented at the same time to the United States Steel Corporation, the Re- public Steel Corporation, the Bethlehem Steel Corporation, or any two of these giant institutions. In the automobile industry the UAW may not take uniform action against the General Motors Corporation, the Chrysler Corporation, and the Ford Company, or any two of them. In the electrical industry the United Electrical, Radio and Machine Workers would be forbidden to present a uni- form wage program to G.E., Westinghouse, R.C.A., or any two of 10 them. The local unions representing employees of each of these employers would be required to act separately. What does this mean in practice? The local unions in the steel industry are all in one organiza- tion. The local unions in the automobile industry and in the elec- trical industry are each in a single national organization. The NAM, however, would prohibit the various local unions in each of these national organizations from consulting and cooperating with other local unions in the same national organization! The NAM, in short, would forbid the existence of national unions. The NAM would break every one of our national organi- zations up into a series of separate local organizations. There is something especially hypocritical about this proposal. When unions first started to organize in major industries they were able to organize only one plant at a time. When they bargained with the employer for a single plant the answer was given that these demands could not be met for the single plant alone because they were matters of general policy affecting the entire corporation. So the unions organized the entire corporation. Then in industry after industry the reply was given: "Why make us the guinea-pig? Why should we be asked to pay more than our competitors? Why is this demand not made on our competitors as well as on us?" As recently as 1945 and 1946 this was the complaint of the General Motors Corporation when it was the only automobile man- ufacturer involved in a strike. So the unions organized the com- petitors. Now the cry is: "Go back to the separate employers. Take them one at a time." Never before has any responsible group dared to advance the outrageous theory now offered by the NAM that we must require competition in wage cutting. Our national policy has always in- sisted on competition with respect to the manufacture and sale of commodities. Our economic system rests on the assumption that we will advance production and secure lower prices through the operation of our competitive system. But we have never insisted that em- ployers engage in competition to see who could establish the worst conditions for his employes. Uniform Practices On the contrary, the War Labor Board adopted a uniform wage policy for the nation. In the steel industry the basic rate has been traditionally uniform throughout the industry; and increases have 11 IJ. OF ILL UB. bsen given on an industry-wide basis for decades — long before there was any strong national union in the industry. It has been our national policy to eliminate competition in wage rates, not to foster competition in sweatshop conditions. If the NAM were sincerely interested in stable labor-management rela- tions, it would attempt to advance, not prohibit, industry-wide bar- gaining. Objective studies have demonstrated that industry-wide uniformity eliminates the chaos, conflict, and unsettled conditions which result from hundreds of separate negotiations. Thus, a recent study under the auspices of Princeton University concluded that when wages are determined by National bargaining, the results are "more sensible and farsighted, taking in the economic interests of the industry as a whole." Senator Ball insists that a prohibition of industry-wide bargain- ing is necessary to prevent industry-wide strikes which injure the public welfare. However, to the extent that industry-wide strikes occur, they occur in industries tightly organized by employers — where for generations the employers have joined together through- out an industry to pit their combined economic strength against their employees. Experience has shown that if the law required negotiation with single employers, all the rest of the employers in the industry would rush to the rescue of the one employer involved, in order to insure that he would suffer no loss through any strikes he might provoke. Union members in other plants would thus be forced to work in order to break a strike of their fellow employees. It should also be borne in mind that a major inducement for peaceful settlement of issues is the recognition by an employer that other employers will ultimately be required to settle on the same terms. A prohibition on industry-wide negotiations would destroy the economic pressure which makes possible uniform settlements. It would thus actually provoke and prolong strikes in the narrower areas in which the law would permit negotiation. If the policy of division advanced by the proposal succeeded, lower standards would develop in some plants than in others. Other employers in that industry, placed at a competitive dis- advantage, would inevitably try to equalize their wages and work- ing conditions. The result would be an epidemic of strikes through- out various single units of the industry. Conversely, if some em- ployers were forced to establish conditions better than the rest of the industry, the resultant inequalities would then cause strikes in other units of the industry to equalize the inequalities. 12 But in either event, the possible injury to the public welfare is far greater than is involved in the situation at present. Two additional conclusions of the Princeton study mentioned above are important: "... elimination of wage-cutting has tended to stress efficiency of management as the most important factor in competition." "... Concentration of the change in one industry-wide de- termination avoids the labor unrest and series of strikes that often accompany competition between firms in the timing of wage changes or competition between rival unions in exacting concessions from employers." No Comparison When the NAM urges that a combination of human beings who join a labor organization to advance their conditions of work is to be compared with a combination of profiteers seeking to gouge the public by joint price policies, the NAM is turning the clock of history backward. The Thirteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution destroyed the institution of slavery and declared that the labor of human beings could not be considered in the same category as ordinary pieces of property, chattels or commodities. In 1914 the Clayton Act laid down a principle which no one has dared openly to deny in the years since, namely, that "the labor of a human being is not a commodity or article of commerce". The NAM today apparently doubts the truth of this principle. Wendell Berge, Assistant Attorney General of the United States. in charge of anti-trust prosecutions — a man who knows about monopoly problems — recently said: "The monopoly problem is today more serious than at any time since the passage of the Sherman Act. If monop- oly power follows its traditional course, we can expect higher prices, limitations on production, and a lowering in the level of employment. Monopoly power prevents the full utilization of our productive and human resources. It retards technological progress. It stifles the development of new enterprise . . . ". . . The twin demands, 'hands off business' and 'curb labor' have long been the heart of the anti-democratic program of those who favor the corporate state. To say that labor unions shall be restrained while the march of 13 monopoly is allowed to continue will result in the abandon- ment of industrial democracy. If industrial democracy is permitted to perish, our proud heritage of political free- dom cannot survive." They Claim T/ie Closed Shop Is Un-American' [fhe closed shop is neither a new nor a rare feature of American labor relations. Workers in America have operated under closed shop contracts for over one hundred years. As long as there has been collective bargaining there have been closed shop or union security contracts. Today approximately nine million American workers enjoy the benefits of union security con- tracts. Almost the entire steel industry works under union security contracts. Over 90% of the men and women's clothing industries do likewise. This type of contract also predominates in the fur, rubber, printing, maritime, electrical manufacturing, textile, and many other industries. Without the closed shop it would be impossible to achieve in- dustrial peace and stability. Impartial authorities on labor have for many years agreed that union security contracts promote indus- trial peace. A study, "The Closed Shop," by Father Jerome L. Toner, form- erly of Catholic University, draws the following instructive con- clusions with respect to the benefits of closed shop contracts: "2. Labor relations are considerably smoother as a result of the closed shop. "2. Trade unions have demonstrated genuine responsi- bility under closed shop contracts, and have contrib- uted substantially to the improvement of production. "3. The closed shop will probably be the rule rather than the exception within the next decade." It is obvious that once a union has no longer to fear for and fight for its security it is then able to turn its energies to a smoother operation of labor relations and to the achievement of industrial stability. 14 In addition, the constant frictions which occur when union members and non-union people work in the same plant, and when two rival unions are operating in the same plant, are eliminated under the union shop agreement. Many managements, recognizing these facts, have hastened to conclude such agreements. Just as employers who are anxious to promote industrial peace in their plants have favored the closed shop, so opposition to the closed shop invariably is the program of employers who actually desire to destroy unions and collective bargaining. It is a matter of record that the powerful anti-labor employers in this country who seek to destroy unionism disguise their objective behind the mask of opposition to the closed shop. This identity between anti- unionism and opposition to the closed shop is fully borne out both by the records of the LaFollette Committee as well as the records of the National Labor Relations Board. It is no accident that the term "open shop" has come to be syn- onymous not merely with opposition to the closed shop but with complete hostility to unionism, violence against union organizers and union members, the use of strike-breakers, company thugs, and open industrial warfare. Legislative prohibition of union security would immediately give rise to a resumption of these pernicious practices. A prohibition of union security would be an open invitation to all employers to destroy and cripple unions. A wave of indus- trial strife would thus be precipitated which would seriously injure the public welfare and promote bitterness in our labor rela- tions for generations to come. No Principl es i nvo/ved It is highly significant that the most bitter opposition to union security comes from well-organized employers' organizations and associations such as the National Association of Manufacturers and the National Metal Trades Associations, rather than from free in- dividual employers. It is also significant that the same anti-labor employers who belong to these powerful employer associations actually use the closed shop technique to prevent bona fide labor organizations by signing back-door closed shop agreements with company unions which do not represent their employees. These employers are obviously not opposed to the closed shop in principle, for they consistently resort to the closed shop when it suits their anti-union purposes. They only condemn the closed 15 shop when it furnishes security to a bona fide labor organization. As Father Toner's study, referred to earlier, points out: "Many of those employers who use the closed shop to frustrate genuine labor organization frown on it when they are asked to incorporate it into the standard union contract.** Union security rests upon a simple and unanswerable logic. A union in its collective bargaining is required by law to make a fair and just bargain for all members of the bargaining unit. It is actually illegal for the employer, through collective bargaining, to make better terms with the union for members of the union than is made for non-members. If the union is required, therefore, to per- form its services for everyone, why should not those who receive the benefits of those services also share the obligations and the responsibilities of union membership? Union security, therefore, is nothing more than the established American principle that those who share in benefits should share in responsibilities. We would not dream of permitting individuals to evade their responsibilities as citizens by refusing to pay taxes. Why should the same individual be permitted to evade the responsibilities as a citizen of an industrial democracy by being permitted to remain outside of the union? Moreover, while these proposals are usually offered under slo- gans about the "closed shop" they invariably outlaw any union security clause. Under maintenance of membership clauses, for example, employees are free to decide whether or not to join a union but are required only to accept the principle that if they do join they remain bound for the duration of the contract. These clauses, too, the proposals would prohibit. Freedom To Contract Those who oppose the closed shop frequently mouth phrases about compulsion. Yet these same individuals ignore the fact that a union security clause in a contract between an employer and a labor organization is the result of free collective bargaining. To empower the government to step in and actually to prohibit real collective bargaining is compulsion and regimentation at its worst. In the American free enterprise economy there is nothing more basic than the freedom to contract. To deprive a labor organiza- tion and an employer of the freedom to make a contract for union security is an undemocratic attack upon a basic right. 16 Those who attack the closed shop and other union security clauses so vehemently also try to give the impressions that such clauses tie the workers into the unions forever. Actually the Wag- ner Act, so much attacked and misrepresented by these same peo- ple, gives the workers complete freedom, regardless of closed shop clauses, to express a full and free choice on union preference at the end of each term of the contract, if they so desire. Because legislative prohibition of the closed shop would pro- mote industrial warfare; because it repudiates the American principle that those who receive benefits should be required to share responsibilities; because such legislation is a drastic inter- ference with freedom of contract and with free collective bargain- ing, such legislation is unsound and dangerous. It is not the closed shop which is un-American. On the con- trary, opposition to union security rests upon principles which are fundamentally un-American^^ They Demand- Make Unions Suable . . ." In the never-ending war upon labor unions and upon free collective bargaining, the organized anti-union employers of this country and their Congressional spokesmen employ one familiar technique. They invent an imaginary evil in labor relations and then propose a "cure" which if adopted would result in profound injury to sound labor relations and in a weakening of labor or- ganizations themselves. Typical of this technique is the frequently advanced proposal that labor organizations be made suable. The argument is made that labor organizations are not at present suable and therefore they should be made suable "in order to make them responsible". In the first place, this type of proposal is based upon an assump- tion which is completely false and deliberately intended to smear labor. The proposal assumes that unions, and unions alone, fre- quently violate collective bargaining agreements and therefore should be made subject to some special redress. What are the facts? 17 Is this proposal supposed to solve any labor problems revealed in the experience of post-war strikes? In not one of the major CIO strikes was there a violation of a collective bargaining contract or any other type of obligation. In contrast, it was the General Motors Corporation which rejected the award made by a fact-finding board appointed by the President; it was the U. S. Steel Corporation which rejected a settlement suggestion of the President himself; and it was the Westinghouse Corporation which was denounced by two prominent conciliators for its provocative and unreasonable prolongation of the strikes. Is this proposal supposed to deal with some long-standing problem of contract violation? It should be realized that every one of the thousands of arbitra- tion awards each year which uphold union grievances is a decision that an employer has violated a contract. On the record, therefore, there are hundreds of proven employer violations for each alleged union violation. Whether the union or the employer is a violator, court litigation will not establish good labor relations. But it is significant to realize that these labor baiters are trying mainly to establish a false public impression unfavorable to unions. This type of proposal seeks to smear unions in still another way. It assumes that unions are in a class apart from employers and enjoy a special privilege under the law. The plain fact is that unions are suable for any breach of their obligations. There is not a single state in the United States in which a union may not be sued for breach of a collective bargaining agreement. In 24 states, express statutes have been passed making a union suable either in its common name or through officers, such as the president or the secretary, designated by the statute. In the re- maining states unions are suable in these cases upon the basis of some other type of statute or established common law principles. The Real Purpose But the real purpose of those who are pressing for an amend- ment "to make unions suable" is not merely to smear labor organi- zations and to create in the minds of the public the idea that labor is irresponsible both in fact and in law. Their purpose goes beyond this. Anyone who is familiar with the field of labor relations recognizes that a lawsuit is the simplest and most effective way to destroy harmonious labor relationships. 18 Employers and labor organizations with a bona fide desire to live in peace and harmony strive in every way possible to free themselves of legalistic technicalities. There can never be good relations be- tween an employer and a labor organization if a law suit is the end product of a breach of a collective bargaining agreement. A collective bargaining agreement is not an ordinary type of contract. It is a contract which is designed to promote a continuing amicable relationship between an employer and the labor organiza- tion of his employees. Because of their special nature and purpose, labor agreements have developed their own special form of redress for breach, namely, a grievance procedure. The sheer chaos which would result if labor organization or employer, instead of filing grievances under the contract, sued in a court of law for violations of the contract is indescribable. Those who would invite the parties to a collective bargaining relationship to substitute for the grievance procedure resort to law suits must be condemned as disrupters and troublemakers. It is easy to see that this proposal, innocent on its face and addressed to a pretended evil for which, if it existed, there would be already available a completely adequate cure, really has a sinister and dangerous objective. This type of proposal serves as a pretext for smearing unions; it serves as a pretext for ruining prospects of industrial peace between employer and employee. It frequently serves an additional purpose. Encouraging Chaos Proposals which pretend that they seek only to make it possible to sue a union, frequently contain cleverly wrapped up within them rules which not only encourage suits against unions but make unions liable for things for which they are not properly responsible. To understand this problem let us go back a bit. In the darkest days of anti-unionism in this country, when the government and the courts set their hands against the unions and aided the employer in destroying them, it was a simple thing to make a union liable for the act of any member. Unions were regarded as conspiracies, and, when a member or a minor officer violated a law, the union and all of the members were made to suffer upon the theory that they were all in the "conspiracy". It was this kind of thinking which led judges to impose enormous fines upon unions and to make the members of unions responsible for acts which they had never authorized or participated in. 19 On the basis of this type of thinking it was relatively easy to destroy a union. All the employer had to do was to plant in the union ranks a spy who would deliberately, contrary to the instruc- tions of union leaders, commit unlawful acts for the purpose of bringing discredit upon the union and of making its officers and members liable for damages. In order forever to banish this type of abuse laws were passed, such as the Federal Norris-LaGuardia Act, which expressly provided that neither the officers nor members of labor organizations could be held liable for unlawful acts of members or agents of those or- ganizations unless there was clear proof that the acts had been either participated in or authorized by the officers or members. Many of the states passed similar laws. Today, in most states of the United States as well as in the federal courts, liability is im- posed upon unions and their members, but only when it is fair to do so, namely, when there has been actual participation in or authorization by the officers or members of the organization. Most proposals, however, which pretend to deal solely with the suability of unions also change this basic principle of liability. By clever phrases and trick clauses these proposals would once again make innocent union members the prey of enormous money judg- ments incurred through the irresponsible and unauthorized acts of others, who frequently are commissioned to perform their acts by unscrupulous employers bent on destroying the union. There is no need for a law to make unions suable. The major purpose of such a proposal is to undermine peaceful labor relations and destroy unions. They Propose Make Labor Unions Bargain Co/fecfivefy . . ." Let's Have A Cooling Off Period Before Strikes. . ." These are two convenient slogans under which a large number of proposals of various sorts have been made. The Case Bill had extensive provisions for a "cooling-off" period. The NAM in its proposals sets forth as a declaration of principle that the union 20 as well as the employer should be obligated by law to bargain collectively. These are appealing words but what do they mean? What are the specific proposals which are made under cover of these slogans? First, let us take a look at the slogans. "Make unions bargain collectively," says the NAM. Is this in- tended to create the impression that unions refuse to bargain collectively while it is the employers who are insisting on collective bargaining? To recognize this for the sheer nonsense it is, one need only stop for a moment and think about what the word "collective" bargaining means. For generations it was the practice of employers to deal with each individual worker, to offer to each worker the wage which the employer would pay, and to hire or fire the worker on the employer's own conditions. That was individual bargaining. Unions came into being because the workers sought equality in bargaining power with the employer. They could not hope for that equality in individual bargaining. The union was a means of sub- stituting collective bargaining in place of individual bargaining. In other words collective bargaining is the opposite of individual bargaining, and collective bargaining is the very purpose for the existence of labor unions. A labor union by its very nature cannot bargain otherwise than collectively. That is the very purpose and intent of the much maligned Wag- ner Act. It requires that the employer bargain collectively with the organization which the workers have established for collective bargaining. The Act does not require the employer to yield to the worker on any condition of employment; it requires only that the employer meet with the union if the workers so desire and bargain with the union as the collective bargaining agency. Does the NAM now mean to imply that employers are insisting on collective bargaining but the unions are insisting on a return to individual bargaining? Is that what the NAM means when it says, "Make unions bargain collectively"? Clearly that would be nonsensical; and equally clearly, if unions were doing that, the NAM would not be complaining. In another implication, which is equally without sense and equally unjustified, the slogan seems to imply that unions are re- fusing to bargain with the employer, while the employers are mak- ing every effort to engage in bargaining in good faith with the unions. If this is what the slogan means, does it imply that unions should be required to yield or compromise their position at the bargaining table? We have already pointed out that the Wagner 21 Act does not require employers to yield. To require unions to do so would obviously be unfair and unjust. 'Coo/ing Off' Proposals This implication that unions are refusing to bargain is similar to that which underlies the equally widespread call by anti-labor groups for legislation to make unions engage in a cooling-off period before calling a strike. Both slogans try very hard to create a public impression that unions are unreasoning groups of men who insist upon rushing into strike action without careful deliberation, without considered and reasonable bargaining, and without reckoning the cost to themselves and the community. "Therefore", say these sloganeers, "make these unions cool off before they call the strikes; make them bargain in good faith before they call the strikes." Do the facts justify any such implications? The Actual Facts In 1946 there were some four or five major strikes which were widely recognized as representing the main core of the strike crisis of the early part of the year. There was a strike in steel; there was a strike in the automobile industry; there was a strike in the electrical industry. Were any of these strikes the result of hot- headed and impulsive action by labor unions? Were any of these strikes the outgrowth of any failure of the unions to make every effort to engage in reasonable collective bargaining? Were any of these strikes called in the face of reasonable employer efforts to bargain collectively? In the steel strike the demands initially presented by the union were delivered to the employers in October of 1945. They were negotiated for the succeeding months and no strike was scheduled or contemplated or announced before the middle of January in 1946. Even at that time at the request of the President the strike was postponed for an additional week. When the President made his recommendation as to the proposed terms of settlement it was the union which accepted the President's proposal; it was the em- ployer who rejected the proposed settlement terms. In fact, while we are discussing unreasonable arrogance, it is well to remember that before the steel strike, it was the U. S. Steel Corporation which twice turned down requests from the Secretary of Labor that they meet with him to discuss the impending strike. 22 In the automobile industry the negotiations preceding the Gen- eral Motors strike took better than 60 days. In that strike, too, when a fact finding Board recommended certain terms of settlement it was the union which accepted and the employer which rejected the proposal. In the electrical industry the negotiations preceding the calling of any strike were as extensive as those in each of the other two industries. In that strike too, it was the union which expressed complete willingness to settle the entire dispute on the basis of recommended national policy; it was the employer who persisted in prolonging the strike before finally accepting the terms suggested by objective authorities, terms which the union had been willing to accept many weeks earlier. It was the employer alone, as federal conciliators themselves declared, who obstructed settlement for an extensive period of time. Does this establish a record of union unreasonableness in the face of employers' willingness to bargain? Or does it point out that despite the best efforts and intentions of the Wagner Act employers are still in a position where they can make a sham of the collective bargaining process by engaging in all the forms of negotiations while at the same time obstructing any reasonable settlement? On these facts who but the NAM could be expected to come forward with a proposal that unions be subjected to special and additional restraints and requirements rather than the employers who were responsible, on the record, for the prolongation of each and every one of the major disputes of 1946? Behind The Slogans Thus we find that these slogans are completely lacking in any reasonable basis. They serve merely as an effort to confuse issues which the facts themselves make quite clear. So much for the slogans. Now what are the proposals which are offered under cover of these slogans? The one most widely urged takes the form of a so-called cooling- off period. The proposal usually contains a suggestion that before calling strikes unions must send certain kinds of notices to the employer and to government officials, that there must be a certain minimum period of conference, and thereafter certain additional notice of varying duration. In all, these usually add up to a re- quirement that before calling a strike a union must give the em- ployer extensive advance notice of its intent to call the strike, 23 usually for at least a period of thirty or sixty days or sometimes even more. Sometimes a slight twist is introduced in addition to this cooling- off period arrangement so as to declare that it is the duty of the union to bargain in good faith and to declare that it shall be an unfair labor practice for the union to fail to bargain. In both forms, however, the proposals have the same evil foun- dations and effects. In both forms, in the first place, the proposals by their very nature seek to create a public impression adverse to unions. By their very nature the proposals seek to create the impression that it is unions which have created recent labor difficulties and that it is unions which must be chastised. The true facts on this we have already pointed out. More important, however, these proposals by their very nature play into the hands of employers and accomplish results seriously weakening to the unions in the collective bargaining process. It is a well-known fact, particularly to leaders of labor organiza tions, that the power of the union to organize and conduct a strike, if one should be necessary, depends in large measure on the morale and organizational spirit among the men and women who comprise the union. That morale and organizational spirit is not a thing of the mo- ment. It is not something which can be built up and turned on or off over night simply at the beck and call of the leaders of the union. A strike decision by any large group of workers is a very important decision; important to them and important to the com- munity. It is one which they take only after consideration and judg- ment and it is one which, once taken, requires a good deal of prep- aration and work to make their decision effective. A Single Ob/ecfive To organize a strike requires planning, timing, understanding and above all complete and detailed preparation. This being so, it is a matter of extreme moment to the organization that it be able to time its strike action properly and effectively. It is a matter of great moment to the organization that it not be placed in the position of scheduling a strike and calling it off and scheduling it and calling it off and delaying it, at the whim and command of a government official or dependent on the stalling tactics of the employer. 24 All of these proposals have a single major objective! They subject the union to artificial delays, to artificial extensions, to artificial uncertainties which make it more difficult to plan and organize an effective strike. There is, in addition, an effect produced by these delaying pro- posals, these cooling-off proposals, which actually forces strikes on many occasions when strikes would not be needed or desired. These cooling-off periods set an official stamp and determinant as to when a strike should be called. If they fix a 60-day period from the day of the notice, an ex- pectation is built up among the members of the union that the end of the 60-day period will mark the commencement of the strike. This has been found to be one of the substantial effects of the ill- fated Smith-Connally Act. Thus, far from preventing strikes, these delaying cooling-off period provisions in statutes have only one major effect: they weaken the union in its organizational efforts in preparation for the strike. At the same time they frequently provoke premature strikes and frequently cause strikes which would not otherwise take place. As to all these proposals a set of simple conclusions may be stated: 1. These proposals are not supported by any of the facts of the strike situations they are supposed to remedy. 2. They are part of a campaign to discredit and vilify labor and obscure the true facts as to the cause of strikes. 3. They will have no effect on labor relations other than to harass and weaken unions in the collective bargain- ing process. They Argue^ "Amend The One-Sided Wagner Act . To refer to the Wagner Act as "one-sided" is a thorough con- fusion of ideas. Prior to the passage of the Act the rights of employers and employees were completely out of balance. Employers had the uncontested right to pool their resources and engage in collective 25 action through the formation of corporations. The corporations themselves were permitted to band together for the purpose of pre- senting a united front to labor on the matters of wages, hours and working conditions. On the other hand, the worker was helpless as an individual to cope with the enormous concentrated bargaining power of the employers. The employer possessed and used many highly effective weapons to destroy unions. Discharge, blacklisting and espionage were but a few of the weapons available to him for such purpose. The em- ployee, however, had the bare legal right of self -organization — and nothing more. Any collective action which he tried to take was promptly smashed by his employer. Finally, the employer's business and property were protected against interference from his employees by the ilijunction and the whole body of laws, civil and criminal, protecting property rights. But the worker found no assistance in police regulations or the injunctive process in protecting his job and the standards under which he worked. The purpose of the Wagner Act was to relieve, at least in part, this glaring inequality. It did so simply by forbidding the employer to use his economic power to destroy the right of self -organization of his employees. The Act thus merely placed employer and employee upon a plane of equality in one limited respect, namely, freedom to organize for collective action. None of the other legal rights of the employer was taken from him. Since the Wagner Act thus merely restores a partial equality where enormous inequality existed before, it is difficult to see how it can be called one-sided. Furthermore, the Act accomplishes its purpose in the mildest possible way. No criminal penalties attach to violation of the Act. Not a single employer has ever gone to jail under the National Labor Relations Act while employees are subject to severe jail sen- tences by anti-labor judges for even threatening interference with the property rights of employers. It is true that the Act imposes obligations only upon employers rather than employees — but to attribute one-sidedness to the Act for that reason is silly. It would be equally unrealistic to assert that game laws are one-sided because they make no provision to protect the hunter against the birds which he is forbidden to shoot. The inequality which the Act sought to remedy grew out of employer interference with self -organization of employees. There 26 is no corresponding threat by employees to the self -organization of employers. Certainly no law is needed to prevent employees from restraining or coercing employers in the exercise of their right to self-organization and collective bargaining. Every proposal which is now made to "equalize" the Act has been urged for years by groups opposed to collective bargaining. They have as their real purpose the hope of interference with the self-organization of employees and the destruction of their unions. Creating False Issues A good example of the way in which critics of the Act create false issues to hide their real purpose can be seen in the so-called "free speech" issue. Many critics of the Act complain that while an employee enjoys free speech under the Wagner Act an employer does not. But what are the facts? The Labor Board has held in scores of cases that the employer is free under the Wagner Act to discuss trade union matters with his employees and to advance arguments to them against unions. There are any number of Board decisions in which the Board has had under consideration statements, notices and speeches by the employer involving an aggressive campaign against unions and their leaders. In all of these situations the Board has held that the utterances of the employer are protected by free speech. The great majority of the employers today use free speech not merely to discuss issues of trade unionism but openly to attack unions, their objectives, their leaders and their program. Shielded by free speech they openly electioneer in Labor Board elections, even though the selection of the employees' representative is pri- marily the employees' business. No employee would dream of in- terfering in the selection of the employer's representative, such as a member of the company's board of directors; yet employers con- sistently thrust themselves into elections of union representatives and enjoy complete immunity under the Wagner Act. The Wagner Act respects employers' freedom of speech and the Supreme Court has so held. As a matter of fact the Constitu- tion protects employers' freedom of speech; if the Wagner Act interfered with such freedom it would have been held unconstitu- tional. It is only when an employer's speech carries threats of discharge or warns of economic reprisal that the Labor Board holds that an unfair labor practice has been committed. There is no constitu- 27 tional right to yell "fire" in a crowded theatre and there is likewise no constitutional right to coerce employees through use of economic " power into abandoning their union. The cry of "free speech" is merely raised as a smoke-screen to justify amendments to the Act which in fact would permit employer intimidation. Employers' Pefitions A similar type of complaint relates to the fact that employers have no right to file petitions for elections under the Wagner Act. At the present time the Labor Board entertains such a petition from an employer who is confronted by claims of two rival unions to represent the employees. But it refuses such petitions when there is one union in the picture. Simple logic justifies such a refusal. In the first place, the right of employees to choose their representative when and as they wish is no more the affair of the employer than the right of the stock- holder to choose directors is the affair of the employees. In the second place, the employer is not injured by the fact that he cannot petition the Board for an election. The employer has no obligation to bargain under the Act until a union approaches him for collective bargaining. At that time the union must demonstrate that it has been designated by a majority of the employees. If the employer in good faith doubts that the union represents a majority he is not obligated to bargain with it and may refuse to bargain with it until after that issue is settled by an election. On the other hand, if the employer were granted this right it would seriously prejudice the rights of his employees. For the em- ployer could then seek an election as soon as a union had started an organizing campaign in his plant. By forcing a vote at that time, the union would be sure to lose. „ The psychological effect of such a defeat in a premature election would cripple organization for some time to come in the future. The result might be to deprive the employees of collective bargaining for a considerable period. The same would be true where an employer had engaged in unfair labor practices and thereby prevented organization among his employees. To permit him to petition the Labor Board for an election at a time when his employees were suffering from his own unfair labor practices would create a condition in which it would be possible for an employer permanently to deprive his employees of freedom of self-organization. No, the Wagner Act is not "one-sided", 28 Let us not fall into the trap prepared by those who dream of once again imposing the law of the jungle on American labor relations by restoring the same glaring inequality between em- ployer and employee which existed before the Wagner Act was passed. They Ask 'Sfop Coercive Pickefing Exactly what is it that those who urge laws on "coercive picket- ing" want to prohibit? Do they want to prohibit peaceful picketing? Do they want to prohibit workers from conducting parades with banners in front of the establishment under strike? Some of those who raise this slogan frankly admit that they are opposed to all picketing, however peaceful. Most of them, however, vehemently insist that they have no intention to interfere with the right of peaceful picketing. As a matter of fact, of course, the right of peaceful picketing is protected by the Constitution of the United States and no law contemplating prohibition of peaceful picketing could withstand the test of the courts. Are these persons opposed only to the use of force or violence or other unlawful conduct in connection with the conduct of the picket line? If so, what is the need for any additional legislation? Clearly, force and violence are unlawful and are today subject to criminal penalty in each and every state of the United States. What then is the true objective of those who urge these laws to restrict picketing? When we examine the various laws that are offered under this heading the true purpose and object becomes quite clear. Tfiey Favor Injunctions Many, if not all, of these proposals suggest that the kind of picketing which they are seeking to attack should be removed from any operation of the Norris-LaGuardia Act. In other words, this slogan is used, in effect, as a cover-up for a suggestion that the Norris-LaGuardia Act be repealed. 29 What would it mean to repeal the Norris-LaGuardia Act? For thirty years before the Norris-LaGuardia Act was passed, the use of the labor injunction in the federal courts as a device for breaking strikes had become a notorious scandal in our national history. Congress therefore passed a law in 1932 which in effect declared (1) that peaceful picketing and other peaceful strike action was no longer to be the subject of any labor injunction in the Federal courts, and (2) if injunctions were issued in labor dis- putes as a means of curbing any proven unlawful or violent con- duct, then there must at least be certain principles of fairness in procedure. These principles as laid down in the law declared in effect only that appropriate notice of an application for injunction be given to the union so that it might defend itself, and that an open and full hearing must be held on the facts so that the court might act with full knowledge. Further, the requirement was laid down that the court was not to issue an injunction unless it was clearly established that an injunction was needed. For example, it would have to be shown that local police authorities were unable to cope with the situation. The Real Motive These may sound like simple principles of equity and fair play. It may be astonishing to realize that there was a time before the Norris-LaGuardia Act when injunctions could be issued without notice to the union, without a hearing, and without any effort to prove that the injunction really was a necessary device. This is what the Norris-LaGuardia Act was intended to termi- nate. This is what most of these proposals would now attempt to revive. The issue thus is not whether "coercive" or "violent" or "un- lawful" picketing shall be protected. There is not a state in the nation where "violence" in not already unlawful. The issue is whether such "violent" picketing shall be curbed by the proper officials, namely, the local police authorities; or whether an occasional scuffle or fist fight on a picket line shall be made the excuse once more, as in the days before the Norris-La- Guardia Act, for sweeping anti-labor, anti-strike injunctions issu- ing out of the Federal courts without notice or hearing, as was the custom in the heyday of "government by injunction," Sometimes these proposals for curbs on picketing are not satis- fied with a revival of the injunction, but provide for vindictive criminal penalties. 30 In other words, the people who offer these proposals are not satisfied to allow any criminal conduct which may occur on the picket line to be treated and punished in the same manner as any similar criminal conduct, whether it occurs on the picket line or else- where. These people are not satisfied to have the police treat a fist- fight on a picket line the same as they would treat a fist-fight any- where else. These people wish to punish conduct occurring on a picket line more severely than they would punish the same conduct occurring anywhere else. It is clear that these proposals are based fundamentally on a principle of discrimination against those who participate in picket- ing. There is still another discriminatory side to the proposal. When an individual engages in physical violence or coercion, he is usually subject to punishment in municipal or state courts. Does it make sense, solely because he is a striker, to subject the same individual to special treatment in the Federal courts? Under our system of government, it was not intended that our Federal courts be converted into gigantic police courts for the punishment of local violence by strikers. Special Penalties Labor unions do not urge or condone any violence or unlawful conduct on picket lines. Every responsible labor organization makes every effort to prevent any outbreak which might arise as a result of the increased tensions of a strike situation. But that is not satisfactory, apparently, to those who wish to utilize every possible device to crush labor organizations. These people wish to punish far more severely certain minor conduct of an offensive nature — which may occur on a picket line just as it may occur anywhere else. They wish to create a reign of legal terror over the pickets in the course of a strike, and they wish to revive the institution of the labor injunction as a device for attacking the entire union and all of its membership. They wish to do so on the thin justification which may arise from a single minor incident in the course of the activities of workers on the picket line. It is this discriminatory effort of those who urge these proposals which exposes in full their true intent and purpose. The simple fact is that existing laws are fully adequate to take care of any of actual force or violence which may arise in the course of picketing. The proposals contemplate something far 31 more than the elimination of force and violence on the picket line. They are aimed at the right itself. They Demand- Lffnif The Right To Strike The year 1946 brought a large number of strikes. This was not at all unexpected. Workers throughout the war period had been subjected to a constantly rising cost of living while their wages had been held under sharp control. In addition, during the war years, there had been an accumulation of grievances of major and minor proportions throughout the entire nation. Employers, taking full advantage of the pledge of labor not to engage in strikes, had gone ahead on their own program of doing as they pleased with respect to working con- ditions. They knew that, in the main, their workers would not vio- late the no-strike pledge given to the nation. It was therefore to be expected that if employers continued, after the war [as they did] to refuse justified demands for much needed and long overdue wage adjustments, a substantial number of strikes would be provoked. Those who have always hated labor unions have seen in these strikes an opportunity once and for all to do a crippling job upon the labor movement. Pointing excitedly to the strikes of 1946, these individuals have revived old campaigns, and started new ones, to eliminate the right to strike in a multitude of circumstances. Trying to build a fire of discontent over the 1946 strikes for which employers were primarily responsible, the NAM calls for laws to outlaw jurisdictional strikes, sympathy strikes, strikes to force recognition, strikes to enforce featherbedding, strikes for this or strikes for that. Another group advocates outlawing strikes against public utilities. Were any of the major strikes of 1946 "jurisdictional strikes"? The answer is "No." Were any of the major strikes of 1946 "sympathetic strikes"? The answer is "No." 32 Were any of these strikes which are supposed to justify all of these proposals strikes to force recognition of an uncertified union? The answer is *'No." Were any of these strikes called in order to enforce feather- bedding? The answer is "No." We could go on down the list of the strikes on which the NAM and others call for prohibitions and ask whether any of them were of the types which the NAM would outlaw. The answer would be "No." Smokescreen For Affack What this all adds up to is very clear. The strikes of 1946 are being used as a smokescreen for attacking all of the various kinds of strikes which the NAM and its friends and members have been trying for years to outlaw. Does the CIO support "f eatherbedding" ? The CIO does not engage in "f eatherbedding." But to the NAM "f eatherbedding" includes any demand for a safe crew and any opposition to the speed up. Are "jurisdictional strikes" good? To the NAM, a "jurisdictional strike" includes any attempt by a union to protect itself against an employer who is starting a company union or imposing an un- desired union on his workers. But over and above all these facts, it is important to realize what the NAM is trying to do when it tries to outlaw a strike. This country has always recognized the basic right of our people to work or not to work as they see fit. The Thirteenth Amend- ment abolished involuntary servitude. The United States Supreme Court in interpreting the Thirteenth Amendment has declared that it is a violation of the Constitution for any state or the federal government to try to make it a crime for anyone to refuse to work for someone else. That would be involuntary servitude. In a decision recently rendered by the U. S. District Court in Chicago,, in a case involving the constitutionality of the Lea Act passed by the last session of Congress, the court pointed out that the right of individuals to leave their jobs under protection of the Constitution is a right which workers have whether it is one worker quitting by himself or a large number of workers acting together. In other words, the right of a group of individuals to leave their jobs is just as sacred as the right of each individual among them to leave his or her job. 33 When the NAM calls for a law prohibiting jurisdictional strikes, sympathy strikes or the so-called secondary boycott, what is it that they are requesting? They are asking for laws to make it a crime for a group of workers to refuse to work under certain conditions. No matter how such laws are dressed up and surrounded by slick slogans, these are simply proposals for involuntary servitude. What Is Labor ^s Program One device has become a favorite of those groups which fight most actively for the program of fraud and deception outlined in the earlier pages of this analysis. It is a trick which is so effective that it has unfortunately "taken in" many honest and objective citizens. Having gone through one after another of these slogans of mis- representation and slander; having leveled all of the baseless charges discussed in these pages; having found these charges an- swered at every turn by reasoned exposure, the sponsors of this campaign then turn to labor and say "What is your proposal?" When they ask this question, they usually mean: "What is your proposal for anti-labor legislation?" The simple fact is that this country is fast approaching a state of crisis. What is the nature of this impending crisis? Its proportions and implications can be gathered from what happened in the first few months of 1946. Industry emerged from the war richer and more tightly concentrated than ever before in its history, and with a profit level unequalled in the history of our nation. The people, on the other hand, found in victory a period of such high living costs that their real earning level suffered a sharp blow from the reduction of the work-week and other economic factors at the end of the war. Industry was clearly in a position to preserve the living standards of those people and still earn profits at a more than reasonable level. Greed overcame reason, and industry said "no." It thereby created the beginning of the crisis. Today we are in a period when prices, released from control, have leaped skyward. Profits have followed suit. American in- dustry anticipates net earnings after taxes of approximately 15 billion dollars in the year 1947. At present wage levels, the Amer- ican worker is faced with an actual and continuing reduction in his real earnings. The workers have asked for increases in wages. 34 Industry is preparing again to say "no." Industry would thereby help to plunge this nation into an economic crash which could well dwarf the 1929 crisis by comparison. Monopolists have created the crisis. Now they point the accus- ing finger at the one group which has stood up in an effort to pre- serve economic stability. These monopoly interests have used the crisis of their own creation as a pretext. They dare not encourage any study of the real crisis of today and a search for real solutions. Instead they revive anti-labor proposals which have been put forth by them for decades. They revive devices which have been considered and re- jected by Congress after Congress. They attack isolated phenomena — "the jurisdictional strike," "the secondary boycott," issues of relatively rare occurrence and far removed from the heart of the real labor-management problems of today. This is a calculated and well-planned program of monopoly. It is a program intended to prevent understanding of the crisis and of the best solutions. What is labor's solution to this problem? We say that the answer lies in the realm of economics, not of vituperation. The answer is a preservation and development of the living standards of the nation. The answer is a sound national wage policy which preserves the purchasing power needed for the American economy. The answer is an expanded social security and health program. The answer lies not in engaging in witch-hunts against the or- ganizations of the nation's workers, but in meeting the basic eco- nomic and social needs of the American people. 35 UNIVERSITY OF ILUNOIS-URBANA CIO Publications THE CIO NEWS. Official weekly newspaper of the CIO. Subscription, ^1 a year ($1.50 in Canada). Special rates for bundle orders, group subcriptions and special editions upon request. UNION NEWS SERVICE. A weekly clipsheet for editors. ECONOMIC OUTLOOK. A monthly survey of current economic facts. $1 a year. No. 80. Church and Labor. 4 pp., 100 for 60c, 500 for J52.75, 1,000 for $4.75. No. 90. For the Nation's Security (Revised). Analysis of proposed bill for improved Social Security. 36 pp., 5c a copy, 100 for $4. No. 93. Political Primer for All Americans. How to preserve and protect our freedom. 2 color, 20 pp., 5c a copy, 100 for $3.50, 500 for $13. No. 99. Labor and Education. How mem- bers of the labor movement and the teaching profession together may improve our school sys- tem. 2 color, 20 pp., 5c a copy, 100 for $4. 500 for $16. No. 111. Labor and Religion. How they may cooperate. 20 pp., Sc a copy, 100 for $4, 500 for $15. No. 112. Union Hall Bookshelf. General la- bor bibliography. 28 pp., 10c a copy, 100 for $8, 500 for $30. No. 114. A Society of Free Men. Speech of Bishop Bernard J. Sheil at 1944 CIO Conven- tion. 8 pp., 100 for $1.50, 500 for $6, 1,000 for $10. No. 116. Re-employment. Philip Murray's Plan for Peace and Plenty. Highly illustrated. 32 pp., 15c a copy, 100 for $12, 500 for $48. No. 121. Substandard Wages. An argument for a 65c an hour minimum. Photos, charts, drawings. 32 pp., 15c a copy, 100 for $12, 500 for $48. No. 124. Guaranteed Wages the Year Round. Why they're necessary and how they're possible. 28 pn., 10c a copy, 20 for $1, 100 for $4. l,000^or$3S. No. 125. The Bible and the Working Man. Colored picture strip. 2c a copy, 100 for $1.50, 1,000 for $12.50. No. 127. Report on World Unity. Report of CIO Delegation to Paris World Trade Union Conference. 24 pp., 10c a copy, 100 for $5, 500 for $20. No. 128. Report of CIO Delegation to the Soviet Union. Description of forms and func- tions of Soviet labor unions. 32 pp., ISc a copy, 100 for $10, 500 for $40. No. 130. Letters to Dad. A labor union man discusses mutual interests with his farmer father. 2 color, 24 pp., 10c a copy, 20 for $1, 100 for $4, 1,000 for $30. No. 131. For CIO Stewards. A handbook for shop stewards and committeemen. 48 pp., 15c a copy, 100 for $12, 1,000 for $100. No. 132. The Truth About CIO. "Eco- nomic Outlook" reprint of "Ten Years of CIO" and "Finances and Government of CIO Unions." 16 pp., 10c a copy. 100 for $6, 1.000 for $45. 5,000 for $200. No. 133. Veterans' Organizations. Positions on key issues, dues and eligibility, etc., of 7 major veterans' groups. 8 pp., Sc a copy, 100 for $3.50, 1,000 for $27.50. No. 134. America's Log Jam — and How to Break It I Sound forestry and forest conserva- tion as proposed in the Hook Bill. 36 pp., 15c a copy. 10 for $1, 100 for $8.50. 500 for $40. No. 135. Your Civil Rights— A handbook for organizers and union members. 68 pp. 20c a copy; 100 for $15. No. 136. Resolutions of 8th CIO Conven- tion — Text of statements passed by 1946 CIO convention. ..pp. 10c per copy; 100 for $7.50. No. 137. Why Wages Must Be Raised- Reprint of the November and December Eco- nomic Outlook. 2 colors, 12 charts. 16 pp., ISc a copy, 10 for $1, 100 for $8. 500 for $32.50, 1,000 for $50. No. 138. The Drive Against Labor— An analysis of recent legislative proposals to re- strict union activity. 32 pp., 10c a copy, 100 for $7.50. No. 139. You and the WFTU. A descrip- tion of the World Federation of Trade Unions — and why the CIO is in it. 16 pp., Sc a copy, 100 for $4.00, 500 for $19.00. No. 140. The Case of the Vanishing Pay- check — How unfair taxes rob the workers, told with words and pictures in "comic book" style. 16 pp.. 10c a copy, 100 for $7.50. 500 for ?25, 1,000 for $35. 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