[Congressional Record Volume 158, Number 160 (Wednesday, December 12, 2012)]
[House]
[Page H6710]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
SO-CALLED RIGHT TO WORK
The SPEAKER pro tempore. The Chair recognizes the gentlewoman from
Ohio (Ms. Kaptur) for 5 minutes.
Ms. KAPTUR. Mr. Speaker, as a Representative from Ohio, a State that
borders Michigan, I rise to stand in solidarity with the workers of
Michigan. Many Ohioans I represent actually drive to work in Michigan.
And due to the high-handed actions of Michigan's Governor and its
legislature, they actually railroaded legislation through Michigan,
with no hearings, to take away the rights of Michigan workers to fund
the collective bargaining process that results in living-wage worker
contracts.
The workers of Michigan are fighting to maintain their rights to a
fair day's wage for a fair day's work. I support their rights and the
rights of every American to organize and negotiate by contract for
proper pay and benefits, regardless of which State they live in. The
rights of labor by contract are critical to growing our middle class,
as opposed to rights by happenstance that are always up for grabs,
where workers have no rights and live in fear of the future.
Michigan's Republican ideologues passed so-called ``right-to-work''
legislation. Well, let's be clear: the bill being pushed there by the
far right should really be called the Right to Work for Less. And that
is exactly what President Obama called it. To quote Bob King, the
visionary president of the United Auto Workers of this country:
Every right-to-work State has lower wages, lower benefits,
less security for workers and more income inequality.
And they have a shrinking middle class. The UAW is right: if you
happen to live and work in a State that has a so-called right-to-work
law on the books, you earn an average of $5,000 less a year than if you
lived in a worker rights State. The bill signed last night in Michigan
strips labor organizations of their right to collect dues to cover the
cost of negotiating a collective bargaining agreement.
The Michigan law is pure politics. No, it is more than that. It is an
old-school union-busting technique, pure and simple. And in Michigan
and Ohio, we know a lot about union busting. As a daughter of auto
workers, I know the history of the hired goons who bludgeoned auto
workers back in the 1930s at River Rouge as workers began to stand up
for their human rights as they labored in the dungeons of the
automotive production facilities at the time.
I actually would like to challenge the Governor of Michigan to come
with me and let's work on the line for a month in one of those
repetitive-motion jobs that make and characterize modern automotive
production. They're not easy jobs. I would like him to install the
windows on the right side of a vehicle as it moves down the line over
and over and over and over and over and over again. Let's see how much
fun he'll have.
A year ago, we in Ohio witnessed a similar effort to eliminate
unions. Right-wing legislators moved through legislation that would
have ended collective bargaining as we know it in Ohio for public
sector workers. We're talking about firefighters, police, and teachers.
Well, the people of Ohio broadly rejected that union busting earlier
this year.
{time} 1100
Citizens organized a ballot initiative to restore worker rights in
Ohio, and they won. It was called Issue 2. The people of Ohio voted to
overwhelmingly protect the rights of those who protect us and who teach
our children.
While worker rights were protected in Ohio, up north, what was done
in Lansing, intends to extend far beyond the borders of just Michigan.
It will impact workers who commute from my State of Ohio and Indiana.
This is about more than just one State. In fact, this is a national
issue, not a states' rights issue at all. The Michigan union-busting
bill is a direct result of weak Federal legislation, and I'm talking
about section 14(b) of the Taft-Hartley Act, which weakens the rights
of labor. Congress should overturn that part of the law and reaffirm
its role in protecting the internationally recognized labor rights of
every American citizen.
That is why I have joined a number of my colleagues in introducing
legislation, H.R. 2775, that would do just that. We should not have
individual States competing against each other in a race to the bottom.
Haven't we seen enough of that?
We need to support and build back the American middle class by
creating good jobs, good-paying jobs, and secure benefits through
secure contracts. I stand attired in red today in solidarity with the
workers of Michigan, and I am proud to do so.
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