[Congressional Record Volume 159, Number 42 (Thursday, March 21, 2013)]
[House]
[Pages H1810-H1815]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
CONGRESSIONAL PROGRESSIVE CAUCUS HOUR
The SPEAKER pro tempore. Under the Speaker's announced policy of
January 3, 2013, the gentleman from Wisconsin (Mr. Pocan) is recognized
for 60 minutes as the designee of the minority leader.
Mr. POCAN. Mr. Speaker, I rise on behalf of the Congressional
Progressive Caucus to recognize our Special Order hour not only to talk
a drop about the budget plans we had this week, but more importantly,
this is an hour to honor organized labor in this country and what
organized labor has done for the middle class and for so many millions
and millions of people across this country.
This week, the Congressional Progressive Caucus put the Back to Work
budget before this body. The Back to Work budget is based on a simple
concept: the number one problem facing this country is not the deficit,
it's the need to improve the economy and create jobs, and the single
best way you can address the deficit is to get people back to work. The
Back to Work budget did just that. It would have created 7 million
jobs, it would have brought unemployment down to 5 percent within 3
years, and it still would have trimmed $4.4 trillion from the deficit.
What it did is it invested directly in the very things that create
jobs--in infrastructure, in police and fire, and in teachers and in
other services that are vital to this country--because we've been told
by the Congressional Budget Office, the single entity that is a
nonpartisan agency that both parties rely heavily on, that this year
one-half of our deficit is caused by economic weakness, and three-
quarters of the deficit in 2014 is caused by economic weakness.
Now, what is economic weakness? That means unemployment and
underemployment. If you get the people of this country back to work,
you will solve most of our problems in trying to deal with the deficit.
So rather than make the end-all goal solving the deficit but completely
ignoring the economy--and as the Republican budget, we saw that, on the
floor today, actually could cost 2 million jobs in this country in the
next year--we need right now to be investing in those jobs so that
people are getting back to work
[[Page H1811]]
and supporting their families and becoming taxpayers. When they pay,
we'll stop that trajectory and the deficit that we have caused by this
weakened economy.
So that's the answer. That's what we need to focus on, and that's why
the Congressional Progressive Caucus put the Back to Work budget out
this week. It really is the premise of what we really want to talk
about, which is our support for the working men and women of this
country and the support for organized labor. Because when we put our
emphasis on jobs, we're recognizing the very hard work that labor has
done in this country.
I just want to share a few historical parts that labor has done which
are so important in this Nation.
First of all, we have the weekend because of organized labor. In
1870, the average workweek for most Americans was 61 hours. But many
workers, including children, put in 10- to 16-hour workdays 7 days a
week. Many workers didn't have a single day off for a week or two in a
row.
In response, labor unions in the late 19th century and the early 20th
century organized massive strikes demanding shorter workweeks. They
fought so that Americans could be home with their loved ones instead of
constantly toiling for their employers with no leisure time.
By 1937, these labor actions created enough political momentum to
pass the Fair Labor Standards Act. The FLSA created a Federal framework
for a shorter workweek that included room for leisure time. So the
reason we have our weekends, our days off during the week, is because
of the effort a century ago by people in organized labor.
Also, unions helped to end the lack of child labor laws that we had
in this country. Child labor was prevalent before the growth of the
labor movement. In the 19th and early 20th centuries, child laborers
were commonplace in factories, shops, and other workplaces across this
country. American children as young as 5 years old worked in large
numbers in mines, glass factories, textiles, agriculture, canneries,
home industries, and as newsboys, messengers, bootblacks, and peddlers.
In fact, children were often preferred because factory owners viewed
them as more manageable, cheaper, and less likely to strike.
In many factories, children were forced to climb on and crawl into
large, dangerous machines because they were the only workers small
enough to do so. These dangerous child labor conditions often caused
the problem with people losing fingers, arms and legs of children that
could easily get caught and mangled in devices.
Beyond the equipment, the environment was a threat to children as
well as the factories that put out the fumes and toxins. When children
inhaled toxins, they would often suffer from illness, chronic
conditions or disease. And harvesting crops in extreme temperatures for
long hours was considered normal for children. The labor movement
spearheaded the fight against the child labor practices that were going
on.
As early as 1836, union members at the National Trades' Union
convention made the first formal public proposal recommending that
States establish a minimum age for factory work. That year,
Massachusetts enacted the first State law restricting child labor for
workers under 15. Over the next several decades, the efforts of labor
movements successfully achieved minimum age laws in other States. In
1881, the AFL proposed a national law banning all children under 14
from employment.
In 1892, the Democratic Party adopted the AFL's child labor platform
and began to push for national child labor laws. Finally, in 1938,
Congress included minimum ages of employment and hours of work for
children in the Fair Labor Standards Act.
Unions have spearheaded the fight for the Family and Medical Leave
Act. Labor unions like the AFL-CIO federation led the fight for the
1993 law which requires State agencies and private employers with more
than 50 employees to provide up to 12 weeks per year of protected leave
for workers to leave for a newborn, a newly adopted child, a seriously
ill family member, or the worker's own illness. Thanks to the labor
movement, employers are required by the FMLA to continue group
benefits, including dental and optical benefits, during family or
medical leave.
{time} 1220
The law also requires that employees can't be retaliated against for
merely taking their federally protected leave; and under the law, when
they have completed their family or medical leave, they must be allowed
to return to the same or an equivalent position with equivalent pay,
benefits, and working conditions.
Here's another thing that organized labor has done for the American
people: they've pushed throughout their career for workplace safety.
It's not just for children, but for adult workers.
Efforts by the Federal Government to ensure workplace health and
safety were minimal until the passage of the Occupational Safety and
Health Act of 1970, better known as OSHA. The laws were so lax that in
places for some employers, it was cheaper for the employer to replace a
worker injured in the workplace than it was to introduce safety
measures. There was little recourse or relief for the survivors of dead
workers or injured employees. In the early 1900s, labor unions had
pressured many States to enact workers compensation laws that
discouraged employers from permitting unsafe workplaces.
Prior to OSHA's enforcement, 14,000 workers died each year from
workplace hazards and 2 million more were disabled or harmed during
those years in these unsafe workplaces. It wasn't until the 1960s that
the movement began for a comprehensive workplace safety law once again
backed by the labor movement. That law went into effect on April 28,
1971, declaring Congress' intent ``to ensure so far as possible every
working man and woman in the Nation safe and healthful working
conditions and to preserve our human resources.''
Those are just some of the benefits that we have seen because of
organized labor's efforts over the last century and a half.
They also were instrumental in passing the Social Security Act of
1935. They were instrumental in the Civil Rights Act of 1964. And their
support for World War II was unmatched in making sure that we had
workers to deal with what we needed to back home while we had so many
people fighting for our country overseas.
Those are just some of the efforts, but there's more. Part of being a
part of organized labor has meant so much for this country. If you are
a union member, let me just offer a few of the things that you're more
likely to have because you're part of a union. One, you will earn
higher wages. Union Members earn 30 percent more than their nonunion
counterparts. So you'll have a better chance at a living wage, the
ability to support your family because you are a part of a union.
You'll have more on-the-job training. Union workers are more likely
to have access to formal on-the-job training, making employees more
skilled and adding to productivity.
And something I should have mentioned from the beginning is I have
been a small business owner for 25 years, over half of my lifetime. I
opened a small business when I had hair and it was dark. It was a long
time ago. But my business has also been a union business. I have a
union specialty printing business. I can tell you one of the very
important reasons why many of us who choose to have unions in our
businesses is because we know the value of what I just talked about,
that training.
Many unions have an apprenticeship program where you can get the very
best, most qualified and skilled employees to be able to come to your
place from day one. One of those other benefits for me as a small
business owner is they're more likely to stay in my business so that I
don't have the turnover of constantly training new employees. I have
the benefit of someone who is going to stay with me for a long time.
Another thing, if you're a member of a union, you have safer working
places. Union workers are more likely to be trained on health and
safety rules, and union workplaces are more likely to enforce OSHA
standards. You're also more likely to receive workers' compensation.
Union members get their benefits faster and return to work more
quickly. When workers are injured, the union helps workers through
[[Page H1812]]
the often complicated process of filing for workers' compensation, and
they protect the workers from employer retaliation.
Finally, you have a better chance as a union member to have health
insurance. Nearly 80 percent of the unionized workers receive employer
provided health insurance compared with 49 percent of nonunion workers.
Union members are more likely to have short-term disability and life
insurance coverage.
Those are just some of the benefits that you'll see for union
workers. Now, specifically, I would like to talk about some of the
problems that unions are facing today because there are several very
significant issues. Not only is it in the States and in the Halls of
Congress that they're having a hard time making sure that we continue
to protect workers and the unions that are working to protect those
workers, but very specifically within agencies.
I would like to read a story--I believe it's The New York Times--
about a situation that just happened this year in the State of New
York. I'm just going to read parts of this article, but I think it will
be especially significant. This was written in mid-February. So this
happened at the end of January of this year. I'll read it from the
beginning, and I'll take a few breaks in here.
The article is: ``At Cablevision, Norma Rae Has Been Escorted
Outside.''
Cablevision claims to take pride in its open-door policy
for employees. So two weeks ago, a tight-knit band of cable
television installers gathered at a company depot in Brooklyn
to pick up route shoots and put ladders and tools in their
vans when they trooped inside to ask a vice president for a
couple of minutes of his time.
Last winter, these workers overcame fierce management
opposition and voted to join the Communication Workers of
America only to spend 9 months in rancorous contract talks.
They wanted to ask the vice president if Cablevision was
serious about a contract agreement or if they only wanted to
break their union.
They waited for 20 minutes to talk and then 20 more.
La'kesia Johnson, 44, grew restless and walked to the front
office. The manager told her to go back inside. Then the vice
president walked in and asked essentially, ``Who is supposed
to be working now?'' Every worker, 22 in all, raised a hand.
``Ladies and gentlemen,'' the vice president said, according
to multiple accounts, ``I am sorry to tell you that you've
all been permanently replaced.''
``What?'' Ms. Johnson said, ``Replaced? You just fired us?
You don't even know what we want.'' Ms. Johnson said the vice
president looked at her and stated, ``I don't care what you
want.''
The article goes on to talk about unions:
Unions win just 50 percent of elections when they
successfully negotiate an initial contract just half of the
time. The National Labor Relations Board is a dog missing
teeth. If workers engage in an illegal strike, the board
legally must seek a court injunction. If a company illegally
fires workers, the board takes months to investigate and
cannot levy any fines.
It goes on further:
I asked Charles R. Schueler, a company spokesperson, about
the firings. He said that ``22 employees refused to go to
work after multiple requests to do so.'' The workers, I
noted, all said they intended to work that day. He repeated
his original statement. He also said that Cablevision
negotiated in good faith. He then said, ``That leaves us with
the issue of your conflict. Are you ready?'' The reporter
said. Sure. You, he said, are a vice chairman of the
Communication Workers of America union.
He's got me, sort of. Like most reporters of The New York
Times, I'm a member of the Newspaper Guild, which is a part
of the Communication Workers of America, which has about
140,000 members in the Northeast. I receive no union pay, and
I have no duties. I'm also a Knicks season ticket holder and
a Cablevision cable customer. I pay far more to Mr. Dolan's
companies than I pay to my union in dues.
Ms. Johnson feels guilty. She's persuaded her colleagues to
risk being fired. She speaks of waking in the middle of the
night and of bills piling up. Her husband is a freelancer.
They depend on her health benefits. ``It's stressful. The air
in our house is very thick,'' she says. ``Sometimes I break
down,'' Ms. Johnson said, and asks herself if she's been
selfish. ``But my husband reminds me: 'You have a home family
and a work family. You must be loyal to both.'''
What's so significant about this case is the anti-worker attitude
that Cablevision brought forth to its workers who voted by law to form
a union. It was on January 30, over a year after 282 cable television
technicians voted overwhelmingly to be represented by the CWA, that
they illegally locked out and fired 22 technicians who were engaged in
legally protected legal union activity.
After waiting more than 40 minutes, as the article explained, they
were told that they were permanently replaced. Since then, five have
been called back to work.
``Permanently replaced'' usually refers to workers who are on strike,
but none of these workers were on strike. In fact, some of the workers
that were fired were already in the field on their jobs. This is a
violation of Federal labor law which follows a year of management's
delays and refusal to bargain in good faith with the elected union.
{time} 1230
They illegally gave raises to every Cablevision technician except
those in Brooklyn who voted to form a union in an attempt to blunt the
Communications Workers of America's union-organizing drive that they
were having in the Bronx. They left Brooklyn consumers behind with
slower Internet speeds, and they publicly stated that they would
disinvest in Brooklyn because of the unionization vote. They refused in
negotiations to agree to even the most basic union contract demands,
such as the union security clause and just cause for discharge and
discipline.
Rather than negotiate a fair contract, Cablevision spent millions on
anti-union lawyers to fight the union, and that's more than it would
have cost to settle the contract. All Cablevision employees want is to
be able to organize and be treated with respect and fairness, and all
Cablevision seems to want to do is spend millions of dollars to take
away those very rights. That's just one problem that we've seen with
attempts to bust unions.
The reason we've seen that is due to a provision that has also
happened just recently with this Senate in its blocking appointments to
the National Labor Relations Board, which is the board that oversees
what's going on. We've heard the case of the Brooklyn Cablevision
story, but here is why it is especially significant. The reason
Cablevision had that confidence in treating its workers so poorly is
that it was part of a strategy of illegal firings and a lockout of the
workers that stems from larger, recent judicial rulings in Washington,
D.C., as part of a larger anti-worker strategy.
On January 25 of this year, in the Noel Canning ruling, a three-judge
panel of Republican appointees to the U.S. Court of Appeals for the
District of Columbia Circuit overturned a National Labor Relations
Board unfair labor practice decision because the court deemed that
three NLRB members who helped to decide the matter ascended to their
positions due to unlawful recess appointments by President Obama in
January of 2012. The ruling went on and destroyed the NLRB's ability to
enforce U.S. labor law. As a result, Cablevision's firings were
executed without fear of reprisal. Cablevision is merely the first
company to recognize and to act on the fact that that ruling can be
exploited by anti-worker corporations.
The real problem we have is that we can't get the appointments to the
NLRB that the President has tried to make because the Senate has
refused to place the people. They have taken advantage of the quorum of
Senate-confirmed members, and they've made it exceedingly difficult to
appoint these because of the 60-vote rule that they have in the Senate.
Due to the GOP's unprecedented obstruction and use of the filibuster
and secret hold, they essentially have made it impossible for people to
be appointed to the NLRB so as to actually enforce the labor laws that
are the law of the land in this country.
Now, it's not just the communication workers who have this story. I
have a union in my State of Wisconsin, the Operating Engineers, who had
a very similar story; and this is repeated across the country. These
are workers with Local 139, with Proppant Specialists, which is a
company in Wisconsin that has had a 3-year fight of trying to form a
union in violation of U.S. law. The company has stopped them from being
able to proceed.
They started back in October of 2010. They filed for a petition for
election in April of 2011. They had an election in June of 2011 and
voted to form the union, at which time people filed objections to some
of the votes. That went
[[Page H1813]]
on for a period of time until the board decision on April 3, 2012. They
certified the election on the 9th of April of last year and said that,
indeed, the election after a year was a fair election. There are
supposed to have been immediate timelines to have started negotiations
for a contract with the union. It's the law of the land. Instead, the
company refused to. They sent a letter to the union, declining the
union's request for bargaining late in that month of April. The union
then filed a complaint against the employer in May, and the
investigation by the labor board had started at that point.
The problem is without the teeth of the NLRB, to this day, 3 years
after starting this process, the workers who voted to form a union
still don't have that right to the union that they have by the law of
the land in this country because of what has happened with the NLRB.
Simply, we have to do something to fix this. We have to make sure
that the President can appoint the people he has to appoint to the NLRB
and make sure that those appointments are confirmed so that they can do
their valid, prescribed-by-law jobs to ensure that workers have that
right to unions when they vote on that.
Now, we know, if you had the Employee Free Choice Act in place in
this country, you wouldn't have to worry about this because it would be
very clear that they would be able to negotiate that contract and get
that done. The problem is if that were the law of the land, despite
support from a bipartisan majority of the House and a strong majority
in the Senate, those same 60-vote filibuster rules would hold up the
ability for us to pass an Employee Free Choice Act in this country.
So what has happened?
We have this toothless law which now is going to allow for more and
more abuse that we're going to see. This isn't the only law that we've
seen like this that has been abused. We've also seen an abuse in the
State of Wisconsin, my State.
I was in the State legislature for 14 years before coming this year
to be a Member of Congress. Two years ago, we had what we refer to in
Wisconsin as the ``uprising.'' Newly elected Governor Scott Walker at
the time had a provision to fix the budget. We were slightly in
deficit. We were not prescribed by law to fix it, but were close to
that point. He decided to have a budget fix; but within that budget
fix, he went way farther and attacked the middle class and the workers
of the State of Wisconsin. He proceeded to, in that budget fix, put in
a provision--one that, I think, the employees have said since they
would have agreed to--for them to pay more for their pensions and
health care, although that normally would happen through the bargaining
process. Then he went as far as to take away their rights to
collectively bargain for public employees, and he took away their
ability in how they paid their dues to their unions.
What does paying your dues to a union have to do with a shortfall in
the State budget of Wisconsin? Absolutely nothing--but Governor Walker
abused his job in order to go after the public unions.
We have had collective bargaining laws in Wisconsin for over a half a
century--and guess what? We've had labor peace for over a half a
century in the State of Wisconsin, only until Governor Walker 2 years
ago decided to take that attack on those public workers and their
ability to bargain for the most basic rights. When you're talking
collective bargaining rights, you're not just talking their wages,
their health benefits, their pensions. You're talking their right to
bargain for their workplace safety conditions.
I have visited many prisons in the State of Wisconsin, and I used to
serve on the corrections committee. Those correctional officers work
and put their lives on the line every day for the safety of my family
and everyone else's in the State of Wisconsin. When they see a blind
spot and when there's not a camera and when there's a security risk,
they have to have that right to be able to negotiate for those safety
concerns; but that was taken away. That's collective bargaining. It's
simply someone's right to bargain for the most basic concerns, like
worker safety.
So in Wisconsin, Governor Walker did that. We had the uprising. We
call it the ``uprising'' because, within days of his announcement, we
had 10,000, 20,000, 40,000 people come each day to protest the
Governor's decisions. On one Saturday, we had 100,000. On another
weekend, they estimated it could have been as high as 180,000 people
who showed up around the State capitol and in the State capitol in
order to protest losing their rights as employees to bargain for their
laws.
What's interesting is that we knew when this fight happened that it
was going to be a long and hard battle, but even more so, the Governor
tried to be very strategic. He did this against all public employees,
but he excluded police officers and firefighters because--let's face
it--after 9/11, politically, those are two organizations that are
viewed very respectfully by the public. So he tried to basically divide
and conquer, but to the police and firefighters of Wisconsin, to their
credit, they stood with every other worker and said, An attack on one
of us is an attack on each and every one of us. Because they stood with
us, it was a stronger, more cohesive effort. You had schoolteachers and
State workers and correctional officers and people who worked for the
DNR--the Department of Natural Resources--and every State agency
standing with police and firefighters and families across the State.
Yet it wasn't having the rallies with 10,000 and 20,000 and 40,000
people that mattered; it was having the 800 people in Bayfield,
Wisconsin. Now, if you haven't heard of Bayfield, Wisconsin, don't feel
bad. We sometimes say this is a map of Wisconsin. At the very tippy top
of the State of Wisconsin, almost in Canada, is a town called Bayfield,
but they had 800 people in this small community rally to show their
support for workers.
{time} 1240
So that is what is so important.
We saw the other consequences of this law. It was the private unions
that also saw this problem because they knew what would happen. Just
like the problem happening right now to the communication workers in
New York, they knew this would happen in Wisconsin.
If first you take away the collective bargaining rights of the public
employees, what kind of a signal is that to those companies that have
negotiated in good faith with their workers to form private sector
unions? Well, sure enough, we know exactly what happened. Within
months, we saw unions, private sector unions across the State, start to
start a fight with their union. In one particular case, we had a crane
company, Manitou Crane, where they had one division, one of the unions
that negotiates a contract with them in dispute, and they were going to
stop production and do unpaid leave for members of other unions. Now,
you can't do that. You shouldn't do that. But they went ahead to try to
force that on the other workers in order to try to bust that union.
Mr. Speaker, those are the problems that we're seeing right now in
this country.
There's another really strong example that we are seeing right now in
this very body on a very regular basis, and this is the fight we're
having on behalf of our United States Postal Service. There has been no
question that there has been an attack on the Postal Service. And what
happened essentially is a number of years back under the Bush
administration, they had this idea to take the Postal Service, the
Postal Service alone and no other agency in the Federal Government, and
make them prepay their retirement system 75 years into the future.
Let me give you an example what that means. That means they're
prepaying the pension of someone who is not born today for their
retirement a half a century down the road. No other agency, no private
company would do that; but we are requiring the Postal Service. So when
you hear the Postal Service is losing money, almost every single dollar
of those losses is due to the prepayment of this unusual requirement
that only the Postal Service has to pay.
So what happens, the response, clearly I think this is an attempt to
try to privatize the system. This is to completely take away a system
that I think so many people have relied on for so many years in this
country. But this is what we see happening.
Recently, we saw there was a move to go from 6-day delivery to 5-day
delivery. When you start to cut back on
[[Page H1814]]
delivery, it has real ramifications on people, on what they're going to
receive and the timeliness of what they're going to receive.
As a small business leader, again for 25 years of my life, many small
businesses, especially in rural communities, count on the United States
Postal Service to help them conduct their businesses so that they can
hire the workers who work for them.
Here's an example. There's a place in Wisconsin called Brooklyn,
Wisconsin. It's just outside Madison, Wisconsin, maybe half an hour.
The people of Brooklyn, Wisconsin, need a post office even more than
the people of Brooklyn, New York, because in Brooklyn, New York, there
may be other alternatives. There may be stores that provide similar
types of services, not necessarily mail delivery, but other types of
delivery that they can go to. But in Brooklyn, Wisconsin, they don't
have that luxury. That post office means everything. That small
business operating out of Brooklyn, Wisconsin, having that means they
can be in business and be able to hire the people in Brooklyn,
Wisconsin. And that's Brooklyn. If you go to other rural parts of my
district in Lafayette County, in Lafayette County, I guarantee, they
have a problem with broadband so they can't necessarily even do an
Internet-based business, so that post office means everything to them.
So when we see some of the attacks that are caused by this absolutely
ridiculous requirement to pre-fund pensions into the future, 75 years
into the future, that's why they are having financial difficulties. So
there is a bill that I'm on, and others, called the Postal Service
Protection Act of 2013. That act would not only maintain the 6-day
delivery service we currently have, but it would also give the United
States Postal Service the ability to reform its funding structure for
their employee pensions. It also would direct them to use revenue to
create innovative postal and non-postal products and services to
generate new revenue sources.
Let's face it, we know things keep changing in how we are able to
communicate and get information out to potential consumers for
businesses, and to get out to your neighbors and friends. But allow
them the ability to do that because if they can, they can make up for
those shortfalls. But this absolutely unfair requirement they have puts
more than 1,700 United States Postal Service workers in my Second
Congressional District of Wisconsin--it puts their jobs in jeopardy.
And for seniors and small businesses and those who live in rural areas,
and those who rely on the Postal Service, it means a lot to have that
post office, that 6-day delivery, and to have a service that's strong
and affordable like it is in this country.
So, the Postal Service is yet one more of these attacks that we've
seen.
The bottom line is thanks to organized labor--they have fought so
much for the people of this country, for the middle class--one might
argue the reason we have a middle class is because of exactly what
they've been able to do. Fighting for the very things that we talked
about, things like a smaller work week, giving us that weekend, as I
discussed at the beginning of this Special Order time that I've had to
talk about labor, has been absolutely crucial.
We have seen the child labor laws that at one time put children as
young as 5 years old in this country, their lives and limbs, at risk.
In large part it has been corrected because of the labor movement over
the years.
The fight for family medical leave, which is so important to families
now. If you have a child, you adopt a child, you have a family member
who is seriously ill and you want to spend that final time with that
loved one, the reason we have that law in place is because of the
efforts of organized labor and others.
The fact that we have work place safety through the OSHA laws, which
is so important, that you can go to work and not have to expect because
of that work to have less of a lifetime, that's been created because of
labor's efforts, and so much more.
Now, I'm a proud member of the Painters and Allied Trades, the
International Union of Painters and Allied Trades. I'm a business owner
and I'm a union member because I'm proud of the workers that I have.
When people are paid a fair wage, you get much more of a result for
your business. I know that I have long-term employees because, instead
of trying to nickel and dime them and not treat them right, by paying a
living wage, I get more than that back in return.
And one of the other challenges that unions have faced is this
current economy, which is exactly why the Congressional Progressive
Caucus introduced the back-to-work budget. Until we get people back to
work, we have all of the other economic woes that are surrounded by
that. The Painters and Allied Trades are part of the building trades
within the union. There are public employee unions, there are private
sector unions. But the building trades are the folks who are the
bricklayers and the laborers and the operating engineers and the
painters and the electrical workers and the carpenters. I could go on
and on, and I apologize for the ones that I'm not listing, but those
people who work every day in construction, which is one of the markets
that's been the hardest hit through this economy, when the economy is
good, people who work in the trades are working and they're doing well.
But when the economy gets the sniffles, people in construction get a
cold. And when the economy gets a cold, people in construction get
pneumonia.
It's simply that much of a direct effect from how our economy is
doing, which is exactly why we should here in this body not only
support the labor laws that we need to and appoint the people to the
NLRB so we can enforce the laws we have in place and expand the
protections for workers that we need to do in this very body, but we
need to get the economy going so that more people are working. Because
the more people who are working, that is going to strengthen and
support the economy.
I've listened to people on the other side of the aisle, the
Republican side, with their budget presentation this week. I know that
they are very serious about wanting to address the issues that they
address, from deficit reduction to some of the other issues. The
problem is that they are going about it in completely the wrong way.
You can reduce the deficit best by getting people back to work. In the
Progressive Caucus budget, the back-to-work budget, we do just that. We
invest in infrastructure. We invest in putting police and fire back to
work. We invest in putting teachers back in the schools. We invest in
infrastructure so that those people in the construction industry who
are hit with double the unemployment that everyone else is right now
can get back to work.
{time} 1250
And I can tell you, from firsthand experience, why that investment
means something. When Congress, several years ago, passed the Recovery
Act and passed the dollars that came to communities to invest in
communities, we saw the benefit in the State of Wisconsin.
I was the cochair of the Joint Committee on Finance, the committee
that writes the State budget for the State of Wisconsin, and we had to
approve every single dollar that came through Wisconsin to make sure it
went efficiently to build roads, repair schools, and the other services
that that funding helped provide.
And when we did that, we had a report from the road-building industry
and the vertical construction industry--not exactly your most
progressive or liberal organizations--that said 54,000 jobs were saved
or created in the State of Wisconsin because of the recovery dollars
and our State budget that year, but it was predominantly the recovery
dollars.
So I was surprised when I sat in this room for my first-ever State of
the Union Speech, and heard President Obama talk about the need for
more investment in infrastructure, just like the budget the Democrats
proposed, just like the budget the Progressive Caucus proposed.
When you talk about that investment, I saw a press release from our
Speaker of this House who said that no jobs were created in this
country from the last recovery dollars. Well, fortunately, the very
next week, in the Budget Committee, which I serve on, we had Dr.
Elmendorf, the head of the Congressional Budget Office, who is our
official, nonpartisan, number-crunching agency, and I asked that
question.
[[Page H1815]]
Is this true? Is this true that no jobs were created because of those
recovery dollars?
And he said, according to their statistics, up to 3.3 million jobs
were saved or created in this country because of that investment. So it
wasn't just the 54,000 jobs in the road-building industry back home,
much less the other industries. It is the nearly 3.3 million jobs that
were helped because of our influx of cash because, at that time, face
it, the economy was down.
If people aren't working, they're not spending money. If they're not
spending money, businesses can't grow. If businesses can't grow, they
can't hire workers. In fact, just the opposite, they were laying off
workers, and it has a cumulative spiral effect down.
But because of those recovery dollars we were able to hold off how
deep we fell and, since then, under this President, we have had
consecutive job creation happening to try to make up for those very
deep losses that we had at the end of the Bush administration.
But we still need to grow even faster, and that's why we need to
continue to work this. When we continue to work hard on creating jobs,
we are helping people to be able to help pay taxes and to bring the
revenue in so that we can solve our deficit. That is the single best
way to solve the deficit.
And again, that same Congressional Budget Office that we all go to,
on both sides of the aisle, to get our facts and figures that we work
off of, they're the ones who said three-quarters of the deficit we'll
have in fiscal year 2014, that we just voted on a budget in this House
today on, is caused by economic weakness. In other words, unemployment
and underemployment. You fix that, you solve the deficit.
So we don't need to take away the Affordable Care Act and take away
all of the benefits that you're going to have from the Affordable Care
Act; the fact that an adult child at 26 can still be on a parent's
policy, that if you have a preexisting condition, you still have access
to health care in this country.
You don't need to repeal that in order to solve the deficit. In fact,
just the opposite. We have savings in there that will help reduce the
rising cost of health care, because that's a challenge.
I think everyone in this room would agree that we have a challenge of
rising health care costs, but we can address that very primarily by
keeping that law in place.
But the Republicans have taken that away. In fact, the Republican
budget, it's been estimated, would cost 2 million jobs next year if it
were to become law. We need a very, very different process and a very,
very different place for this country to be.
As a small business owner, I have been an advocate in this House of
saying, you can be pro-business, you can be pro-labor. I have a union
business. And you can be a progressive. None of those are incompatible.
Again, to me, one of the smartest things that I was ever able to do,
as a small business owner, was to have a union shop, because it allowed
me to hire some of the best and most talented people, to offer them a
fair wage so they can support their families, offer them good benefits
so they have health care and are in a better place for their families.
And it's a mutual respect that we have that allows it to continue.
It's so important that we have that respect for the people who work
in this country, for the middle class, and for those who are aspiring
to be in the middle class. That is the backbone of the country we have
to fight on.
So when the Republican version of the budget, instead, is going to
take trillions of dollars and put it on the backs of the middle class,
it's the reason why the Democrats, instead, were looking at getting rid
of some of the loopholes that are out there, whether it be the
subsidies to Big Oil that we still do, the corporate jet loophole, that
they still fund tax breaks for corporate jets, the fact that we give
tax breaks to companies that send jobs overseas, none of that makes
sense.
So the Democrats are working hard to try to take care of that,
because we know that the backbone, again, is people getting to work in
America, and part of the strength of that is the union movement that we
have.
So I would hope that people would really realize that it is because
of the labor movement that we have been able to benefit so very much
from what has been able to support the middle class in this country.
There is so much more that unions are facing across the country,
whether it be collective bargaining laws, the right to work less for
less laws that we just saw happen in Michigan and other places. It's
those sort of laws that sound good on the surface but really hurt the
American worker. When you hurt the American worker, that's a serious
problem.
So with that, Mr. Speaker, again, on behalf of the Congressional
Progressive Caucus, we are so proud to have spent a little time to talk
about the middle class and the American labor movement and what it's
done for America.
We salute our brothers and sisters in organized labor, thank them for
their efforts, and vow to continue to fight on behalf of the middle
class, and to make sure that they all have protections and standards by
following our laws and passing more laws that give workers a voice.
Mr. Speaker, I yield back the balance of my time.
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