Employee Free Choice Act
Anti-EFCA Groups Continue to Rely on Karl Rove and Bad Data
The Economic Freedom Alliance, a right-wing business organization whose members include the Missouri Chamber of Commerce, is currently running billboards and online ads attacking Claire McCaskill, Ike Skelton, Russ Carnahan, Emanuel Cleaver and Lacy Clay. The ads, which some of you may have seen on billboards or online, accuse the Democratic members of Congress of "killing jobs" because they've been supported by labor organizations and support the Employee Free Choice Act.
The ads are based on a "thoroughly discredited study" funded by the "corporate-friendly, anti-union 'Alliance to Save Main Street Jobs" and "based entirely on decades-old data from a handful of Canadian provinces."
Read More »"Offensive, Brazen, Cynical, Vile"
Karl Rove, Lt. Governor Peter Kinder and former state Sen. John Loudon are all pounding the pavement luxuriously carpeted hotel ballrooms this week to rally the corporate class against basic workers' rights. Loudon is the head of the Orwellian-named Save Our Secret Ballot organization, which is trying to put a question on the ballot to preempt the proposed Employee Free Choice Act (EFCA).
Karl Rove's sins are well known and well documented. His involvement in Missouri on behalf of corporate interests should be all a person needs to know that the so-called Save Our Secret Ballot effort is bad news.
More locally, John Loudon has kicked off the SOS Ballot campaign with offensive and manifestly false statements about EFCA. Yesterday, for example, Dave Catanese reported via Twitter:
Read More »Orwellian Irony
It's more than a little ironic that former GOP Sen. John Loudon invokes George Orwell in a dishonest opinion piece printed in last week's St. Louis Business Journal (via JohnCombest.com).
Let’s save our secret ballot in Missouri
Most of us assume voting by secret ballot in America is a constitutional right, a God-given right. Surprisingly, it isn’t guaranteed either in our federal or state constitution.
And right now, Missourians’ right to a secret ballot is in jeopardy as the U.S. Senate is within a vote or two from passing an Orwellian-named bill called EFCA – the Employee Free Choice Act. This bill would do away with secret ballot elections where employees decide who will represent them. Instead, unions could be formed in companies with as few as 10 employees through what’s known as “card check.”
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Together, we can build an economy that works...for me!
Seriously
Could you have a worse spokesman when your organization is trying to convince the public that you're not the side with a demonstrated record of intimidation, strong-armed tactics, smashing folks' basic rights in the Employee Free Choice Act debate?
Rove to address St. Louis business leaders on how to fight Employee Free Choice Act
By Jo Mannies, Beacon Political ReporterKarl Rove, one of the top advisers to former President George W. Bush, is slated to address St. Louis area business leaders at the St. Louis Club in Clayton on Monday afternoon.
The event is organized by the Missouri Chamber of Commerce and Industry, and will focus on the proposed federal Employee Free Choice Act.
The act, which has yet to pass Congress, would make it easier for unions to organize by allowing a majority of the employees at a business to agree to form a union by signing cards, and without a vote. (A secret ballot vote would not be required, but could be held if the workers request it.)
I was really hoping that 2009 would mean a lot less Karl and Dick Cheney on the teevee. But on the upside, their insistence on remaining very public spokesmonsters is making it really easy to identify the Dark Side in a lot of these public policy debates.
How (Not) to Form a Union
This video from CAP's American Worker Project breaks down the existing challenges for workers looking to organize pretty well:
(via Matthew Yglesias)
Akin embarrasses himself on Employee Free Choice Act
This is pretty classic. At a community meeting this week, Rep. Todd Akin started to run with the manifestly false argument that the Employee Free Choice Act would remove the right to a secret ballot for workers seeking to form a union --- but was promptly exposed by two members of the audience:
Caught, Akin's handlers tried to shut down the challenge in the name of a "civil debate." I guess "civil debate" means politicians should be able to say whatever they want, true or not, and the public should sit and take it.
Hotflash at Show Me Progress has the full story.
New ad: "Greed"
American Rights at Work is running a new ad highlighting the corporations that have received bailout money but refuse to support the Employee Free Choice Act.
From Hotline On Call:
"The public and lawmakers alike need to know that the special interests opposing the Employee Free Choice Act are the same ones who caused this economic meltdown," said American Rights at Work executive director Mary Beth Maxwell. "This new ad sends a resolute message that now is the time to help workers to bargain for a better life. The Employee Free Choice Act is urgently needed to create fairness in this economy."

Rove to address St. Louis business leaders on how to fight Employee Free Choice Act


