This post was originally published on Common Dreams – Breaking News & Views for the Progressive Community.
-
“Now more than ever,” said U.N. Secretary-General António Guterres, “we must work together to end this devastating and senseless war.”
-
“This is what happens when SCOTUS nominees lie about settled law at their nomination hearings,” said one observer.
This post was originally published on Common Dreams – Breaking News & Views for the Progressive Community.
-
After vetoing similar legislation last year and threatening to do so again last month, California Gov. Gavin Newsom on Wednesday signed Assembly Bill 2183 into law, making it easier for farmworkers in the state to participate in union elections.
The Democratic governor’s about-face on the measure represents a major victory for labor leaders. It follows a monthslong push by United Farm Workers of America (UFW) and the California Labor Federation (CLF) and comes in the wake of pressure from President Joe Biden and two high-ranking national Democrats with California ties — Vice President Kamala Harris and House Speaker Nancy Pelosi.
“This is an incredible victory,” said UFW president Teresa Romero. “Starting next year, farmworkers can participate in elections free from intimidation and deportations. ¡Sí se puede!”
A.B. 2183, which the CLF called “the most consequential private sector organizing bill in our state’s history,” gives farmworkers a streamlined way to unionize without having to cast a ballot at a polling place on or near growers’ property following a monthslong anti-union campaign.
BREAKING: Gov. @GavinNewsom stops by the @UFWupdates vigil, signs AB2183 into law. The legislation will allow farmworkers to vote remotely in union elections. pic.twitter.com/UN3eBU1kWS
— Eytan Wallace (@EytanWallace) September 28, 2022
Proponents say the newly enacted law, which contains several provisions aimed at preventing union-busting and was opposed by dozens of agriculture industry groups, will make it harder for bosses to subdue and retaliate against the workers who provide most of the nation’s fruits and vegetables, many of whom are undocumented and fearful of being deported.
When California’s Democratic-led Legislature approved the bill last month, Newsom’s office expressed opposition. The governor only signed it after his administration, the CLF, and UFW “reached a ‘supplemental agreement’ on provisions that will be introduced in the next legislative session,” the New York Times reported Wednesday.
According to the Associated Press: “The agreement includes a cap on the number of unionization petitions over the next five years and will allow state regulators to better protect worker confidentiality and safety, Newsom’s office said. It would do away with an option for workers to unionize through mail-in voting that is contained in the current language, but keeps a ‘card check’ election process.”
Under the revised law, farmworkers will still have the opportunity to “vote from home or anywhere else they feel comfortable,” reducing the likelihood of employer intimidation, UFW legislative and political director Giev Kashkooli told the news outlet.
As the CLF explains:
Majority sign-up, or “card check,” allows workers who want to join a union to sign a card authorizing the union to represent them in collective bargaining. If a majority of workers sign cards, the cards are submitted to the National Labor Relations Board (private sector) or the Public Employment Relations Board (public sector). If the Board finds that the majority of workers want a union, the union is entitled to recognition. In California, public sector employees already have the right to majority sign-up; all workers should be able to organize under this fair and democratic system.
In a video, Romero told those who led and supported the fight for free and fair union elections that “this is your victory.”
“Every one of you who struggled and donated your time and your energy to get this done,” said Romero. “Farmworkers organized and sacrificed to make their voices heard and to pass A.B. 2183.”
The governor has just signed #AB2183. This is your victory.
– @ufwpresident Teresa Romero pic.twitter.com/twvyRMdWNS— United Farm Workers (@UFWupdates) September 28, 2022
Starting on August 3, as KCRA reported Wednesday, UFW members embarked on “a 24-day, 335-mile journey from Kern County, near Bakersfield, to the state capitol, a march that civil rights activist César Chávez first led in 1966.”
Although Newsom disappointed farmworkers by announcing near the end of their march that he “cannot support an untested mail-in election process,” labor organizers around the state — with an assist from Biden and other top Democrats — continued to hold rallies and eventually won important reforms.
On social media, the CLF wrote: “This victory belongs to every farmworker who marched and sacrificed. It is shared with the whole California labor movement, who mobilized and stood in historic solidarity with the United Farm Workers. The fight of farmworkers is the fight for all of labor.”
That message was echoed by Sara Nelson, president of the Association of Flight Attendants-CWA, who said that “this is what happens when we organize with urgency. Together, we can win.”
This is what happens when we organize with urgency. Together, we can win. Si se puede! #AB2183 Hooray @UFWupdates! https://t.co/gwcc2kZ8hr
— Sara Nelson (@FlyingWithSara) September 28, 2022
The effort to secure free and fair union elections follows “years of dwindling union membership among California farmworkers,” the Times noted. “There are more than 400,000 agricultural workers in the state,” but the percentage who are unionized is “statistically zero,” according to recent estimates based on data from a 2020 Bureau of Labor Statistics survey.
Organizing agricultural workers was made more difficult last year when the U.S. Supreme Court’s far-right majority ruled that a California regulation granting union representatives access to farms amounted to an uncompensated government taking of farm owners’ private property.
“In this historic time when workers want a union more than ever before, everything we do — including legislatively — must be focused on organizing,” CLF chief officer Lorena Gonzalez Fletcher told the Times on Wednesday. “It’s natural that in California, our farmworkers will be leading the way.”
Also on Wednesday, Newsom signed A.B. 2530, which protects the healthcare benefits of striking workers. As Unite Here put it, the newly enacted law allows workers to “exercise their right to strike for better jobs without jeopardizing their families’ access to care.”
In a statement, Gonzalez Fletcher said, “Workers have the right to stand up to their boss and go on strike to improve wages, working conditions, and for a better life.”
This post was originally published on Latest – Truthout.
-
“We need a World Bank Group leader who fully appreciates the threat of climate change and the need to accelerate the global transition to a clean just energy future to improve living standards, reduce poverty, and encourage sustainable growth.”
This post was originally published on Common Dreams – Breaking News & Views for the Progressive Community.
-
“This is your victory,” UFW president Teresa Romero told those who led and supported the fight for free and fair union elections.
This post was originally published on Common Dreams – Breaking News & Views for the Progressive Community.
-
Democratic nominee Cheri Beasley has a one-point lead, but Trump-backed U.S. Rep. Ted Budd is getting more support from the Republican Party.
This post was originally published on Common Dreams – Breaking News & Views for the Progressive Community.
-
“Development of genetically engineered trees is advancing despite the serious risks to our forests and continued opposition around the world,” said one advocate.
This post was originally published on Common Dreams – Breaking News & Views for the Progressive Community.
-
“The concept of the ‘offshore’ tax haven has very much washed ashore,” says the Institute for Policy Studies.
This post was originally published on Common Dreams – Breaking News & Views for the Progressive Community.
-
“Democrats want to expand Social Security and Medicare,” said one advocate. “Republicans want to cut, privatize, and ultimately end both programs.”
This post was originally published on Common Dreams – Breaking News & Views for the Progressive Community.
-
“Democratic House leadership,” noted one observer, is “shooting down a wildly popular messaging bill right before the midterms.”
This post was originally published on Common Dreams – Breaking News & Views for the Progressive Community.
-
“Here in Jackson there will probably be a time when there’s crowds as far as the eye can see, people from all over, because somebody’s been poisoning the water,” said Bishop William J. Barber II.
This post was originally published on Common Dreams – Breaking News & Views for the Progressive Community.
-
More than 80 congressional Democrats sent a letter Monday urging the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency to accept the proposals of its largest union — the American Federation of Government Employees Council 238, which represents more than 7,500 EPA workers — amid ongoing contract negotiations.
“At a time when EPA is administering historic levels of funding, it is imperative that EPA’s career employees are supported by the agency’s political leadership,” the lawmakers wrote to EPA Administrator Michael Regan, a former agency employee. “Improving the rights and protections of EPA employees is critical to recruit and retain the talented and diverse workforce needed to fulfill the agency’s mission to address climate change, enhance environmental justice, and protect public health and the environment.”
“We believe that AFGE’s proposal to invest in EPA’s workforce is a cost-effective solution that will help employees perform the mission of the agency,” the letter continues. “According to AFGE, these investments — such as restoring career ladders, supporting sound science, and increased diversity — come at a minimal cost. However, we have been told that the investments will pay out enormous dividends in attracting and retaining the best and the brightest to fill the ranks of EPA’s highly educated, highly trained workforce.”
As the Washington Post reported, “The union and its allies are trying to leverage” President Joe Biden’s pledge to be “the most pro-union president” in the nation’s history — as well as his administration’s eagerness to swiftly implement the climate provisions of the Inflation Reduction Act — “to secure its goals at the bargaining table.”
Sens. Bernie Sanders (I-Vt.) and Elizabeth Warren (Mass.) were among the signatories of the letter, which was led by Reps. Paul Tonko (N.Y.) and Diana DeGette (Colo.). It was also signed by House Oversight and Reform Committee Chair Carolyn Maloney (N.Y.) and House Energy and Commerce Committee Chair Frank Pallone Jr. (N.J.), along with progressive stalwarts such as Reps. Pramila Jayapal (Wash.) and Rashida Tlaib (Mich.).
Marie Owens Powell, president of AFGE Council 238, told the Post that she was “thrilled” to have the lawmakers’ support. The recent passage of the Inflation Reduction Act, she added, has given contract talks a stronger “sense of urgency.”
“We cannot afford to lose any more of our current workforce,” Powell said. “They have the knowledge that we need to pass on to the newer folks coming in with this increase in funds.”
-
“What she’s saying,” wrote one critic, “is this: ‘Let’s make what’s already the most undemocratic body in government positively anti-democratic by enshrining minority rule.’”
This post was originally published on Common Dreams – Breaking News & Views for the Progressive Community.
-
“Improving the rights and protections of EPA employees” will help the agency “address climate change, enhance environmental justice, and protect public health and the environment,” the lawmakers wrote.
This post was originally published on Common Dreams – Breaking News & Views for the Progressive Community.
-
A whopping 80% of voters in the United States want the federal government to create a paid family and medical leave program, according to a new survey released Friday.
Navigator, a progressive polling firm, found that 89% of Democrats, 76% of Independents, and 70% of Republicans support the establishment of a federal program that would enable people to take paid time away from work to attend to serious illnesses or provide care for loved ones, including sick or disabled family members and newborn or newly adopted children. Just 12% of voters are opposed.
A majority (52%) of voters — including 68% of Democrats, 57% of Black Americans, and 61% of Hispanic Americans — would be more likely to vote for a candidate who publicly supports paid family and medical leave, according to the survey.
In addition, over half (51%) of voters — including 65% of Democrats, 58% of Black Americans, and 61% of Hispanic Americans — would be more motivated to vote in the upcoming midterm elections if Congress supported the passage of a national paid family and medical leave program, the poll found.
New from @NavigatorSurvey: 80% of Americans support #PaidLeaveForAll. A majority would be more likely to support a candidate who supports it—and they’d be more motivated to vote. pic.twitter.com/IkBwM5N7tj
— Dawn Huckelbridge (@dhuckelbridge) September 23, 2022
“Our nation’s leaders must stop ignoring what the data tell us time and time again — that paid family and medical leave is a critical support that families need, it is what Americans want, and it is what they deserve,” Jocelyn Frye, president of the National Partnership for Women & Families, said in a statement.
Dawn Huckelbridge, director of Paid Leave for All, told Common Dreams that the new survey “mirrors what Paid Leave for All Action has seen in midterm battleground states — 4 in 5 voters support paid family and medical leave, and this is an issue that motivates all voters, but particularly the progressive base and key persuadable groups like Independent women.”
“Paid leave is an issue that all candidates should be running on — and then delivering,” Huckelbridge added.
Six arguments in favor of paid leave were deemed convincing by more than three-quarters of respondents.
Voters were compelled by the fact that the U.S. is one of only seven countries in the world without federally guaranteed paid family and medical leave; far outpacing the U.S., the average length of maternity leave worldwide is more than six months.
The need for a federal paid family and medical leave program was clear to an overwhelming majority of respondents after they were informed that just 15% of workers in the U.S. — typically high-wage managers — receive such benefits through their employers.
Also persuasive were studies showing that paid leave policies increase the likelihood that women return to the workforce following childbirth and decrease reliance on public assistance programs.
The three most convincing arguments for paid leave focused on how it:
- enhances household well-being, including better early childhood development and more economic security for parents;
- improves health outcomes for infants, mothers, and the elderly; and
- boosts workplace morale and reduces employee turnover.
In a Common Dreams opinion piece published Thursday, Vicky Badillo of the Workers Defense Project in Austin wrote that “it’s time for our lawmakers to deliver what so many people are calling out for: a national paid leave policy.”
“Paid leave is a human right and a matter of dignity — it’s something every single one of us should have access to, regardless of who we are, where we live, or what we do,” Badillo continued. “Lives are on the line.”
“There is no economic and racial justice without access to paid leave,” she added. “Ensuring people have the time they need to be with and care for themselves and their families is morally the right thing to do — and it also makes sense for our economy and our national well-being. Investing in paid leave will help our families, our communities, and our nation.”
Poll results are based on online surveys conducted among a sample of 1,001 registered voters from September 8 to September 11.
This story has been updated to include a statement from Dawn Huckelbridge, director of Paid Leave for All.
This post was originally published on Latest – Truthout.
-
“When I hear them say, ‘Well, we’re so comfortable here,’ it’s like, ‘Great, now you can really help us get the rest of the world done,’” said WHO senior adviser Bruce Aylward.
This post was originally published on Common Dreams – Breaking News & Views for the Progressive Community.
-
“Paid family and medical leave is a critical support that families need, it is what Americans want, and it is what they deserve,” said one advocate.
This post was originally published on Common Dreams – Breaking News & Views for the Progressive Community.
-
“Big corporations are getting away with pushing up prices to fatten their profit margins, and families are quite literally paying the price,” said one economist. “It’s time to rein them in.”
This post was originally published on Common Dreams – Breaking News & Views for the Progressive Community.
-
“Instead of voting for the DISCLOSE Act and cracking down on the dark money in our democracy, Republicans blocked it,” said Sen. Patty Murray. “Shameful.”
This post was originally published on Common Dreams – Breaking News & Views for the Progressive Community.
-
“The World Bank must not be led by a climate denier and President Biden should call on the bank’s board to fire David Malpass immediately,” said one advocate.
This post was originally published on Common Dreams – Breaking News & Views for the Progressive Community.
-
“Any protest against Putin,” said one observer, “will be dealt with harshly in Russia. This takes real conviction and courage.”
This post was originally published on Common Dreams – Breaking News & Views for the Progressive Community.
-
“After a year of escalating climate disasters, this is an important signal from Denmark that the issue of loss and damage finance is being taken seriously,” said one advocate.
This post was originally published on Common Dreams – Breaking News & Views for the Progressive Community.
-
“When every night on the TV news is like a nature hike through the Book of Revelation, that builds demands for meaningful action,” said the former vice president.
This post was originally published on Common Dreams – Breaking News & Views for the Progressive Community.
-
“We united, took action, and achieved a contract that does more for us and our students,” said the Seattle Education Association.
This post was originally published on Common Dreams – Breaking News & Views for the Progressive Community.
-
“Just as they did for the tobacco industry decades before, lobbyists and spin doctors have spewed harmful misinformation,” said U.N. Secretary-General António Guterres.
This post was originally published on Common Dreams – Breaking News & Views for the Progressive Community.
-
“Forty-eight migrants were lured,” said Bexar County Sheriff Javier Salazar, “under false pretenses.”
This post was originally published on Common Dreams – Breaking News & Views for the Progressive Community.
-
“Our research shows just how far railroad executives will go to funnel record profits to their shareholders—even if that means stagnant wages, inhumane attendance policies, and throwing our supply chain into further turmoil,” said one Groundwork Collaborative analyst.
This post was originally published on Common Dreams – Breaking News & Views for the Progressive Community.
-
“What’s ending here is political commitment and funding, not cases or deaths,” said one medical anthropologist.
This post was originally published on Common Dreams – Breaking News & Views for the Progressive Community.
-
“The city remains under threat of a state-imposed privatization,” said one campaigner.
This post was originally published on Common Dreams – Breaking News & Views for the Progressive Community.
-
“It’s a simple question,” says Fetterman. “Do you support the GOP bill to ban abortion? Yes or no?”
This post was originally published on Common Dreams – Breaking News & Views for the Progressive Community.