By Daniel H. Kruger, Professor
School of Labor & Industrial Relations
Professor Daniel H. Kruger is a Distinguished Professor of
Industrial Relations at Michigan State University where he has been a
faculty member since 1957. He is not only a MSU Distinguished Faculty
Award recipient, but he also has a Distinguished Faculty Award from
the Michigan Association of Governing Boards of public universities.
He has served as a consultant to the U.S. Department of Labor, chaired
the Michigan Manpower Program and been member of the Board of Trustees
of the National Urban League as well as many other federal and state
committees and task forces. In 1982 he received a five year
Presidential appointment to the Federal Service Impasse Panel and was
given an unprecedented second and third term. Dr. Kruger is a prolific
writer and speaker on topics such a collective bargaining,
arbitration, dispute resolution procedures and human resource
utilization.
The political season is upon us. Television, radio and newspapers
present an ongoing stream of articles and ads on the presidential
primaries. Candidates for public office seek support from both
individual citizens and groups in their efforts to get elected.
Business groups, environmental groups, gays and lesbians,
pro-abortion, anti-abortion, doctors, lawyers and unions all engage in
various types of political action.
As a professor, students ask me why UNIONS engage in political
action. Below are ten reasons why I believe unions engage in political
action:
· To help shape legislation that supports the individual in his or
her dual role as citizen and worker.
· To help shape the role of the federal government and its impact
on the job economy through monetary and fiscal policies.
· To influence the appointments by the President of the United
States as cabinet members, members of administrative agencies and
federal judges.
· To have a voice or help shape U.S. foreign trade policies which
affects jobs and therefore the livelihood of American workers.
· To help shape policies of the federal, state and local
government as they relate to their employees. Government in the United
States employs about 20 million employees nationwide.
· To elect congressmen, senators, state legislators, county
commissioners and city officials friendly to workers and their
legitimate interests.
· To help elect governors in order to shape the state budget and
the allocation of tax revenues for human services. The governor in
some states appoints judges to the state courts.
· To serve as a countervailing force to the legislative agenda of
business and other special interest groups.
· To expand the institutionalization of collective bargaining
which is the only legally mandated system of employee involvement in
the United States.
· The work of a democratic society is achieved through a system of
negotiated transactions with groups who possess political power.
POLITICAL ACTION BY UNIONS GIVES WORKERS A SEAT AT THE SOCIAL
NEGOTIATING TABLE.
Through political action, unions seek to enhance their political
power. Why is political power so important? In a democratic society
the extent or magnitude of political power gives unions their voice
and their seat at the great social negotiating table provided by
democracy. The work of a democratic society is accomplished through a
system of bargaining by those who possess political power. The greater
the political power, the greater the bargaining power. And political
power is achieved, in the words of Samuel Gompers, one of the founders
of the American Federation of Labor, "Elect your friends and
defeat your enemies." This statement was made in or about 1881
and applies as well today.
Political action is part and parcel of a free democratic society,
and unions, as part of the democratic community not only do engage in
political action, but are obligated to do so on behalf of their
members and their interests. |