How'd he win in the first place?

I'm dying to hear how employers can intimidate via a secret ballot.

You do realize that the sole purpose of secret ballots of all kinds are to prevent any untoward influences? Yet somehow employers found a way? Tell me another load of bovine excrement.

Employers intimidate in the run up to the secret ballot election. They threaten workers by declaring pay cuts, layoffs, and other consequences if the union is voted in. They make them attend mandatory anti-union meetings and hire anti-union consultants to do the intimidation.

There's only so much a union can do even after it's formed, and since, as I documented, 25% of employers fire workers for forming unions, that intimidation is very real.

As opposed to these fantasy scenarios you keep spewing up.
 
No it isn't. It hasn't changed. 30% of the workforce.

That's what it is now.

Except it's the OTHERSIDE of the fence. It's the non-union, non-organized workers that have to get 30% of the employees on a petition all the while fighting the unions. The people who want the non-union will never, ever, manage that.

I've already been over this.
 
So if I'm following along here... we've moved the standard of evidence from "explicit statements from Republicans to that effect" in order to prove their union-busting intentions, to "because I said so" in order to prove the violent intentions of the protesters of this particular Republican lawmaker?

I must admit, I kind of like the idea of evidence only being required from people with whom I disagree. How do I get in on this racket?
 
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No, I did not. The statement "we know where you live" is a message. It conveys information. And the information it conveys indicates more than simple possession of a particular fact. Can this rather basic concept really have eluded your grasp?

Yes, it does. It conveys the information that the location of your house is known by people. But it does not convey the information that people will act upon this information in a violent way - you have added that in yourself, and yet again provided nothing to back it up. Many people know where I live, and none of them wish me harm. Unless you can show that the protestors intended to intimidate (not claim over and over - show), all you're doing is throwing around baseless accusations.
 
Except it's the OTHERSIDE of the fence. It's the non-union, non-organized workers that have to get 30% of the employees on a petition all the while fighting the unions. The people who want the non-union will never, ever, manage that.

I've already been over this.

Nonsense. This is pure fantasy. Why wouldn't they be able to manage it? They manage it now with employers doing everything they can to intimidate workers from forming unions. Card Check just makes it easier.

If 30% of the workforce doesn't oppose the union, then the union should be there. They don't have to tell anyone in the union what they're doing, they just have to submit signatures to the National Labor Relations Board. If a sizeable percentage of the workforce was upset with the card check, it could happen simultaneously.
 
Yes. The conditions can never, ever, be fulfilled for a major corporation. Or even a mid to small corporation for that matter.

So your answer that yes, the bill outlaws, eliminates, or otherwise abolishes something that is clearly allowed by the bill, and this opinion is based on nothing more than your assertion that no major corporation can get 30% of its employees to sign a petition to hold an election?

And that this failure is 100% NOT the result of said employees being satisfied with their new union status, but can ONLY be the result of intimidation? And you have exactly what evidence for any of this?
 
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So your answer that yes, the bill outlaws, eliminates, or otherwise abolishes something that is clearly allowed by the law

It creates a standard that is impossible to meet. You say it's there, and sure enough it is, but that doesn't mean it will ever be used. Do you advocate going back to segregation? It created a situation that was "separate but equal". The law said it was equal! But of course is wasn't, was it?

I've been over this. I'm done with it. Go bash your head against someone in the CT forum if you want to keep asking the same question over and over again and ignoring the answers.
 
Nonsense. This is pure fantasy. Why wouldn't they be able to manage it? They manage it now with employers doing everything they can to intimidate workers from forming unions. Card Check just makes it easier.

If 30% of the workforce doesn't oppose the union, then the union should be there. They don't have to tell anyone in the union what they're doing, they just have to submit signatures to the National Labor Relations Board. If a sizeable percentage of the workforce was upset with the card check, it could happen simultaneously.

Why not just submit 30%+ of people who want to change the status quo and then have a secret ballot where no one can interfere?:boggled:
 
It creates a standard that is impossible to meet. You say it's there, and sure enough it is, but that doesn't mean it will ever be used. Do you advocate going back to segregation? It created a situation that was "separate but equal". The law said it was equal! But of course is wasn't, was it?

I've been over this. I'm done with it. Go bash your head against someone in the CT forum if you want to keep asking the same question over and over again and ignoring the answers.
You've been presented evidence and decide you don't like it.

Now that is something I see all the time on the CT forum.
 
Why not just submit 30%+ of people who want to change the status quo and then have a secret ballot where no one can interfere?:boggled:

Around and around we go.

Because the time lapse between the submition of the petition and the secret ballot election allows employers a chance to intimidate and harass employees and generally run anti-union campaigns.

All card check does is make the union automatically form if that initial petition has more than 50% of the workers signed on. Notice that if 50+% are willing to sign on publicly, that means the secret ballot would return a result in favor of unionization. Why, in essence, would you force two elections if the workers are satisfied from the beginning?
 
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It creates a standard that is impossible to meet. You say it's there, and sure enough it is, but that doesn't mean it will ever be used.

Nor does it mean it will never be used. Since it's there in the law, as you now admit, what evidence do you have that it will never be used? Since the mere existence of the provision is evidence enough that it could be used.
 
All card check does is make the union automatically form if that initial petition has more than 50% of the workers signed on. Notice that if 50+% are willing to sign on publicly, that means the secret ballot would return a result in favor of unionization.

Uh, no. No, it doesn't. That's the whole point of the objection. If employers intimidate workers and unions don't, then a secret ballot would likely return a higher portion of pro-union votes than public petition. But if unions intimidate workers and the employer doesn't, then the situation will be reversed, and a secret ballot would give a lower return than the public petition. A secret ballot protects workers against BOTH employers AND unions. In making this claim that the public vote is necessarily lower than a secret ballot would be, you're basically saying that it's impossible for unions to intimidate workers. That is... counterfactual.

Why, in essence, would you force two elections if the workers are satisfied from the beginning?

Because only the secret ballot allows people to vote their conscience without being retaliated against. By either the employer OR the union. So only the secret ballot is a reliable gauge of people's true opinions. Why is that not obvious to you?
 
Uh, no. No, it doesn't. That's the whole point of the objection. If employers intimidate workers and unions don't, then a secret ballot would likely return a higher portion of pro-union votes than public petition. But if unions intimidate workers and the employer doesn't, then the situation will be reversed, and a secret ballot would give a lower return than the public petition. A secret ballot protects workers against BOTH employers AND unions. In making this claim that the public vote is necessarily lower than a secret ballot would be, you're basically saying that it's impossible for unions to intimidate workers. That is... counterfactual.

Again, you're failing to understand the procedure.

Right now, if 30% of employees sign a petition, the NLRB sets up a secret ballot election. If >50% vote in favor of the election, they have an election.

Card Check would simply cause the union to come into being AUTOMATICALLY if that first petition contained >50% of the worker's signatures. That's it. The later election is skipped, but the procedure is exactly the same as it is now. Nothing changes.

And please explain how a union is going to intimidate people into signing that initial petition if it doesn't exist.


Because only the secret ballot allows people to vote their conscience without being retaliated against. By either the employer OR the union. So only the secret ballot is a reliable gauge of people's true opinions. Why is that not obvious to you?

If >50% are willing to publicly support the union, there's no need for a secret ballot election. If workers are uncomfortable and want a secret ballot, they can have one. What's the problem?
 
You need to be abe to verify that a significan number of empoyees are even interested before you hold an election anyway.

The card check pre-verifies that an election is needed.
 
Again, you're failing to understand the procedure.

Right now, if 30% of employees sign a petition, the NLRB sets up a secret ballot election. If >50% vote in favor of the election, they have an election.

Card Check would simply cause the union to come into being AUTOMATICALLY if that first petition contained >50% of the worker's signatures. That's it. The later election is skipped, but the procedure is exactly the same as it is now. Nothing changes.

How on earth can you say with a straight face that nothing changes when the unions can skip the secret ballot? If they can intimidate 50% of the workers into signing the cards (which are not secret), then no secret ballot gets used. You made the claim that the secret ballot would necessarily be higher than the public petition. I pointed out that this was wrong. The reasons it's wrong are obvious. The possible consequences of it being wrong are obvious as well: it's possible for a union to form even if less than 50% of the workers actually want it. You say that changes nothing. But it does, as I've just explained. You cannot actually counter my point that your baseline assumption that the secret ballot would always return a higher vote than the public petition is simply wrong.

And hell, even if we take you at your word, your position is still nonsensical. After all, if nothing changes, why enact the law at all? You cannot seriously expect us to believe that unions are fighting so hard for card check because they want to remove redundancy in the election process. Procedural efficiency has never been a rallying call, and it sure as hell isn't one now.

And please explain how a union is going to intimidate people into signing that initial petition if it doesn't exist.

You have GOT to be kidding me. Union organizers from existing unions can do the intimidating. Is that really not obvious?

If >50% are willing to publicly support the union, there's no need for a secret ballot election.

You keep saying that, but it only makes sense if you assume that union intimidation cannot occur. But that's simply false. And your above reason for why it's false is simply laughable.

If workers are uncomfortable and want a secret ballot, they can have one.

If they can gather the required 30%. But if they're being intimidated, who among them is going to risk trying to do that? Why shouldn't a secret ballot be used every time?
 
I think that in any case, it's always (at the very least) rude and over the line to protest at someone's home. The only exception I could ever find acceptable would be if someone decided to avoid their place of work for weeks or months on end to be protested there, or if they held a business event at their home which would be protested.
 
How on earth can you say with a straight face that nothing changes when the unions can skip the secret ballot? If they can intimidate 50% of the workers into signing the cards (which are not secret), then no secret ballot gets used. You made the claim that the secret ballot would necessarily be higher than the public petition. I pointed out that this was wrong. The reasons it's wrong are obvious. The possible consequences of it being wrong are obvious as well: it's possible for a union to form even if less than 50% of the workers actually want it. You say that changes nothing. But it does, as I've just explained. You cannot actually counter my point that your baseline assumption that the secret ballot would always return a higher vote than the public petition is simply wrong.

As the union is running around and intimidating people, 30% can submit a petition to the NLRB that the union never gets to know about. This trumps the card check and there's a secret ballot.

But this is what I love: give me some example of this sort of union intimidation occuring. This sort of thing gets dealt with so swiftly by management and law enforcement. It just isn't a problem.

And hell, even if we take you at your word, your position is still nonsensical. After all, if nothing changes, why enact the law at all? You cannot seriously expect us to believe that unions are fighting so hard for card check because they want to remove redundancy in the election process. Procedural efficiency has never been a rallying call, and it sure as hell isn't one now.

I've explained this 10 times. It does make a significant change: if >50% sign the initial petition, the union automatically forms. THis eliminates the time lag that employers use to run anti-union campaigns. Unlike your fantasy about union "thugs" intimidating people, this is a persistent problem:

In the last two decades, private-sector employer opposition to workers seeking their legal right to union representation has intensified. Compared to the 1990s, employers are more than twice as likely to use 10 or more tactics in their anti-union campaigns, with a greater focus on more coercive and punitive tactics designed to intensely monitor and punish union activity.

It has become standard practice for workers to be subjected by corporations to threats, interrogation, harassment, surveillance, and retaliation for supporting a union. An analysis of the 1999-2003 data on NLRB election campaigns finds that:

63%of employers interrogate workers in mandatory one-on-one meetings with their supervisors about support for the union;
54% of employers threaten workers in such meetings;
57% of employers threaten to close the worksite;
47% of employers threaten to cut wages and benefits; and
34% of employers fire workers.
http://www.americanrightsatwork.org...ition-to-organizing-20090520-758-116-116.html

Card check is meant to curtail ACTUAL harassment and ACTUAL intimidation, as opposed to this fantasy nonsense you're babbling about.

You have GOT to be kidding me. Union organizers from existing unions can do the intimidating. Is that really not obvious?

And there's no way for poor wittle corporate America to stand up against this...

Here's all that happens:

But even the principle behind the argument is a fraud. The obvious point is that companies don't allow secret ballots for electing managers. But the real fraud is that union workers have plenty of secret ballots under the Employee Free Choice Act:

•They elect union leaders by secret ballot;
•They vote on whether to authorize strike or other work actions by secret ballot;
•They approve union contracts by secret ballot
But without a union in the first place, most workers never see any ballot at all on their work conditions:


Let's be clear what happens when a majority of workers sign cards asking for a union. The company then has to meet with union representatives to discuss work conditions. That's pretty much it. After the union comes in, there are lots of discussions, debates and, yes, secret ballots by the members on all sorts of things even before a union contract can be negotiated and implemented.
http://tpmcafe.talkingpointsmemo.com/2007/03/01/labor_law_and_saving_the_secre/


You keep saying that, but it only makes sense if you assume that union intimidation cannot occur. But that's simply false. And your above reason for why it's false is simply laughable.

Please, you don't understand the law, you don't understand the facts (as evidenced by your continual failure to factually substantiate this idiocy about union intimidation), and so you're resorting to hollow bluster.

The workers aren't unionized at that point. If they go to management and say, "These union folks are trying to intimidate me into signing their petition," what do you think will happen?

It's just amazing what a fantasy world you live in. Management and employers have such a massive power advantage over unions and yet the mere chance of union "intimidation" is so terrifying that you're willing to ignore all the evidence for actual employer intimidation. Fascinating.


If they can gather the required 30%. But if they're being intimidated, who among them is going to risk trying to do that? Why shouldn't a secret ballot be used every time?

Because 1) they can go to management; 2) they can do it simultaneously with the union forming; 3) they can submit evidence of intimidation to police and other law enforcement officials; 4) they can sign the petition, send it to the NLRB and never tell the union about it.

Is there currently a problem with rogue unions going around and intimidating workers into submitting petitions to the NLRB? Do you have any evidence that during the lull between the petition and the secret ballot election these outside unions are intimidating workers? Do you have evidence for anything or is this just paranoia?
 
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