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The Presidential Candidates Should Debate Union Rights in Chattanooga

Members of UAW Local 42 want collective-bargaining rights at the Volkswagen plant. Where better to debate about labor rights, unions and the future of work?

John Nichols

April 11, 2019

UAW members stand outside an employee entrance at the Nissan assembly plant in Canton, Mississippi, August 1, 2017. (AP Photo / Rogelio V. Solis)

Bernie Sanders, a regular on picket lines, says it is time for “candidates at every level to get serious about forcefully speaking out for unions.” Elizabeth Warren just stepped up, posting a video supporting efforts by graduate students at the University of Pittsburgh to form a union. Cory Booker waded into an Iowa special election campaign last month with an argument that voters had to elect a Democratic state Senate candidate—which they did—because doing so could “make a big difference in protecting labor rights.”

Democrats are starting to talk the talk and walk the walk in favor of strong unions. This pushback against the assaults on labor rights by anti-union governors and corporate-aligned judicial activists has been a long time coming. But it is becoming a real focus of the crowded competition for the party’s 2020 nomination.

Now, the men and women who are bidding for the presidency have a chance to make that focus even more meaningful.

They should all come to Chattanooga, where members of United Auto Workers Local 42 have filed a petition with the National Labor Relations Board seeking an election at the sprawling Volkswagen plant that has been the target of a multiyear drive to organize production and maintenance workers. Organizers on the ground have already done the work that was required to get a new vote at the VW plant where a unionization vote was defeated by a relatively narrow margin in 2014. Presidential hopefuls should get specific about how they plan to renew labor rights in the South and nationally. Where better to have a Democratic debate than in the city where a labor struggle with enormous consequences is playing out?

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The Chattanooga fight has become a symbol of the struggle to organize workers in the Southern and border states where foreign corporations have located new manufacturing plants. Southern states, with their so-called “right to work” laws, have historically erected barriers to organizing. Multinational corporations know this, and they resisted efforts by workers to organize and collectively bargain in the region.

This is one of the reasons why US workers have lagged behind workers in other countries when it comes to realizing the promise of Article 23 of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights, which declares that “Everyone has the right to form and to join trade unions for the protection of his interests.”

“Why are Chattanooga workers treated any differently than other VW workers in the world?” asks Steve Cochran, president of UAW Local 42 in Chattanooga. “Why are Chattanooga workers treated differently than even other auto assembly workers at plants like GM Spring Hill?” That’s a great question—one that ought to be answered by everyone who wants to be president.

John NicholsTwitterJohn Nichols is a national affairs correspondent for The Nation. He has written, cowritten, or edited over a dozen books on topics ranging from histories of American socialism and the Democratic Party to analyses of US and global media systems. His latest, cowritten with Senator Bernie Sanders, is the New York Times bestseller It's OK to Be Angry About Capitalism.


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