Public Union: Public Enemy - YouTube

Channel: PragerU

[2]
How would you like to fund politicians with whom you strongly disagree?
[6]
Not interested?
[8]
How about if I
 forced you?
[10]
How would I do that?
[12]
Well, what if I said: if you don’t pay, you lose your job.
[17]
For decades millions of state and local government workers – police, firefighters, teachers,
[22]
and others – have been forced to make that choice.
[26]
And who forces them?
[27]
Public-sector unions; that is, unions who represent public-sector employees.
[33]
How?
[34]
It’s pretty straightforward.
[36]
First, they demand employees pay hundreds of dollars in union dues as a condition of
[41]
employment - meaning if they don’t pay, they get fired.
[45]
Next, they use that money to support and elect union-friendly politicians.
[50]
Then, they negotiate contracts with those same politicians
[54]
– kinda like negotiating with yourself.
[57]
It’s a sweet deal – unless you’re a worker who doesn’t agree
[59]
with those union-friendly politicians.
[62]
Or, the taxpayer who hasto foot the bill for those union contracts.
[66]
This game plan is not a secret.
[68]
Here’s what the American Federation of State, County, and Municipal Employees
[73]
say on their website.
[75]
"We elect our bosses, so we've got to elect politicians who support us and hold those
[79]
politicians accountable."
[82]
These perverse incentives might help explain why for most of American history, pretty much
[86]
no one thought that unionizing government workers was a good idea.
[90]
This includes liberal icon President Franklin Roosevelt.
[94]
Roosevelt was a very strong supporter of private sector unions, but a very strong opponent
[99]
of public sector unions.
[101]
Here’s what he said on the subject in 1937: “All Government employees should realize
[107]
that the process of collective bargaining
 cannot be transplanted into the public service...”
[113]
Roosevelt recognized that public-sector unions could hold the government hostage at will.
[119]
They could simply threaten to walk off the job if they didn’t get what they wanted.
[123]
Sanitation workers, for example, could put public health at risk by refusing to collect
[128]
the garbage.
[129]
Other public employees would have similarly disruptive power.
[133]
This was, Roosevelt believed, “unthinkable and intolerable.”
[138]
In 1943 New York state’s highest court agreed, calling government unions “not only incompatible
[144]
with the spirit of democracy, but inconsistent with every principle upon which our government
[149]
is founded.”
[151]
In the late 1950’s New York City and Wisconsin defied this view and allowed their public
[156]
employees to unionize.
[158]
But it was President John F. Kennedy who opened the floodgates.
[162]
In order to win the support of union leadership in the 1960 presidential election, he promised
[167]
to allow federal employees to unionize – and fulfilled that promise with Executive Order
[172]
10988 in 1962.
[175]
It was a shrewd political move, but a bad deal for the country – and its consequences
[180]
are still being felt today, as public-sector unionization spread rapidly in the decades
[185]
that followed.
[186]
Today, unions wield tremendous power in government.
[190]
Try to fire a poor-performing government worker in New York City or Los Angeles.
[194]
Or almost any unionized government employee anywhere.
[198]
It’s extremely difficult, if not impossible, no matter how incompetent they might be.
[203]
According to one union contract in Michigan, employees could be caught drunk at work
[208]
five times before being fired.
[210]
And then there are the pension plans – income paid out to government workers after they retire.
[216]
Pensions barely exist in the private sector anymore.
[219]
They’re much too expensive.
[221]
But they’re standard for public-sector unions, and have bankrupted cities like Detroit
[225]
– and have government-union-heavy states like Illinois on the brink of financial calamity.
[231]
Unfunded pension obligations — that is, money that the government doesn’t have but
[235]
has promised to government retirees — are anywhere from four to six trillion dollars nationwide.
[242]
Over $250 billion of that belongs to Illinois alone.
[246]
But fortunately, there is some hope.
[249]
Today, 28 states have passed “right-to-work” laws stating that no worker can be forced
[254]
to join or pay a union as a condition of employment.
[258]
When joining and paying the union becomes voluntary, the same thing invariably happens:
[263]
workers leave in droves.
[265]
And thus the union’s ability to manipulate the system, declines sharply.
[270]
Now, the US Supreme Court has extended this right to public employees in the other 22
[274]
states as well.
[276]
In Janus v. The American Federation of State, County and Municipal Employees the Court ruled
[282]
that public employees cannot be compelled to pay union dues against their will.
[287]
Millions of public-employees don’t want to be pawns for the union agenda.
[291]
Thanks to this ruling, they no longer have to be, and we the taxpayers have a fresh opportunity
[297]
to make sure that our politicians work for us – not the unions.
[302]
I’m Akash Chougule, Senior Policy Fellow at Americans for Prosperity, for Prager University.