Address
of International Secretary-Treasurer
Jerry J. O'Connor
IBEW 2nd District Progress Meeting,
Nashua, New Hampshire
October 1, 2003
Thank you, Frank. Thank you, brothers and sisters for that kind
welcome. I love to be with Brothers and Sisters in the Northwest,
because I understand every thing you say the first time, and I
know that when I state, that the current President of the United
States is nothing but a mouth piece for multinational corporations,
you wont have to lean towards your neighbor and ask, what did
that Yankee say?
Usually this time of year, people flock to New Hampshire to see
the glorious fall colors. But this is not a usual year in New Hampshire.
The Granite States vaunted primary election is about four months
away, and those people crawling all over the state arent tourists.
Theyre presidential candidates, political operatives and reporters
all more numerous than the leaves on the trees. Kevin Cash told
me he cant sit down for a cup of coffee these days without a Democratic
contender offering to stir in the sugar.
Enjoy it, but also pay attention. What our members do in this
state will go a long way toward determining who will carry our
banner against George W. Bush in a years time. I know that I dont
have to preach involvement in the democratic process to this crowd.
New England is where democracy took full bloom.
In the meantime, we still have our hands full in Iraq. Our troops
including our own brothers and sisters who have been called up
to active duty have done everything asked of them and more under
extremely trying circumstances. We can only hope that their leaders
show the same intelligence, courage and perseverance as the fighting
men and women on the front lines.
The fight on foreign soil takes up much of our energy. But we
also face a fight here at home. A direct terrorist did not even
come close to breaking America, but a withering combination of
economic factors are devastating our people. Getting our nation
back on track here at home is the most immediate battle and one
that will be our focus for the foreseeable future.
How bad is it? Lets look at some numbers.
Unemployment in the United States is the highest it has been in
ten years. Some economists say that if you count people who have
given up looking for work and those working part-time but seeking
full-time jobs, then the rate is as high as 10 percent.
Thats no surprise. Pick up the business section of any major
newspaper in the country and you read about layoffs. What is going
to happen to these people? In the boom times of the 1990s, the
economy absorbed many displaced workers, even if they couldnt
find employment equivalent to what they had. Now, these folks are
falling through a safety net that has holes big enough to drive
a tank through.
The National Association of Manufacturers hardly proponents
of the union agenda reported a loss of 2.3 million manufacturing
jobs in the last three years. To give it a little perspective,
thats the equivalent of three big unions being wiped out since
late 1999.
And its not just industrial workers. A recent study by one consulting
firm estimates that by 2015, more than 3 million white-collar jobs
and nearly $140 billion in wages will have been transferred from
the U.S. to other nations. And surprise, surprise professionals
in other countries earn less than their U.S. counterparts.
Apparently the Republicans approve of this. Did you see the story
that we put on the IBEW web site and which later hit the media
about the Republicans putting a telephone fundraising operation
in India? Its happening. As long as those corporate fat cats keep
writing big checks, I guess they dont care where the calls come
from, or the jobs either.
In the meantime, at least 41.2 million Americans are without health
coverage, and the total climbs steadily. That squeezes the health
care system and forces the costs onto those of us who have coverage.
In negotiation after negotiation, health care is the backbreaker
issue.
The Clinton surplus is long gone, as the federal government now
projects a $480 billion deficit in this fiscal year, and thats
before Bushs tax cut really kicks in.
And as for retirement security, $175 billion was lost in 401(k)
savings in the year 2001 alone.
Not too long ago, the federal government was the largest employer
in the United States. Say what you will about the government, it
was a source of good, stable jobs with health care and pension
benefits. Today, the largest employer in the United States is Wal-Mart
a company that has raced to the bottom when it comes to wages
and benefits, dragged suppliers down to its low standards, and
hates unions with a passion. Do you feel happy about that?
After ten years of labor warning about the effects of unfair trade
agreement and cutthroat foreign competition, the press and politicians
finally seem to be waking up to the fact that we have a jobs crisis
in America. George Bushs solution is to create a manufacturing
czar in the Commerce Department and politely ask the Chinese to
stabilize their currency so their exports wont have such an unfair
advantage. Do you think we should tell him that creating one job
in the government isnt going to help create jobs in the private
sector? Do you think we should let him know that the Chinese have
already told him where to put his request about their currency?
And Maybe we should tell the President that it really doesnt matter
how much the yen is worth because the slave masters in China dont
pay much of them to their workers anyway? When it comes to creating
jobs, meaningless symbolic steps are no substitute for solid investment
in industry, infrastructure and policies that allow them to flourish.
Not surprisingly, the jobs crisis is reflected in our membership.
Over the past five years, you folks in the Second District increased
your "A" membership by 2,798, a solid performance. But
in that five-year period, your net membership gain was only 1.54
percent. Thats because during that same period, the district suffered
the loss of 2,155 "BA" members, reflecting the decline
in manufacturing, the ongoing restructuring of the utility industry,
and the "surplusing" of telecom workers. And now that
construction is in a slump, our "A" membership is breaking
even or declining in many districts. Union-wide, our overall membership
was down 3.43 percent in 2002. The sharp downturn of the last two
years has eaten away at our hard-won gains of the recent past.
Our net membership growth over the past five years has been a mere
three-tenths of one percent. Theres a word for that, brothers
and sisters stagnation.
And if we dont turn this around soon, we will be looking at long-term
losses in our membership, and thus our power to change things for
the better in our industries and in our society as a whole.
No matter what is happening to the lives of real people no matter
how many industrial jobs are being eliminated no matter how much
income inequality grows the elite in our society still happily
count on retail and the service sector to pull us through. And
I kind of understand why.
Our past prosperity has been a two-edged sword. On the one hand,
it has allowed us to enjoy the highest standard of living in the
world. But the downside has been that far too many of us dont
define ourselves as union members, or members of a political party,
or adherents of a particular faith. The common thread among Americans
from the descendants of the Pilgrims to the newest immigrant
to our shores is that we are consumers. We want to acquire as
much stuff as possible and we dont care where its made as long
as we get the best price.
Im sure everybodys seen that paragraph that somebody put together
some years ago about how Joe Smith wakes up a uses his German-made
razor to shave, watches his Korean-made television, puts on his
Pakistani-made shirt and Mexican-made trousers, drives to the unemployment
office in his Japanese-made car and wonders why he cant find a
good-paying American job. Anybody think thats a stretch?
We wonder why Wal-Mart has achieved such growth in this country,
when in fact that companys expansion is possible because we made
it so. Wal-Mart is simply catering to what the people want, or
at least think they want in the short run.
Those of us who are active in our union have been preaching buy
American, buy union-made for years. At least I think we have. Check
your clothes and shoes when you get back to your rooms and see
where theyre made. Unless you have an IBEW shirt or jacket on,
I bet were talking imports. Were all at partly guilty of guilty
of that, because we live in a society that doesnt value its domestic
manufacturing capacity anymore. Were swimming against a tide that
shows no sign of being turned back anytime soon. I read where even
the government is thinking of replacing the Presidents helicopter
with one made in Europe.
It goes back to that lack of idealism that Ed talked about. By
rights, when working people read about how corporate executives
are robbing workers and shareholders to enrich themselves, we should
be dragging those fats cats out of their plush offices, tarring
and feathering them and sending them out of town on a rail. But
we dont. And I think we dont because the culture of greed has
spread throughout our society. And its affected many in our own
ranks as well.
If I thought the situation was hopeless, I wouldnt be here. I
know how I feel about whats going on in our nation and the world
today. I know how many of you feel about it. And Im betting that
there are hundreds of thousands of IBEW members and other workers,
union and nonunion, who fare also angry and fed up.
And weve got to prevent that anger from turning into bitter frustration.
Instead, weve got to channel it into righteous anger that inspires
us to get out there and change things.
You folks in this room are some of the finest local leaders to
be found anywhere in the IBEW. You make a positive difference in
your members lives every day. Its the work that we do as union
leaders that has helped prevent things from getting even worse
than they are. But weve got to speak out and look beyond our day-to-day
jobs to see how we can build a better America.
When were on the job, we build from the bottom up. Thats what
we do every day. And thats one way were going to change things.
But we also need to give it our best shot from the top down. In
2004, we badly need to elect a new President of the United States.
Many of us wore the uniform of our country by serving in the military.
Were you as disgusted as I was to see a guy who sat out Vietnam
in the Air National guard -- and then didnt even bother to show
up for that cushy duty -- fly onto that aircraft carrier some weeks
ago? Were you as angry as I was to see him strutting around in
a flight suit they he never had to wear in defense of his country?
And were you outraged to see brave men and women who had recently
put their lives on the line be used a props so the President and
that wingnut Karl Rove could have footage for their campaign commercials
next year? And it was easy for the President to taunt our enemies
with the words "Bring em on," when it wasnt him, or
anybody related to him, or anybody like him, whose lives are on
the line in Iraq and Afghanistan.
Is that what our troops deserve? Is that what we as patriotic
Americans deserve?
Ill say here what I have said at our conferences this year. We
have enough evidence in the third year of this administration to
know that Bush as a domestic leader is a total and abject failure
and unfit to be given another term on the job in 2004.
Whether you look at the big picture or focus on the details, the
results are the same. The Bush Administration is a disaster for
all but the most privileged in our society. Their campaign to undermine
working families has truly been one of "shock and awe." But
in their greed and lust for power, the Bush loyalists are also
eroding the very foundations of our economy and our society.
These are people who captured "captured", not won
the election in 2000. Bush didnt outpoll Al Gore; he finagled
the victory through bullying legal tactics and a bare majority
of the right wing activists on the Supreme Court. And what did
he do? He has acted as if he had a mandate to govern from the far
right, and made Ronald Reagan look like a moderate.
From the end of World War II up until 2001, every President of
the United States presided over a net creation of jobs. Through
all phases of the cycle, the American economy was at least strong
enough to keep creating more jobs than were lost. Not surprisingly,
more jobs were created under Democrats, but even Nixon, Ford and
Reagan kept us moving in the right direction.
Until now.
Who is the first president to see a net loss of jobs on his watch?
Why, its none other than that newly minted flyboy himself. We
are losing an average of 69,000 jobs per month under George W.,
the worst record in 58 years.
I think that says it all. Under George Bush the wealthiest and
most powerful Americans are thriving. The oil companies are in
the chips. The corporate elite are raking it in. But the people
are hurting, and its getting worse every day. The tax cut that
passed Congress this year was one of the sorriest bills in our
history, at least for now. This administration will probably break
its own record for shameful legislation before long.
And what happens if you raise your voice to protest whats going
on? If the rare politician and they are getting rarer all the
time dares to speak out for the little guy, he or she is branded
a "class warrior," the implication being that it is somehow
un-American. Class warfare is apparently okay if it is declared
from the top, but how dare the rabble have the gall to fight back.
And in the meantime the public, including our members, are increasingly
being spoon-fed the new party line by a media that is either too
timid to be objective or is out-and-out controlled by people who
used to spend their time helping Republicans get elected.
Believe me when I tell you that I am afraid for our future if
the political climate does not change. And when I say "our," I
am not speaking merely of the IBEW or even the labor movement,
but of the future of freedom and democracy in the United States
and, by extension, Canada and the rest of the world. Unions do
not flourish in unjust societies. Working people do not have hopes
for advancement in nations where a tight band of thieves controls
the wealth and the doors to opportunity. And yet I am afraid that
is where we are headed.
We are getting pushed further out into the political wilderness,
and we need to begin the trek back. None of us can do it alone,
but together we can make that journey.
Do not underestimate your role in that process. You are the leaders
in one of the greatest unions in the history of the world. What
you say and do matters it matters a lot to your members and in
your communities. If we are going to lop off that diseased top
branch of our country, we have got to work from the roots on up.
We have got to start telling the truth now about what is happening
in this country and make our voices heard. And we have got to get
our people out to vote to make sure that the voice of working America
is heard before they try to take that away too. If were still
talking about it and not doing it by this time next year, then
it will be too late. You will be hearing more about this. We need
the biggest political mobilization effort ever in our union and
in the labor movement for 2004.We did a tremendous job of mobilizing
in the last election but the right wing out did us. The odds against
us are steep, but we must begin now, and if we fail in 2004, then
we must fight even harder until we win.
And there is no politician who alone can deliver a more honest
and just society. It is a never-ending task that falls to all of
us. Thats part of our responsibility. This is our watch, and we
will be judged by history. Lets do our job with gusto, because
were the good guys.
Throughout my career, I have been inspired by the words of a brave
and defiant labor leader, Eugene V. Debs. He went to jail for his
beliefs, but without his struggles, none of us would have the rights
we have today. And its these words from 1894 that give me strength
and give me the confidence to know that we in the IBEW today are
every bit as capable of fighting back in hard times as were our
forerunners more than a century ago.
Debs wrote: "Ten thousand times has the labor movement stumbled
and bruised itself. We have been enjoined by the courts, assaulted
by thugs, charged by the militia, traduced by the press, frowned
upon in public opinion, and deceived by politicians.
But notwithstanding all this and all these, labor is today the
most vital and potential power this planet has ever known, and
its historic mission is as certain of ultimate realization as is
the setting of the sun."
Lets use that vital and potential power, brothers and sisters.
Lets use it to bury these bastards and organize their pall bearers.
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