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From the July-August 2009
issue of Union Democracy Review #180
Appeals court backs union curbs on the internet
The U.S. Appeals Court for the District
of Columbia has upheld a union rule that places new burdens on candidates
who want to use their own independent web sites to campaign for union
office. The court's decision gives the green light to those nervous union
officials who hope to develop new ways to limit the potential of the internet
as an instrument for union democracy.
Michael Quigley and four other members of the International
Union of Operating Engineers had sued in Federal court to challenge a
union rule that would force candidates to limit access to their campaign
websites to members only by requiring a password protection system that
would require members to record their names and union identification numbers
before they could access the site.
The union justified the new restrictive rule as a
means of preventing employers from logging in and perhaps gaining information
that might be harmful to the union. Even though it was clear that the
"danger" from employers was purely hypothetical, the court ruled
that the union's concern was "reasonable." And so, the internet
is now subject to limitations and controls not imposed on other forms
of union electioneering. For example: A candidate can circulate printed
handbills or publish a tabloid newspaper which hypothetically could easily
reach an employer, yet these campaign instruments are not subject to the
same kind of restrictions now imposed on websites.
To anyone even modestly informed about life in the
construction trades, like operating engineering, it should be obvious
that the requirement to list your name before reading opposition literature
casts a pall over democracy. Chilling? It's freezing. Workers who depend
upon their business agents and managers for job referrals are not likely
to advertise an interest in the activities of oppositionists who want
to depose those agents! In the broader world of politics, civil libertarians
resist the demands of law enforcement authorities who, in the guise of
the war against terrorists, want to force librarians to reveal the names
of those who read subversive books. Yet, construction workers who voluntarily
read opposition union writings are far more likely to endanger their jobs
than a reader of revolutionary books is likely to be harassed by the FBI.
The judges find this requirement for self-exposure "not burdensome,"
a conclusion which seems based upon two failures of imagination. For one
thing, they accept naively the union's assurance that some "third
party" will guarantee confidentiality to skeptical union members
who will not be as trusting as the chambered judges. For another, judges
who are guaranteed lifetime tenure and depend on no one for their jobs,
are not likely to fully understand the pressures on those who repeatedly
must line up for work. Here is one excellent example of what Judge Sotomayor
may have had in mind when she said that a judge's background affected
his or her "empathy."
Quigley and his colleagues argued in effect that the
password requirement is not only burdensome from the principled standpoint
of democracy but that it is also technically burdensome for the rank and
file web site sponsors and for the readers who might search for their
sites. The judges accepted the union's rebuttal, but in their decision,
the judges' explanation of the union position is so complicated that this
writer, with his technical limitations, finds it incomprehensible. [Try
it yourself: DC
Circuit decision in case 08-7056] But not to worry. The court accepted
the union's assurance that it will make it easier for perplexed web siters
by providing them with technical assistance. And so the dissident must
depend upon a union leadership which set out to make things more difficult
to make life easier!
The Court based its finding on the 5-4 decision of
the Supreme Court in Steelworkers
v. Sadlowski in 1982. The Steelworkers union had adopted a rule which
forbade any candidate for union office to receive campaign support in
cash or kind from any non-member of the union, arguing like the Operating
Engineers, that the ban was necessary to protect the union from "outside"
interference, especially from employers. The Court noted that the rule
did limit the democratic rights of members. However, it concluded that
the ban could be imposed because, in its opinion, the union's misgiving
over outside influence was reasonable and the limitation on membership
rights was not "burdensome." The four judges, vigorous in their
dissent, would invalidate the rule as a serious violation of membership
rights. However, our interest now is not to review the Court's decision
but to recall its aftermath.
For a hundred years or so, the labor movement had
survived, and sometimes even flourished, without a rigid rule that barred
candidates for union office from accepting campaign support from sympathizing
non-members. I.W. Abel got that kind of backing in his successful challenge
to David MacDonald in the Steelworkers; Arnold Miller and the Miners for
Democracy in the battle against Tony Boyle; Rich Trumka supported that
campaign which paved the way for his rise to president of the Miners union
and then secretary treasurer of the AFL-CIO. The State Coalition for a
Democratic Union had outside help in ousting a corrupt and autocratic
president of the Public Employees Federation. But after Ed Sadlowski,
with help from liberals and civil libertarians, frightened the Steelworkers
administration with an effective, but unsuccessful, run for international
president at the head of a full opposition slate, the union and the labor
movement detected, or invented, that danger from outsiders. Once the Supreme
Court gave the green light, the copycat killers of the hypothetical employer
menace promptly fell in line, each with its own version of the new restrictive
rule, among them the IBEW, the Miners, the SEIU, PEF.
The Steelworkers showed incumbents how to encumber
dissidents in the old world of printed literature; now the Operating Engineers,
in the new world of the internet. In court, the Operating Engineers succeeded
in defending their move. But defining the web site restriction as legally
permissible does not make it morally justifiable. Union leaders may now
have the right to do something indefensible by the standards of democracy
and fair play, but they are not required to do so! We can't know how far
the new limitation will proliferate; but, unhappily, there are enough
nervous incumbents ready to adopt any available device to curb critics.
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