Coalition Representing 24 Million Workers Demands Senate Vote on PRO Act Before Midterms
A broad coalition ofĀ progressive advocacy groups and unions representing 24 million workers on Wednesday doubled down on its demand for Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer to hold a vote on landmark labor reform legislation before next month’s pivotal midterm elections.
At issue is theĀ Protecting the Right to Organize (PRO) Act, a popular bill that aims to push U.S. labor law in a more worker-friendly direction. If passed, the legislation would ban anti-union “right-to-work” laws and nullify thoseĀ enactedĀ by GOP officials in 27 states, strengthen penalties against employers who engage inĀ unlawful union-busting, and make it easier for newly unionized workers to finalize their first collective bargaining agreement, among other reforms.
“As potentially illegal harassment, retaliation, and union-busting byĀ Amazon,Ā Starbucks, andĀ AppleĀ continues to make headlines,” the Worker Power Coalition said in aĀ statement, “workers across the country can’t afford to keep waiting for the Senate to take action.”
The coalitionāmade up of a few dozen unions, environmental justice groups, and left-leaning research and advocacy organizationsāspent the past seven weeks mobilizing in key battleground states.
Members met with Senate Democrats in Arizona, Colorado, Georgia, Nevada, New Hampshire, and Virginiaāthe first five are states where the outcomes of hotly contested races will help determine control of the upper chamber. They also participated in direct actions in Florida, Ohio, and Wisconsin, three states in which Democratic Senate candidates are vying to unseat or replace Republicans.
“We must do everything possible to support the growing number of workers who are joining together to improve their workplaces,” said Communications Workers of America secretary-treasurer Sara Steffens.
“Our labor laws are outdated and broken. Employers flagrantly violate workers’ rights, hold mandatory anti-union meetings, and intimidate and even fire workers for organizing,” Steffens noted. “Workers need for the Senate to pass the Protecting the Right to Organize Act now so they can organize for safer jobs, better working conditions, and higher pay.”
Although the HouseĀ approvedĀ the PRO Act earlier this year, the bill has yet to make it to the desk of President Joe Biden due to a combination of Republican obstructionism and Democratic acquiescence. In keeping with hisĀ pledgeĀ to be the “most pro-union president” in U.S. history, Biden hasĀ endorsedĀ the measure and urged lawmakers to pass it.
The biggest barrier is the Senate’s 60-vote filibuster, an anti-democratic rule giving the GOP minority veto power over most legislationāsomething that conservative Senate Democrats, including Joe Manchin (W.Va.) and Kyrsten Sinema (Ariz.), have refused to eliminate.
But even if Democrats managed to repeal the filibuster, the question remains whether corporate-friendly senators in the party would support the PRO Act. Sinema, her Arizona colleague Mark Kelly, and Mark Warner of Virginiaāthree of the Democratic lawmakers visited recently by the Worker Power CoalitionāhaveĀ not yet co-sponsoredĀ the pro-worker legislation.
According to the coalition, Kelly and other vulnerable Senate Democratsāincluding Michael Bennet in Colorado, Raphael Warnock in Georgia, Catherine Cortez Masto in Nevada, and Maggie Hassan in New Hampshireāought to welcome a chance to vote for the PRO Act, since doing so could help them differentiate themselves from their GOP opponents.
A fresh poll commissioned by the coalitionĀ foundĀ that more than 80% of voters under 40 say that one of the key issues motivating them to vote is a desire for improved workers’ rights. Data from the survey shows that this demographic is driving Democrats’Ā better-than-expected performance in pollsĀ with just 35 days to go until November 8.
Originally published at Commondreams.org.