The Fight for a Democratic AFSCME
It boggles the mind. How could anyone considering themselves progressive union reformers have backed Lee Saunders? After decades serving at the side of McIntee, a labor leader notorious for his heavy handed methods, extravagant use of dues money to support his personal lifestyle (commuting from Florida to work in private charter jets to the tune of hundreds of thousands of dollars of dues money), Saunders did not come to this election unstained. These budgets lacked transparency, even to the International Vice Presidents.
McIntee, and Saunders alongside him, developed a relationship with the Democratic Party in which there was not only no sunshine between AFSCME and the Dems, where campaigning (such as in Wisconsin) was couched in the talking points imposed by the Democratic Party (so that an International staffer complained to me they were unable to talk to working people about labor’s issues when walking door-to-door), but incorporated us with a seat for himself in the Democratic National Committee (now Saunders’ seat). This man believed he was part of running the Democratic Party (a dangerous delusion), and had a lifestyle to match. Saunders pledged at the convention to continue the political work McIntee established. The Donohue campaign said Saunders was an inside-the-beltway man because that’s how he was trained, and that’s a lot of what he did and will do. The prohibition to speak in labor’s voice, a strategy the International and Saunders were responsible for, contributed to labor’s failure to kick the bum out. As Mark Brenner said, “Twenty-five percent of union-member voters chose Scott Walker, and 38 percent of all those from union households did the same.”
This is the labor bureaucracy.
Due to the pressure of the Donohue campaign, Saunders began adopting some Donohue-esque positions. He came to agree with Donohue on reducing the bloated salary for the International President by $90,000, down to a mere $290,000. (Yes, McIntee did quite well for himself.) Saunders came to agree with Donohue that we needed to discuss a change in our priorities to deal with the severity of the attacks. One thing is sure, however. No matter how often he echoed the Donohue campaign and declared we will hold all politicians accountable, regardless of party, Saunders is and will continue to be up to his eye-balls in the Democratic Party, emptying the coffers of AFSCME to support one after another “friend of labor.”
It makes little sense to compare a contract negotiated by Saunders in entirely different economic circumstances to the CSEA contract negotiated during the worst global economic crisis since the Great Depression, in circumstances where unions and workers are under a full scale assault (which LN describes so well in Issue 400, Future Tense). Saunders and his supporters spent the last two years whipping up blame and resentment on Donohue for the take-backs (contract was actually negotiated by a negotiating team without Donohue’s involvement) that were more accurately due to the tremendously difficult times we all are negotiating under now. The rank and file members of CSEA voted overwhelmingly to re-elect Donohue as their president following these negotiations where thousands of threatened layoffs were avoided.
As for rolling over to Cuomo on tiering pensions, that’s just not true. Donohue and CSEA, the state’s largest public employees union, were furious and made an unprecedented decision to halt all political contributions and endorsements for the foreseeable future. (Even during the 2010 campaign, some unions –including CSEA – withheld support from Cuomo, in response to his talk about public employee pay freezes, union givebacks and government spending reductions.)
Donohue said, “CSEA will also use this time to consult with our brother and sister unions and other allied community organizations about how we can collectively address the disrespect and disenfranchisement of working people by our state’s elected officials,” and further, “New Yorkers should understand that lawmakers’ actions did not result from meaningful debate and good judgment – it resulted from political expediency – and it will have harmful consequences to people and communities now and for a long time to come. CSEA will seek better ways to hold elected officials accountable and ensure that the voices of working people will be heard and addressed in New York state.”
I don’t care how many dramatic speeches Saunders makes, which, in fevered pitch, he declares himself to be a fighter who never backs down and never gives up. It’s theater. It does not change the capitalist global forces arrayed against labor and all the bluster in the world won’t produce one better contract clause.
Arguing that a purported “good-negotiator” leadership was better than a leadership fighting for more independence, more transparency, and for more funds on the ground, reminds me of Andy Stern’s thinking: members do not care about democracy so much as good contracts. It’s not the individual skills of a chief negotiator, but the membership, like the Chicago teachers, mobilizing and organizing in their own voice, who are the best negotiators for decent contracts. The best leadership is one that knows that.
Donohue has been a leader and an organizer of CSEA, which grew to become the largest single affiliate of AFSCME. When longtime Secretary-Treasurer Bill Lucy retired in 2010, he encouraged Donohue to run to continue the fight for political independence (read: more separation, unfortunately not a labor party) from the Democratic Party, more rank and file democracy, transparency, and for less abuse of office both financially and organizationally.
So one of Donohue’s key planks was to reduce the independent political expenditures (such as the recent Florida $1.5 million ad against Romney AFSCME paid for), and put it on the ground for the locals and councils waging the fights that are critical to labor’s existence.
Take the point made by Wisconsin delegates who explained that in 2011 Wisconsin Council 40 was forced to reduce its staffing level by 35% during the height of the assault on workers’ rights, saying: “Undoubtedly, the International Union did much to help battle Scott Walker in Wisconsin, but as is too often the case, the focus was on media and politics, not on strengthening local affiliates so that we would have the ability to carry the fight forward once the ballots were tallied and the cameras stopped rolling.”
Saunders held sway at the most undemocratic convention to date, where:
• a new low in campaign behavior: texts, emails, postcards, flyers were distributed by Saunders supporters that smacked of PR tactics more akin to Karl Rove than anything I’ve ever seen in the labor movement. Opponents were accused of being like Papa Doc in Haiti; called names like “Wall Street Alice,” with misinformation cynically and liberally used. This created an atmosphere of irrational hostility that doesn’t belong in the labor movement;
• the decision of the chair was unassailable (chair decided by his hearing whether the ayes or nays won, and when a division of the house was called for, decided by his vision, refusing multiple requests for a count by the Sargeants of Arms (a long-standing previous practice in AFSCME);
• a duly elected president was removed from office and from the floor of the convention, based on factionally-motivated Judicial Panel rulings (that contradicted prior Judicial Panel rulings for the same charges in the same local), and replaced by an officer loyal to Saunders;
• factionally-run administratorships in several locals and significant evidence of rigged elections further torqued the vote towards Saunders;
• a newly elected leadership holding tens of thousands of votes was revealed to have won their campaign due in large measure because it was run by full-time staff loyal to Saunders, in violation of the International’s rules and the constitution of the local involved, and not surprisingly, became Saunders supporters;
• the Saunders supporters voted enthusiastically against the motion of Donohue supporters to halt the practice begun in 2010 in Boston of having international staff carry proxy votes for non-attending locals that they farmed nationally and cast in this election. If Markey did not distinguish himself from his fellow Saunders’ supporters and voted for this top-down undemocratic procedure, all I can say is, while he may have led the CRC years’ ago, he’s much older than that now. This was a vote for International control from the top down, if there ever was one.
For the sake of accuracy, Markey does not have all of his figures quite right. It was Alice Goff’s local votes that counted along with the 40 of 49 locals in the Council who supported Donohue. The Executive Director of our Council, Cheryl Parisi, not Goff, had 1 vote. Also, the UDW voting strength was 60,227.
Saunders has been elected, by hook or by crook. While the alternative leadership was not perfect (did not call for a Labor Party, for ex.), it is sad that someone like Markey had a lesser vision of AFSCME (a purported "good-negotiator" leadership that had decades enforcing a top-down heavy-fisted International) than the hundreds of thousands of workers in AFSCME who had a vision of a more democratic union that prioritized building the base and sought political independence.
AFSCME will pull together and the fight for democracy will continue.
--Andrea Houtman, President, AFSCME Local 800
VP, AFSCME District Council 36