https://www.msn.com/en-us/news/polit...xFH?li=BBnb7Kz
                                         
On Labor Day, the public celebrates workers’ dignity. Ironically,  Congress will soon consider legislation denying workers a say in how  they communicate with their employers. Sen. Bernie Sanders 
has committed  to including the PRO Act in the reconciliation bill. One of the PRO  Act’s provisions would eliminate a safeguard that protects workers’  agency: the federal ban on secondary boycotts and strikes.
     

    © Provided by Washington Examiner     Federal labor law is premised on giving workers agency, empowering  them to decide how to deal with their employers. The law protects  workers’ rights to speak to their employers collectively through union  representatives. It also protects their right not to unionize and  instead deal directly with their employer. The fundamental principle of  existing federal labor law is the worker decides, and the federal  government protects their freedom to choose.
             
 Secondary boycotts and strikes are inherently anti-worker. 
Secondary  strikes occur when a union strikes to prevent its employer from doing  business with a second company the union wants to organize. As a  hypothetical, imagine the United Auto Workers has unionized General  Motors. In a secondary strike, the UAW would strike GM if it purchased  parts from nonunion suppliers or provided vehicles to nonunion  dealerships. The strike would last until GM stopped working with those  companies or the workers became unionized.
Secondary strikes are  incredibly powerful organizing tools. They allow unions to leverage  organizing one company into unionizing all firms that do significant  businesses with that company. In the above example, the part suppliers  and dealership would need to unionize to stay afloat.
But  secondary strikes and boycotts are also hugely coercive to workers.  Secondary strikes turn workers into pawns on an economic chessboard.  These strikes put an economic gun to workers’ heads, telling them they  must join a particular union or lose their job when their company goes  under. Workers can still vote on whether to unionize and which union to  join. However, if they do not join the specific union pressuring their  company, their firm may go bankrupt, and they may become unemployed.  Joining the union thus becomes an offer they can’t refuse or a bullet  they must bite. 
Secondary actions take the choice about unionizing out of workers’ hands.
This is precisely why federal law has prohibited them since 1947 when Congress voted 
overwhelmingly to outlaw secondary strikes and boycotts. Congressional debate 
featured  stories of constituents forced to unionize through secondary actions.  Members of Congress supported the right to unionize, but they wanted  workers to make that decision. 
As Pennsylvania Sen. Ed Martin 
explained:  “I recognize labor's right to strike to obtain relief from grievances,  [but] I am opposed to … secondary boycotts. …. I believe the American  workingman should be protected in his right to work freely at the job of  his choice.”
Federal law allows union workers to strike to raise  their own pay. But under current law, unions cannot use secondary  actions to force other employees to unionize. Unions must persuade those  workers to join voluntarily. This system puts workers in the driver’s  seat.
So why is Sanders trying to eliminate labor protections that have lasted almost 75 years? Because union membership has 
fallen significantly  over the past generation. Unions have not been able to organize enough  workers to replace members lost at bankrupt companies. While unions  represented a quarter of the workforce in the 1970s, they now represent  just 1 in 10 employees.
Unions want the PRO Act to reverse this  decline. Legalizing secondary strikes would certainly boost their  membership. But it would come at a terrible cost: abandoning the  principle that employees decide who represents them.
James  Sherk is the director of the Center for American Freedom at the America  First Policy Institute. He previously served as a special assistant to  the president in the Domestic Policy Council at the White House during  the Trump administration.
 
Tags: Opinion, 
Op-Eds, 
Unions, 
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Bernie Sanders
Original Author: James Sherk
Original Location: Democrats’ reconciliation bill denies employees choice in the workplace
Bernie and the communist DPST party abhor teh very word and idea of 'Choice"
Theirs is a one party Communist totalitarian Ideal for their Rule as rich , dictatorial nomenklatur. 
Their by word - F... America .  I am superior and A communist and deserve to Rule in perpetuity. 
Buck fiden 
From my cold dead hands/
and for 'r' ,  95, and and all teh DPST sheeple marxist 
Be careful what you ask for - AOC will not limit her concentration camps to republicans. 
Nomenklatura do love the blood on their hands!