By Michael Watson
Monday, September 01, 2025
Those hoping to hear workers’ voices need to find an
alternative to union bosses, who have shown they barely speak for their
members, much less all laborers.
Since at least the 1930s, if not the late 19th century, labor unions
have claimed the power to speak on behalf of all American workers. But, on this
Labor Day, should we still give them that power, when labor unions represent less than 10 percent of the workforce?
Politicians act as if union bosses do speak for
all workers, perhaps conditioned by the fact that seemingly every group, from
accountants to zookeepers, has at least one advocacy or trade coalition working
on its behalf. This may have been defensible in the days of George Meany, who
led the AFL-CIO from the 1950s through the 1970s, when as many as one-fourth to
one-third of wage and salary workers were unionized.
But recent Bureau of Labor Statistics reports indicate
that less than one in ten workers, and less than one in 16 workers in the
private sector, are union members. Meanwhile, almost half of union members work
for state, local, and federal governments, even as less than 15 percent of all
workers in the U.S. work for government. Perhaps unsurprisingly given that
career path, the Union Membership and Coverage Database estimates that union
members are more likely to be college-educated than the workforce as a whole.
So union bosses actually speak, at most, for a
disproportionately privileged, government-employed segment of workers.
This is a warning to political figures and campaigners who would use union
bosses as a proxy for the voice of workers as a whole: The bosses are
unrepresentative, and they answer to a segment of workers that is not of the
hard-hat and lunch-pail set that many politicos hope to reach.
Indeed, union bosses’ approach to politics is nakedly
partisan and ideologically committed to the Everything Leftism of the
professional activist class that staffs the union office. It’s easy to spot the
partisanship: OpenSecrets’ compilation of union political spending in 2024
shows unions sent 87.3 percent of their contributions to Democrat campaigns,
with 11.8 percent sent to Republicans.
These contributions are far more Democratic leaning than
union families themselves. Exit polls from the 2024 general election showed
that then–Vice President Kamala Harris beat Republican President Donald Trump
by only a 53–45 margin among the 19 percent of Americans who are members of
“union households” (pollster-speak for union members and their families).
The divergence between more centrist-leaning union
families and the Democratic Party’s left wing, occupied as it is by union
bosses, suggests Big Labor maintains a model of politics that wouldn’t be out
of place in a Russian revolutionary cell in 1917. Because the workers have not
attained appropriate class consciousness, their power must be directed through
a union’s professional-activist staffer class functioning as a nominally
elected dictatorship of the proletariat until the workers adopt the politics of
graduate students (who have, not coincidentally, proven to be one of the few
fertile organizing grounds for Big Labor in recent decades).
Those hoping to hear workers’ voices need to find an
alternative to union bosses who have shown they barely speak for their members
and their families, much less all laborers. And those workers need the freedom
to ensure that their voices can be heard over the voices of union bosses who
erroneously purport to speak for them.
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