Pro-Worker Agenda of Congressional Progressives

Pro-worker legislation, including equal pay for equal work and an updated stronger version of the Employee Free Choice Act, are part of the progressive platform lawmakers will try to push through the Democratic-run House in the 116th Congress, Rep. Pramila Jayapal, D-Wash., the Congressional Progressive Caucus co-chair, says.

And solons got a head start on that platform with two House Education and Labor Committee hearings the week of Feb. 11.

Teachers (AFT) President Randi Weingarten and other witnesses discussed crumbling classrooms and underpaid teachers and staff . The next day, the panel got down to work on the Workplace Fairness Act, designed to put teeth into equal-pay-for-equal-work law. And thats not all.   

Other pro-worker causes pending before solons include the non-binding resolution for a Green New Deal, which includes more than just a pledge to switch the U.S. over to non-fossil fuel energy sources over a 10-year period. And Rep. Andy Levin, D-Mich., a former AFL-CIO staffer, introduced legislation to undo a Trump decision to let employers get away with infrequent reporting of workplace injuries.

The Green New Deal also envisions construction of new and clean infrastructure, training workers for the high-paying clean energy jobs and reversing historic discrimination, in those industries and elsewhere, against women and minority-group workers.

Meanwhile, lawmakers and gun control advocates pushed for strong gun control legislation, a year after the Valentines Day Massacre at Floridas Marjorie Stoneman Douglas High School. There a gunman murdered 14 students and three AFT-member teachers, setting off a nationwide student-led campaign for stiffer gun control. And the students voted, helping elect pro-gun control lawmakers.

Jayapal discussed the pro-worker measures as leadoff speaker on Feb. 8 at the con-ference on the future of unions, assembled by AFTs think tank and the Century Foundation.

An organizer herself, Jayapal also stressed the best way to get the measures approved, as well as mobilize for worker power, was to ensure and organize wide community support, by highlighting community-oriented issues and folding worker causes into them.

Labor issues are community issues and community issues are labor issues and we will fight for both, she promised. Two other issues the Progressive Caucus will fight for:

Medicare For All

Jayapal is now the lead House sponsor and promised to introduce a new and more comprehensive Medicare For All bill within a few weeks. She also previewed a key campaign theme for it: Targeting the greedy health insurers.

Insurance companies have had a run of declining care and increasing profits, even under the Affordable Care Act, Jayapal said. What is unaffordable for the U.S. is 80 million uninsured and underinsured people while the country spends 19 percent of its GDP on health care. Longtime sponsor Sen. Bernie Sanders, Ind-Vt., will reintroduce it in the GOP-run body. 

We know we will get attacked by the insurance and health care companies and even by some in our own party business-oriented Democrats beholden to those interests.  But nothing in this country has ever occurred because we thought small, Jayapal said.

The Workers Freedom To Negotiate Act

Though Jayapal described the measures aims as to stop misclassification of workers as independent contractors without worker rights and to stop (state) right to work laws, its actually a lot more.

First unveiled late last year by Rep. Bobby Scott, D-Va., now the Education and Labor Committee chairman, the bill is actually the updated, expanded and strengthened Employee Free Choice Act, a Scott fact sheet says.

Its provisions include larger fines and damages for labor law-breaking employers, plus fines and damages against individual corporate officers and directors. It also would immediately reinstate workers illegally fired for union organizing and without waiting for a court order and let individuals sue firms for labor law-breaking when the National Labor Relations Board wont.

The bill would also allow secondary boycotts, reinstate fair share fees for public workers overturning the Janus decision by the U.S. Supreme Courts 5-man GOP-named majority   and reinstate workers rights to file class action suits, which the justices also threw out.

And it would require mediation and arbitration if the two sides cant reach a first contract, and write into law the NLRBs proposed joint employer rule, which Trumps board threw out. That rule said big corporate franchises think McDonalds headquarters that actually set labor policy for their franchise-holders are jointly responsible for obeying, or breaking, labor law. 

Jayapals list adds to the agenda of the 98-member Progressive Caucus, the largest such group in the Democratic-run House. Also prime is the Green New Deal, unveiled by Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, D-N.Y., and Sen. Edward Markey, D-Mass.

That measure will go to a special House committee Speaker Nancy Pelosi set up. And while its just a resolution a statement of goals and not a proposed law, its a flagship for progressive forces in Congress and includes more than just making U.S. energy consumption green by 2030. That hasnt stopped the GOP in general from trying to smear it. GOP President Donald Trump, meanwhile, aims a socialism smear at Medicare For All.

By contrast, five Democratic senators seeking the partys 2020 presidential nomination against Trump already signed on to the Green New Deal: Kirsten Gillibrand of New York, Amy Klobuchar of Minnesota, Elizabeth Warren of Massachusetts, Kamala Harris of California and Cory Booker of New Jersey. So has Sanders, who is pondering another White House run.  

We need bold action to avoid the worst impacts of climate change, and we may have as few as 12 years to achieve it. The extreme weather, storms, droughts, and wildfires of recent years have made the worsening effects of climate change impossible to ignore, Markey and Ocasio-Cortez said.

A Green New Deal is about jobs, and it is about justice, said Markey, a longtime environmental and consumer champion. It would be the greatest blue-collar jobs program in a generation and repair the historic oppression of frontline and vulnerable communities that have born the worst burdens of our fossil fuel economy, all while saving the planet.

We can create high-quality jobs and enforce labor standards, guarantee rights to retirement security and health care, and conduct inclusive decision-making in this Green New Deal, he stated.

Ocasio-Cortez, a Democratic Socialist, made the Green New Deal a prime plank in her upset victory in a New York City congressional district last year and even led a sit-in at Pelosis office early this year to demand action on the issue. That forced Pelosi to re-create the special climate change committee.

Among the Green New Deals goals: Repair and upgrade U.S. infrastructure; meet 100 percent of our power demand through clean, renewable, and zero-emission energy sources; build smart power grids, retrofit all U.S. buildings for energy efficiency; build new green factories to provide the technology and materials for the Green New Deal projects and overhaul U.S. transportation systems.

For too long, we have seen inequality soar, social injustices fester, worker protections and labor unions erode, and wages stagnate, added co-sponsoring Sen. Jeff Merkley, D-Ore.

As the rich and privileged consolidate power, our communities struggle for clean, safe water, to access quality health care, to afford education, and to recover from more common and powerful natural disasters.  We must fundamentally change our economy to support workers, communities that have long been denied economic opportunity, and our rural economies that have been left behind.

Besides the Progressive Caucus, the Green New Deals initial backers include Service Employees Hospital and Health Care Workers Local 1199 and Local 32BJ, which represents janitors and other custodians. Others include the Labor Network for Sustainability and the National Domestic Workers Alliance, along with environmental and progressive groups.

Levins bill, his first, would reverse a Trump Labor Department decision to dump a new Occupational Safety and Health Administration injury-reporting rule. That rule required more-frequent reporting, public reports posted on the Internet, and retention of job safety and health records for five years.

AFL-CIO Occupational Safety and Health Director Peg Seminario strongly protested when Trump dumped it. Levin, a former assistant director of organizing for the labor federation, wants to undo Trumps action and restore the Obama job safety rule. The Trump administration made clear time and again that the health, safety and dignity of working Americans are not its priority. That is why Congress must step in, he said. Trump, he added, is weakening protections for workers who get injured on the job.  

(PAI reporting)