Some 35 years ago, the Ol'
Bloviator published a book called "The Selling of the South," which
chronicled the efforts of southern political and economic leaders to attract
new industrial plants, employing a variety of subsidies, tax exemptions and
other gimmicks, but focusing in by far the greatest part on the promise of
cheap, nonunion labor. As the following piece, which appeared a while back at
zocalopublicsquare.org, shows all too well, this practice has changed but
little.
The recent crushing rejection of
a United Auto Workers bid to organize a 6,500-worker Nissan assembly plant near
Canton, Mississippi seemed to present the proverbial déjà vu all over again for
organized labor's ancient and oft-thwarted crusade to gain a serious foothold
among Southern workers.
This time, however, we are not talking about
textile and apparel plants in the 1920s or '30s, but about a thoroughly
globalized Japanese auto manufacturer, led until a few months ago by a
French-educated, Brazilian-born CEO. What might seem to be no more than a
classically Southern triumph of continuity over change is better understood as
an example of continuity within change--one with implications ranging well
beyond regional boundaries.
Cheap labor has been the mainstay of efforts
to lure industrial employers into the South since the 1880s. By the 1920s,
union agents venturing into the region could expect withering inhospitality,
not excluding brutal beatings by local sheriffs or company thugs. With these
shows of physical force came a powerful and cohesive propaganda barrage, courtesy
of racist and sectionalist politicians who linked labor unions to the
abolitionists of the 1850s and the "race mixing" NAACP of the 1950s.
According to one study of
Southern industrial development, it was common practice to remind workers that
unions were ruled by "potbellied Yankees with big cigars in their mouths"
sporting names "even a high school teacher couldn't pronounce." From the
pulpits came warnings that "CIO means Christ is Out," with editors and Chamber
of Commerce types chiming in to make a vote to unionize tantamount to
"endorsing the closing of a factory."
Between 1944 and 1954, all of the old
Confederate states strengthened their anti-union arsenals with right-to-work
statutes outlawing the practice of requiring all employees of union-represented
plants to belong to the union or pay dues. The union membership rate in the
South was 50 percent of the national average in 1939, and as of 2016, the
Southern average had slipped to 43 percent of the national mean--particularly
telling given that the national figure is now only 10.7 percent.
Since the 1930s, a steady proliferation of
industrial enticements and subsidies, including free land, tax-exemptions, and
low-interest bond financing offered by state and local governments has
effectively made anti-unionism the sine qua non of Southern
regional development strategy. Protecting these investments of public revenue
and resources in private firms made it even more vital to keep the subsidized
company union-free.
As the cost of these concessions soared, the
South became something akin to a lavishly appointed gated community for
industrialists, maintained primarily at the expense of their own workers. Not
only were union recruiters sent packing, but even potentially high-wage
employers like United Airlines. In 1991, the airline met with vociferous
opposition from the Greensboro, North Carolina business community when it
revealed plans for a maintenance facility that would bring 6,000 well-paid
unionized workers to a well-known haven for non-union industries.
With Rust Belt employers already opting for
the balmier business climate of the "Sun Belt," foreign industrial investment
in the South got a huge boost in 1971, when the Nixon administration moved to
boost exports by devaluing the dollar while simultaneously imposing a 10
percent surcharge on imported manufactures. At that point, exulted a British
banker, industrial investments in the United States were "like getting Harrods
at half price."
Excited liberals presumed initially that these
foreign companies, coming from environments where labor enjoyed greater
bargaining rights and prerogatives, would not insist on union-free work forces.
Yet, many of them were drawn to the South precisely because it had neither the
labor issues nor the leftist political pressures that they felt at home.
Although they consistently offered wages higher than the local average, none of
the South's new foreign employers like Nissan or BMW showed much inclination to
lug along the high wages and extensive benefits that one German executive
called "the social baggage we have back home."
This much became apparent in 1977 when the
French tire maker Michelin, which had recently opened a plant near Greenville,
South Carolina, joined forces with local development leaders to keep a large,
relatively high-wage, but likely-to-be-unionized Phillip Morris plant out of
the area. Thirty years later, developers were still reminding Japanese
industrialists that because South Carolina's unionization rate was "one of the
lowest in the nation" its manufacturing wage was also "among the lowest in the
country." In the long run, emerging global competition for new plants made it
all the more imperative for the region to hold down labor costs by continuing
to resist the incursions of organized labor.
Nissan became the South's first major
international auto manufacturer in 1980, when it agreed to open a truck plant
near Smyrna, Tennessee. Toyota would follow four years later with a facility
near Georgetown, Kentucky, and over the next 20 years an invading horde of
foreign automakers including Mercedes, BMW, Honda, Kia, Hyundai, and Volkswagen
would stake their claims in the American South. As the list of firms grew, so
did the size of the subsidies offered. With the bidding for new foreign car
plants in full runaway mode, Tennessee's initial $33 million payoff to Nissan
seemed like pocket change compared to the $295 million show of affection that
sealed its original agreement in 2000 to come to Madison County, Mississippi.
Mississippi's subsidy guarantees to Nissan now exceed $1.2 billion, with the
total for all foreign automakers with plants in the South topping $4.2 billion.
To this day, not a single production workforce
at any of these heavily subsidized foreign auto plants has opted to join the
United Auto Workers. Nissan's non-union Tennessee and Mississippi operations
are the only such plants among its 45 production facilities world-wide. Like
its international peers as well as the great majority of the domestic
manufacturers preceding it to the South, the company has frequently reminded
workers, state officials, and leaders of the affected communities of their
stake in keeping it that way. In the struggle in Canton alone, Nissan has
racked up eight NLRB charges
of unfair labor practices in the last 36 months.
The anti-union onslaught in Canton over the
protracted build-up to this month's vote had a ferocity reminiscent of many
such campaigns in years past. This time, however, the stakes were much higher,
not simply in terms of money and jobs locally, but in the future of what has
long been Mississippi and the South's foundational development strategy of
bringing jobs in by keeping unions out. Though the terminology and technology
employed by both camps were different than they would have been 75 years ago,
elements of race, religion, regional bias, and, of course, fear, were still
part of the story this time around.
With blacks accounting for a large majority of
plant employees, race came into play more subtly this time, as anti-UAW
spokesmen pointed to the union's donations and close ties with certain black
churches and civil rights advocates, while union supporters cited preferential
treatment for white plant employees. There was ministerial involvement on both
sides, with pro-union clergy concentrating on linking workers' rights to civil
rights and pointing to Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr.'s advocacy of both.
Meanwhile, instead of Satanizing the UAW, opposing clerics came closer to
deifying Nissan for, as one put it,
making "such a change in the life of the people ... The lights are on, the water
is running ... Everything is fine. It is just superb."
Ironically, representatives of Yokohama-based
Nissan cast the UAW as an "outsider" trying to disrupt the plant "family."
Although the old-fashioned appeals to sectional bias were not apparent in
official company statements, they lurked just below the surface among
rank-and-file union opponents, such as the one who took to an anti-union Facebook page to
condemn organizers as "21st-century carpetbaggers" and urge workers to "help
these Yankee aholes pack ... and tell [them] to get back to Michigan and stay
there."
Meanwhile, anti-union politicians were hardly
less given to fear-mongering than they had been several generations earlier.
Mississippi Gov. Phil Bryant warned,
"If you want to take away your job, if you want to end manufacturing as we now
know it in Mississippi, just start expanding unions." Bryant's message echoed
one in a video shown to workers from Steve Marsh, the plant's top
executive, who pointed out that UAW workers at Ford and GM had
"experienced significant instability in recent years," including, "many layoffs
and plant closings." A representative of Kelly Services, which recruits
temporary workers for Nissan, had warned more explicitly on Facebook that the
Canton plant might close if the union came in.
In the end, Nissan's not-so-veiled threats of
lost jobs were almost certainly critical to the roughly two-thirds vote against
the UAW. An estimated 40 percent of the workforce are temporaries, who are
hired at much lower starting wages, currently advertised by Kelly Services at
$13.46 per hour. If they eventually join the regular workforce, these former
temps come in at their current pay under a two-tier wage-benefit scale that
caps their hourly wage at $24, roughly $2 per hour less than the average for a
worker hired earlier on regular terms. Even so, a Nissan employee making $24
per hour would still be making as much as $385 more each week than the average
for workers surrounding counties, including Hinds, which is home to the state
capital.
With temporary workers ineligible to vote, the
second-tier status of some 1,500 former temporary workers seemed more likely to
support the union than their senior-coworkers, and a reasonably unified pro-UAW
stance on their part might have swung things the other way. When it came time
to vote, though, in a state that is down more than 30,000 manufacturing jobs
over the last decade, even an inequitable work situation was clearly preferable
to flipping burgers or cleaning motel rooms. One former temp reasoned that even
her second-tier paycheck meant that she could finally, "put food on my table
without worrying about having to pay my light bill."
The key to this and countless other union defeats
in the South and elsewhere, is not the ignorance of those who vote "No," or
their blindness to the potential benefits of union representation. Rather, it
is the sobering, self-preservational realism of workers steeped in generations
of unrelenting, sometimes unthinkable poverty. Although making some headway at
long last, in an age of almost instantaneous industrial mobility they remain
acutely sensitive to the ephemerality of even the incremental gains they are
finally enjoying as individuals. It should not surprise us that they are given
to far greater skepticism of the more expansive vision of progress they are
asked to accept on faith by others whose lived experiences often differ
dramatically from their own.
N.B.
Still juiced on the classic liberal
notion that worker solidarity trumps all, a certain commenter on the OB's humble
offering seems oblivious to radical changes in historical and economic context
since the 1950s. As it so often does, this particular blind spot breeds impatience
rather than empathy:
This
very interesting and historically enlightening article is seriously flawed by
the last paragraph which is absolute nonsense. It is not
"self-preservational realism" or any other kind of rational thinking
that caused the Nissan workers to vote against their own self-interest. I don't
know why they voted against themselves but i suspect that it is about
intellectually unsophisticated workers succumbing to intimidation. I grew up in
Detroit where first generation immigrant factory workers with little education
like both of my grandfathers had the courage and insight to fight to unionize
the auto industry.
While the O.B. readily doffs his beanie to this gent's
resolute and courageous grandpas, he begs to point out that mid-20th century Detroit autoworkers had little reason to think that the factory doors were going to be
slammed in their faces when Americans were standing in line to get them
one of those Buicks with the new dynaflow transmissions. Nor were the factories themselves going to be
relocated at any great distance from the vital steel and rubber suppliers
concentrated in the Industrial Midwest.
Suffice it to say, the world looks quite different today,
not simply for workers in Mississippi but those in many of the former
strongholds of organized labor throughout the old Manufacturing Belt. At 8.1
percent, Alabama has the highest unionization rate among the 11 states of the
old Confederacy, while the rate in 7 of those states is under 5 percent. Meanwhile,
across the entire country, the share of workers belonging to unions has fallen
from 20.1 percent in 1983 to 10.7 percent in 2016, reflecting a loss of 3
million members over that span. Industrial
outmigration, complaints about excessive wage and benefits demands, and a
general anti-labor political backlash have factored heavily in this decline,
which has produced serious political consequences, particularly for the
Democrats, for whom "labor" has long simply meant "organized labor." It is one
thing to say that reversing the longstanding overall decline in union membership
would help to restore a much-needed balance and tangibility to American politics.
It is quite another to draw on a sorely outmoded perception of the current
realities of labor-management positioning to summarily declare that any worker
in any setting who opts out of union representation is incapable of defining or
assessing his/her "own self-interest."