A union leader betrayed.
Steelman, Aaron
Before the last election, the AFL-CIO, under the direction of its
president John Sweeney, spent nearly $40 million lobbying on behalf of
candidates who wished to expand the size and scope of government. It was
the most ambitious political program the AFL-CIO had ever undertaken. It
was also one at odds with the vision that labor pioneer Samuel Gompers
had for the union movement.
Gompers was born in London in 1850. His formal education ended at the
age of 10, when poverty forced him to leave his neighborhood's
Jewish school and find work in the shoemaking business. He quickly grew
tired of that trade and coaxed his father into teaching him cigarmaking.
But even with the addition of Samuel's income, the family was
unable to make ends meet. So in 1863, the Gompers family, like thousands
of other European families of that period, secured passage to New York.
In America they didn't expect to find a handout, but rather the
opportunity for a better life.
Gompers soon began work in a New York cigarmaking factory. He was
instrumental in the founding of the National Cigarmakers Union and
served as its vice president for four years. In 1881, the cigarmakers
joined several other unions in creating the Federation of Trades and
Labor Unions of the United States and Canada.
In 1886, the federation was reorganized and renamed the American
Federation of Labor (AFL).with the exception of 1895, was annually
reelected president until his death in 1924. During that period--as the
AFL's membership grew to more than 4 million--real wages increased,
work weeks shortened, and working condi- tions improved in industry
after industry.
Although he supported such legal protections as child-labor laws and
general liability laws for employers, he favored union bargaining power
over govern- ment regulation as a means to advance the economic standing
of wage earners. As historian Florence Calvert Thorne has written,
Gompers thought that "by joining hands with like-minded
workers,"wages which could make more material comforts
available." That, coupled with "personal freedom and
self-dependence, would help them to be alert and responsible citizens of
their community." A Nonpartisan Union
From the beginning, Gompers was wary of embroiling the AFL in
politics of any kind, partisan or otherwise. He had seen a rival labor
organization -- the Knights of Labor--implode over faulty political
alliances and feared that the same thing could happen to the AFL. More
fundamentally, he believed that government activism was harmful to the
working man.
In 1915, he wrote, "Doing for people what they can and ought to
do for them- selves is a dangerous experiment. In the last analysis the
welfare of the workers depends upon their own private
initiative."He applied that belief to issue after issue.
He argued that "compulsory sickness insurance for workers is
based upon the theory that they are unable to look after their own
interests and the state must interpose its authority and wisdom and
assume the relation of parent or guardian. There is something in the
very suggestion of this relationship and this policy that is repugnant to free-born citizens."
As for welfare programs, Gompers believed that "social insurance
cannot remove or prevent poverty."the country into two classes, and
a long established sys- tem would tend to make these classes
rigid."
Gompers also worried that welfare would undermine the ethic of
self-responsibility. As early as 1915--20 years before the enactment of
Social Security -- he stated, "Whether as a result of laziness or
incompetency there is a steadily growing disposition to shift
responsibility for personal progress to outside agencies. What can be
the result of this tendency but the softening of the moral fiber of the
people?"
Undoubtedly, he would have disapproved of the modern regulatory state
as well. In an article for the American Federationist, Gompers argued
that "regulation of industrial relations is not a policy to be
entered upon lightly -- establishment of regulation for one type of
relation necessitates regulating of another, until finally all
industrial life grows rigid with regulation."in California
originated? It was started by the Socialist Party of California."
Samuel Gompers's lifelong devotion to both the union movement
and Jeffersonian political principles improved the lives of millions of
working men and women. He rightly deserves to be called the greatest
friend labor has ever known.