
The successful Chicago Teachers' Strike was a high point for labor in 2012.
This was a tumultuous year for working people and their families. From the grassroots uprisings last winter to the low-wage workers’ strikes at year’s end, 2012 saw many people coming together for the first time and finding their voices. Below are the items that I would highlight as the best and worst developments of 2012 in the world of labor and progressive social movements.
THE WORST:
- Conservatives have repeatedly tried to pass anti-worker legislation under misleading names and false slogans in 2012. This approach hasn’t always worked—California’s Prop 32, which would have unfairly restricted workers’ political speech in the state, failed at the polls in November. Sadly, though, at the end of the year, Michigan’s lame-duck legislature, dominated by a billionaire-funded GOP, passed a so-called “right to work” law. As has happened in other states, the new law will pit Michigan workers against each other by forcing those who pay union dues to represent and bargain for those who don’t. The state has been a union bulwark historically, so this is a sad sign for working people all over the country.
- Neoliberal trade policy has continued to undermine the American middle class in 2012. As reporters Donald Barlett and James Steele have documented, the so-called “free trade” deals modeled after NAFTA are part of a pattern that has resulted in huge job losses here in the United States. This year, the Obama administration has been promoting a new pact based on this same model that would create a “free trade zone” made up of ten countries along the Pacific Rim, called the TransPacific Partnership (TPP). As Matt Stoller has said in Salon, the creation of the TPP has mostly flown under the radar, but it could lead to “offshoring of U.S. manufacturing and service-sector jobs, inexpensive imported products, expanded global reach of U.S. multinationals, and less bargaining leverage for labor.” None of this is good for Americans who desperately need jobs to be created here.
- Another disturbing trend that continued this year was giveaways of public funds to private companies. As watchdog Good Jobs First documented earlier this year, state and local governments handed out $32 billion to private corporations in the name of job creation, but with no real accountability or guarantees of public benefit.
THE BEST:
Not everything was bad news; there were also some positive developments that offer hope for the future. Four of these were:
- Student activism allied with union advocacy paid off in San Jose, California, where a student-led coalition got a ballot initiative passed that will raise the minimum wage from $8 to $10 per hour for everyone working within the city limits. Organizers estimate the number of workers who will get a raise to be in the tens of thousands. I see this as a fine example of regional coalition-based organizing, and I hope it becomes a trend.
- Labor helped push President Obama to victory: once again, organized labor showed that its electoral muscle is critical in propelling candidates to victory. This creates a window of opportunity for pursuing future gains for workers at the federal level.
- Chicago teachers won their strike. The September walkout that lasted for seven school days may prove to be a bellwether for other places, where teachers can begin to reframe the issue of reform to include teachers’ unions and more equitable distribution of resources as part of the solution for public education.
- Walmart workers staged the first-ever strikes against the biggest private sector employer in the United States. United Food and Commercial Workers Organizing Director Pat O’Neill talked about how the union is experimenting with a new model of organizing—workers and community members coming together to support better conditions in the stores and warehouses even before the workers join a union.
In 2013, as Obama starts his new term, we can find hope in these examples of regionally based innovation. Rather than waiting for change to come from above, we must take what is working at the regional level and turn it into a people’s agenda for Washington.
This was originally posted on The Century Foundation.
Photo by Shutter Stutter under Creative Commons license.



5 Comments

One of the lowlights of 2012 was Michigan, the birthplace of the UAW, passing right-to-work legislation.
The squalid story of RTW’s passage through the lame-duck legislative session included this unsuccessful Munich Pact-level capitulation on the part of our state’s labor leaders:
The first two concessions would require a constitutional amendment. That said, I wouldn’t trust Michigan’s labor bosses to negotiate the purchase of a Ford Focus, let alone the future of this state.
I did not consider Obama’s victory good news and I am not sure how we know labor is what gave him the victory. If it did, I am not sure its is good news,
The man campaigned in 2008 on owning comfortable shoes, then apparently lost them as soon as he got elected and pretended not to see what went down in Wisconsin. Not only that, but he chose a right to work state for the Democratic National Convention of 2012, once again, putting his personal ambition before everything else, futilely, as it turned out. Oh, yeah, and whatever happened to good ole EFCA? And, I have a feeling Obamacare is not going to turn out half as well for rank and file labor as it does for health insurers and hospitals.
We’ve mocked Republicans for voting against their own self-interest. If labor chose to make the difference on behalf of Obama after all that, what the hell do we have to laugh at?
This is so true! For further documentation see Unions – http://newprogs.org/blog/2012/02/05/unions-under-democraticrepublican-uni-party
I’ve got some “Worst” Labor nominations:
1. AFL-CIO President Richard Trumka, for supported the Evil Pipeline (Economy over Environment?), inferring that Laborers should poison their children.
2. President Obama, for supporting Slavery in Bahrain.
3. President Obama, for supplying Poisonous Gas used in the Genocide against the Slaves of Bahrain.
4. President Obama, all American citizens, and the Government of South Africa, for not protesting the Massacre Murder of more than 30 Slaves in South Africa.
Oh yes, and:
5. US Labor leaders for supporting the “Slaver of the Bahrain Pogroms for President of the United States.