As I travel around the country, I tell people:
if you have a job, join a union. And if you don’t have a union, start one. You see, it all comes down to the balance
of power between business and workers. You strengthen the middle class by strengthening
unions. In the mid-1950s, unions were strong, and wages grew in tandem with the economy. Nearly one third of all workers in the United States were unionized. This gave workers across
America -- even those who weren’t unionized -- significant power to demand and get better
wages, hours, benefits, and working conditions. Yet starting in the 1980s and with increasing
ferocity since then, private-sector employers have fought against unions. Corporate raiders
demanded that companies boost share prices by busting unions or moving to non-union states.
Ronald Reagan’s administration fired the nation’s unionized air traffic controllers
and launched an all-out assault on workers’ rights, concentrating even more power in the
hands of corporate executives. In short, anti-worker corporations and politicians
joined together to stop workers from joining together. We now know that as union membership declined,
middle class incomes shrank. The two trends are the exact mirror images of each other.
The wealthy and big corporations continued to take home a larger share of the nation’s
wealth, while workers were left behind. Unions balance the power of workers with corporations,
by allowing workers to join forces to get a fair share. As an individual your voice
is limited, but there is power in numbers. Today, unions are more important than ever
to the survival of the middle class. Corporations have tremendous power over our lives, dictating
everything from bathroom breaks to health care for millions of Americans. In the halls of Washington and state legislatures,
their political power has allowed them to block increases in the minimum wage, roll
back workplace protections, and deny workers their benefits. Unless workers balance the
power of big corporations, the middle class will continue to get a smaller piece of the
pie as more and more wealth goes to those at the top. Unions are also essential to the workplace
of the future. Workers must contend with the forces of globalization and technological
change. With the stroke of a keyboard, executives can now send jobs overseas. Automated technologies
threaten to replace workers in every sector of the economy, making jobs less and less
secure. Without unions, workers will be completely at the mercy of these trends. This isn’t just a theoretical argument.
The tangible, real-world examples of how unions make workers’ lives better are everywhere
you look. Hospitality workers were able to secure raises and job protections from Marriott,
the world’s largest hotel chain, because of the power of their union. Disney employees
secured a $15 an hour base-pay after years of opposition from management. JetBlue’s
flight crews have unionized to negotiate better wages and more flexible schedules. We must continue to expand unions to restore
balance to our economy. In 2017, more than 250,000 additional American workers joined unions, and research shows almost 60 million more workers would like to join–if they
had the opportunity. Public approval of labor unions is at 62 percent, a 15-year high. That’s why powerful corporations and their
enablers in government are trying to squash workers by pushing so-called “right to work”
laws and undermining health care, workplace safety, and retirement protections. We have the power to overcome these attacks.
If you want a better life for you and your children, join a union. And if you want a
better America, support unions. What do you think? If you aren't in union, why not?
Let us know in the comments. If you found this video informative, be sure to also watch our video on why right to work is wrong. And as always be sure to subscribe to this channel for more videos like this one.