The Feb. 14 defeat of a United Auto Workers effort to unionize a Volkswagen plant in Chattanooga, Tenn., is rightly being portrayed as a sort of St. Valentine’s Day Massacre for the labor movement. But there was, amid this debacle, at least one seemingly hopeful sign for unions: Grover Norquist takes them seriously. That’s more than you can say about labor’s liberal allies.
A UAW defeat south of the Mason-Dixon line wouldn’t ordinarily qualify as news, given the South’s longstanding reluctance (Norma Rae notwithstanding) to unionize its manufacturing sector. In this instance, though, something unusual happened: Management stayed neutral. Indeed, VW favored unionizing the plant so that it could create cooperative European-style “works councils” there. (VW says it will press ahead with the works councils, but U.S. labor law makes that difficult when there is no union.)
VW’s neutrality rendered irrelevant most of the usual obstacles that plague organizing efforts today. These make it laughably easy for businesses to quash union drives. Management, for instance, can bar unions from presenting their case to the workers on company property. In Chattanooga, Volkswagen waived that privilege.
The legal obstacles to labor organizing derive principally from the 1947 Taft-Hartley Act, which the “card check” bill, much-discussed at the start of Obama’s presidency, would have partly repealed. But that bill came nine votes short of the 60 needed to break a Senate filibuster in 2007, and Obama lost whatever chance he had to enact it when the Democrats lost the House in 2010. The UAW didn’t need card check to win in Chattanooga because VW wasn’t trying to influence the vote.
So why did it lose anyway?
In large part because Republican politicians were determined to keep the UAW out. Sen. Bob Corker, after pledging to remain neutral, claimed two days before the vote that if the plant were unionized, he was “very certain” it would lose its chance to make VW’s new midsize SUV—contradicting an earlier statement by VW’s CEO and prompting a denial from the chief of VW’s Chattanooga operations. In addition, two high-ranking GOP state legislators said a pro-union vote would threaten future state subsidies to the plant.
But the most surprising part in this drama was played by Grover Norquist, in a role that conservatives, in more typical past unionization fights, would have identified as “outside agitator.” Norquist’s nonprofit Americans For Tax Reform, inventors of the famous I-won’t-raise-taxes pledge, turned out to be funding a union-busting arm called the Center for Worker Freedom that waged a public campaign against the UAW in Chattanooga.
The CWF replaced an earlier ATR organization dating to 1998 called the Alliance for Worker Freedom. The AWF conducted research and lobbied against pro-labor legislation (of which there’s been precious little in recent years). The rebranded Center for Worker Freedom, on the other hand, took the fight directly to the factory floor. In November Mike Elk of In These Times reported that CWF executive director Matt Patterson, a former staffer at the conservative Competitive Enterprise Institute, brought the project to ATR after floating to several conservative groups a proposal that promised “significant impact can made be over the next year in Tennessee, Alabama, and throughout the South to keep the UAW from organizing the foreign-owned auto facilities.”
When reached by e-mail, ATR spokesman John Kartch said the switch from AWF to CWF wasn’t linked to any shift in tactics. Kartch was vague about when CWF was formed (“at some point”), but the In These Times report suggested Patterson and ATR teamed up in late summer or early fall. “The UAW push in Chattanooga was an excellent time to get out information to the community and to the whole country about unions and their impact,” Kartch told msnbc. “We plan for the Center to be very active over the next several years.”
In Chattanooga, the CWF didn’t hesitate to take off the gloves and portray the UAW bid in culture-war terms. One billboard crossed out the “Auto” in “United Auto Workers” and replaced it with “Obama.” A radio ad stated, “Chattanooga is not Germany or Detroit. At least not yet.” And in a sort of verbal waving of the Confederate flag, Patterson coauthored an op-ed that likened the fight to a Civil War battle. “One hundred and fifty years ago, the people of Tennessee routed such a force in the Battle of Chickamauga,” Patterson wrote. “Let their descendants go now and do likewise.”









