I went down to DC over the weekend for the president’s inauguration and it was truly spectacular. The patriotic pageantry, the soaring rhetoric, the thousands who braved the cold and the DC transit system just to catch a glimpse of history. It was a grand moment for our democracy and a triumphant moment for Democrats who listened with pride as our president outlined his policy agenda. Climate change, immigration reform, gun reform, LGBT equality, women’s rights. Public opinion is moving in our direction on these issues and progress just seems possible.
But even as we celebrate, we must recognize that on another issue. An issue the president made no mention of but which is perhaps the most critical issue for the long term health of our economy, we are not just losing, we’re getting destroyed.
This chart shows the long decline of labor union membership. Just yesterday we received a new and unsurprising data point from the BLS. The number of union members fell by 400,000 last year and overall membership is now at a 97 year low.
Why does this matter?
The implication here is pretty clear. As labor goes, so goes the middle class. And make no mistake, labor is going. Right now we’re locked in a vicious downward spiral. Republicans, driven by corporate money and a cynical zeal for undermining one of the richest sources of Democratic campaign contributions attack labor rights in state after state. Their frequently successful attacks make it harder for unions to organize and lead to fewer people joining unions. With fewer people in unions, there are fewer people who understand the benefits of union membership for themselves and their families. And there are more people to be talked into the Republican caricature of union bosses as boorish thugs and mafia goons. So public support for labor unions declines, allowing Republicans to launch even more successful attacks on labor rights.









