DC plane crash, funding freeze, NLRB firings, and what Trump’s chaotic directives mean for labor | dc plane crash, funding freeze, nlrb firings
From the attempt to broadly freeze federal grants and loans to high-profile firings at the National Labor Relations Board, TRNN Reporter Mel Buer and Editor-in-Chief Maximillian Alvarez break down this weekâs chaotic directives from the Trump administration and what they will mean for working people and the labor movement. Mel and Max also lay out what we know about the tragic collision of a US Army Black Hawk helicopter and American Airlines regional passenger jet, Trumpâs broad attacks on federal workers, including air traffic controllers and members of the Aviation Security Advisory Committee, and how those attacks have been going on long before Trump. Then, from the historic union victory by Whole Foods workers in Philadelphia to Kaiser Healthcare workers on strike in California, we will highlight key labor stories taking place beyond the chaos in Washington, DC.Â
Studio Production: David Hebden, Cameron Granadino, Adam Coley
Transcript
The following is a rushed transcript and may contain errors. A proofread version will be made available as soon as possible.
Maximillian Alvarez:
Welcome to the Real News Network and welcome back to our weekly live stream. Alright, week two of the new Trump administration has been a characteristically chaotic one, but make no mistake, while this all feels kind of familiar, because we have the last Trump administration to compare it to from the avalanche of executive orders and the baffling press conferences to the spectacles filled Senate confirmation hearings, the past two weeks have brought us undoubtedly into historically unique and unfamiliar territory. And we can see that just by looking at this graph from Axios, comparing the current administrationâs pace and number of executive orders to those of passed administrations, including I might add the first Trump administration. As Aaron Davis notes in his first nine days in office, president Trump unleashed a flurry of executive orders. Unlike anything in modern presidential history, Trump is reshaping the federal government with a shock and awe campaign of unilateral actions that push the limits of presidential power.
Only President Biden and President Truman issued more than 40 executive orders in their first 100 days in office. So far, Trump has signed 38 after less than two weeks, and the shock and awe effect is very real and itâs very intentional. Faced with a barrage of executive orders and administrative shakeups, some that are purely theatrical bs, others that are deadly serious and could trigger full on constitutional crises from pulling the US out of the Paris Climate Agreement, yet again to declaring a national emergency at the southern border to pardoning the January 6th insurrectionists. Thereâs just too much here to process at once our brains and our hearts get overwhelmed and we end up immobilized. But our goal with these live streams and with all of our real news productions is to do the exact opposite. And thatâs why today my real news teammate Mel Buer and I are going to focus in on a few key stories from this week that have direct implications for workers, our lives and safety, our rights in the workplace, and for the labor movement writ large. And Mel and I are going to try to use our skills as reporters with long histories of covering labor, including on our weekly podcast, working people to answer your questions and give you the information, perspectives and analysis that you need so that you can process this, you can get mobilized and you can be empowered to act. Alright, so Mel, what are we digging into?
Mel Buer:
Okay, so weâre starting with three pretty major headlines from this week. The first is going to be last nightâs horrific plane crash in dc. Itâs the deadliest on US soil in over 20 years where 64 civilians and three military service members are dead. And thereâs a lot we donât know and new information is coming through at a pretty fast clip. So weâll lay out what we do know and why that matters. Then weâre going to get into the most pressing headlines coming out of the White House as it relates to Trumpâs executive orders, namely the funding freeze fiasco and what that means for workers here in the us. And then weâre going to talk about the recent shakeups at the NLRB General Counsel, a bruso firing and the abrupt termination of the NLRB chair Gwen Wilcox and what that means for the future of labor organizing in this uncertain moment. When you look at these stories together, they reveal a lot about how this administration sees government workers, contractors, and the working people around the country who depend on their services, how itâs approaching governance, using union busting and anti-worker tactics from the private sector, and how explicitly targeting the agencies and precedents that exist to enforce labor law and protect workersâ rights has become kind of a key issue for this administration.
Maximillian Alvarez:
Alright, so letâs dig into the most pressing story that weâre all thinking about right now. Letâs talk about what we know and what we donât know about this horrific plane crash. And we are going live right now at 4:00 PM on Thursday as I speak, president Donald Trump is holding another press conference his second today, itâs a live briefing on kind of an FA debrief. So thereâs going to be things said at that briefing that we canât comment on now, but we will of course follow up on this story and weâre going to try to give you as much of what we know. Now, letâs start with the basics. What do we know whatâs happening? The AP reports, the basics here. A mid-air collision between an Army helicopter and an American Airlines flight that was coming from Kansas killed all 67 people on board the two aircraft.
And the reasons for this crash, the causes of it are still under investigation. That is the official word. So we want to temper all of our collective expectations here and allow for the investigatory process to proceed so that we can get more information. Now, of course, weâll comment on this in a minute that hasnât stopped many people in the government from opining and blaming and directing blame at what they perceive to be the causes of this horrific crash. And weâre going to talk about those in a second. So AP continues in their report, which was updated this morning. At least 28 bodies have been pulled from the Potomac River already. Others are still being searched for the plane that carried 60 passengers and four crew members included a number of children who were training for to be in the Olympics and skating one day. This is a truly, truly tragic and horrific loss, and those families will never be whole again.
And we send our thoughts and prayers to them and our love and our solidarity because letâs not forget what really happened here. People lost their lives. So John Donnelly, the fire chief of the nationâs capitol, announced that they are at the point where theyâre switching from a rescue operation to a recovery operation. This is very similar to what we experienced here in Baltimore of March, in March of last year when the Francis Scott Key Bridge collapsed and Trump and Republicans tried to blame that on DEI too. Weâll get to that later. But there was a harrowing number of hours where loved ones community members were hoping against hope that their loved ones who were working on that bridge, these were immigrant construction workers working in the middle of the night who as we reported here at the Real News Network, received no warning that they were about to meet their deaths in a ship that was about to crash into the bridge they were working on.
So we were in that same wait and see. Mode two weâre hoping to retrieve living people turned into trying to recover deceased people. And as per the official notice, there are no expected survivors. This is a recovery mission, not a search and rescue mission. As Mel mentioned, this is the deadliest air crash over US airspace. Since the nine 11 attacks that happened in 2001. Collectively, those attacks killed 2,996 people on the day of the attack. Thereâs no immediate word, as I said on the cause of the collision, but officials have said that flight conditions were clear as the jet arrived from Wichita, Kansas with US and Russian figure skaters and others on board, quote from American Airline CEO, Robert Isam, he said on final approach into Reagan National, the plane collided with a military aircraft on an otherwise normal approach. Now, a top army aviation official did say that the Black Hawk crew was very experienced and familiar with the congested flying conditions of Reagan National Airport.
For those who donât live in and around dc this is a extremely busy airport in a densely populated part of the city that has been increasing air traffic for years. And Mel and I will talk about that more in a minute. But point being is that from the American airline side, from the military side, there appeared to be no interceding conditions like extreme weather that may have caused this crash that we know of so far. Investigators are going to be analyzing the flight data that they can retrieve from these two flights before making their final assessment. The transportation secretary, Sean Duffy, who was sworn in this week, said that there were early indicators of what happened, but he declined to elaborate on those pending a further investigation. Now Iâm going to wrap up here in a sec. As I mentioned, president Trump is giving a second press briefing as we speak.
He gave another one this morning. Iâm sure many of us saw it or at least saw the headlines to it because in this press conference where the leader of the country is expected to lead, Trump did what Trump does best and blame everybody else without evidence. Trump blamed the air traffic controllers, he blamed the helicopter pilots and he explicitly called out democratic policies at federal agencies. Trump claimed that the Federal Aviation Administration, the FAA, was actively recruiting workers who suffer severe intellectual disabilities, psychiatric problems and other mental and physical conditions under a diversity and inclusion hiring initiatives. So as usual, the typical boogeyman of DEI being like the thing at the root of all of our problems was the thing at the root of Trumpâs press conference this morning. And MAGA Republicans have spared, have wasted no time reaffirming this line. And weâre going to talk a little more about that as the stream continues. But those are essentially the basics of what we know and what we donât right now. This is an unfolding story, but we think it does have a lot to tell us. And so Mel, I want to kind of toss it to you and give us some of the broader context here that maybe people arenât seeing and theyâre sure as hell not hearing from the White House press briefings right now.
Mel Buer:
Well, I think itâs important to kind of note here that just like with our railroad reporting that we did in 2022, thatâll oftentimes what weâre looking at is kind of a breakdown of policy among decision makers, right? We know that the A-F-A-C-W-A and other unions that are involved in the aviation industry have been sounding the alarm about needing to have better staffing conditions at airports across the country. Those conditions have been worsening for at least since 2013. So through successive administrations, including the Trump administration where you had the chance to solve that problem and chose not to, and especially in this DC airport, Freddie Booster, Lois partially and David Soda wrote for Jacobin that lawmakers brushed off safety warnings amid mid-flight near misses and passed an industry backed measure designed to add additional flight traffic at the same DC airport where this disaster unfolded. So really, I think the point that Iâm trying to make here is that while the aviation industry is trying to bring more flights into these airports, which are welcome, right?
We want to be able to kind of reduce the sort of congestion in terms of wait times for flights, having more options as consumers for traveling across this country that also needs to come with heightened safety measures in terms of better staffing in the air traffic control towers and unions in the aviation industry have been really fighting for this for the last number of years, just like with our railroad reporting, what we learned with the railroads was that lack of staffing and disregard for really tried and trusted safety measures leads to accidents. And tragically, this is what happened here. That isnât to say that folks arenât fighting for this. Thatâs the big point that I want to make. And I think that unfortunately Trumpâs blaming of these various groups really is not to put it as lightly as possible, not helpful,
Maximillian Alvarez:
And itâs also not helpful. Letâs also be clear, right, falling into the partisan trap of trying to blame Trump for all of this too, right? Because as we are trying to show here, and as we show in our work at the Real News, these are longstanding problems that have had bipartisan support for many years. Trump is definitely making these problems worse, but he is not the originator of the problem. And you can see that in the question of under staffing. Now of course, a number of pundits and politicians have pointed to the fact that just last week, Donald Trump put a hiring freeze for federal employees, which would include hiring new air traffic controllers at a moment when weâve been experiencing an extended air traffic controller shortage. And weâll talk a bit more about that in a second. But also, of course, like Trumpâs firing of high level officials, even the heads of the TSA, the FAA and members of the very commissions that are there to ensure air flight safety.
And so of course the impulse is to look at that and see like, well see Trump did this last week and now this week we have a plane crash. Itâs a little more complex than that. As I speak to you now, there is a live update from the New York Times that came out just 10 minutes ago, sparse on information. But the information reads, live update control tower staffing was not normal during deadly crash. FA report says, an internal report suggested that the controller on duty the night of the accident was doing a job usually handled by two people. And so what we are trying to show yâall is that that situation did not come from nowhere, and it is not a situation that is sadly particular to air traffic controllers. This is something that Mel and I hear in the worker interviews that we do in industries around the country, the crisis of deliberate understaffing in critical industries, including those that have a direct bearing on our own public safety.
And with the railroads, Mel mentioned, to refresh your memories, a couple years ago, if we all recall, the US was approaching its first potential railroad strike in 30 years. We had been interviewing railroad workers across the industry, engineers, conductors, signalmen, Carmen dispatchers, all of whom were telling us different versions of the same story, which is that the corporate consolidation, the government deregulation, and the Wall Street takeover of the rail industry had created this sort of process that has built into a crisis over decades where the railroads have become more profitable than ever by cutting their costs year after year after year. And so what does that mean? It means cutting labor costs, cutting safety costs, making those trains longer, heavier, piled with more dangerous cargo, while having fewer and fewer workers on the trains and also fewer and fewer workers in the machine shops checking the track in the dispatch offices.
The point is, is that when these layoffs happen, when these corporate restructurings happen, like these policies are implemented in key industries like logistics industries like federal, like aviation, you are not just firing people, you are removing layers of security that are there for a reason and youâre doing so for the benefit, the short-term benefit of higher profits, while the long-term costs are born by the workers in those industries, the public that is being hurt by them and even by the customers who use those industries, rail shippers are as pissed off as rail workers are right now. So the point just being is that Mel and I hear this in education teacher shortages, more students piled on to fewer teachers leading to worse education outcomes, healthcare hospital workers who have been burnt out before covid even more so since covid, more patients piled onto fewer nurses leading to declining quality of care, treating patients more like just a kind of grist for the mill.
Get âem in, get âem out. This is a system-wide problem that we are seeing the effects of across the economy, and we can see it here in this tragic plane crash that has claimed the lives of nearly 70 people. In fact, this is much like the horrific train accident that occurred in East Palestinian, Ohio on February 3rd. The anniversaryâs coming up, the two year anniversary of that, and the workers on the railroads warned us that something like that would happen and then it did, just like workers in the aviation industry, as Mel mentioned, have been warning us that something like this would happen and now it has. But we have been sort of dancing on the lip of this volcano for a long time. Weâre just waking up to the reality now. And I just want to kind of underline this point by quoting from a really great Jacobin article that was published in 2023 by Joseph a McCarton titled The US is Facing a Growing Air Safety Crisis.
We have Ronald Reagan to thank for that. And again, this was not published this week, this was published during the Biden administration. McCarton makes the very clear point that on March 15th, 2023, the Federal Aviation Administration held a safety summit in McLean, Virginia, gathering more than 200 safety leaders from across American aviation to discuss ways to enhance flight safety. What prompted the unusual summit was by the FA aâs own admission, a quote string of recent safety incidents, several of which involved airplanes coming too close together during takeoff or landing. And McCarton also notes in that same article that a, a recent internal study by the Inspector General of the US Department of Transportation found that 20 of 26 critical facilities, 77% of them are staffed below the FA aâs 85% threshold. So again, donât get it twisted. What Trump is doing is making the problem worse. Itâs pouring gasoline on the fire, but this fire was burning before Trump came into office.
And Mel, as you said, this is something that weâve had workers in these industries decrying for many, many years. And this is also something that we need to sort of have a long historical view on, right? Because as McCartan mentioned in that article, we do have Ronald Reagan to thank for a lot of this. And I just wanted to kind of hover on that point for a second because as we know, one of Ronald Reagan, president Ronald Reaganâs most infamous acts in his first presidential term was to fire striking air traffic controllers over a thousand of them. It was a significant massive percentage of the existing air traffic controller workforce in 1981. Not only did this sort of unleash a new age of union busting across the private sector and elsewhere, but it also is directly relevant to what weâre talking about here because when you fire that many air traffic controllers, as Reagan did, this was 11,000, approximately 70% of the controller workforce at the time that Reagan fired in 1981 and then tried to replace.
So a point that maybe we donât think about, but that actually connects to the air traffic controller shortage now, is that when you in one year eliminate 70% of that workforce and then you replace it with new hires in the next two to three, four years, you are creating essentially a generational problem where those new hires in the 1980s are retiring in 30 years, and then the process starts again, where suddenly you have kind of a massive aging out of the existing workforce and a dire need to replace those understaffed agencies. So we are still feeling the staffing ripple effects and the safety impacts that has from Ronald Reaganâs original firing of the air traffic controllers. We have not fixed that problem. And as weâve said a number of times, like air traffic controllers continue to be chronically understaffed, which means all of us who fly are flying at the mercy and our safety hangs on the overworked shoulders of understaffed air traffic controllers across the country right now. And I donât know, does that make you feel safe, Mel? It doesnât make me feel safe.
Mel Buer:
No. I take the train. I already have enough air anxiety. The reality is I think as well when youâre talking about, particularly with the PATCO strike, but in any industry where there is high turnover, there is not really a space for the sort of concentration of expertise. And PATCO is a huge example of this where you have career air traffic controllers who have amassed collectively hundreds of years of collective experience and how to work this industry and do it safely. And youâre training new hires who may or may not have the same sort of experience or youâre shuffling folks into these departments. Youâre not going to get the same level standard of expertise. We see it in healthcare, we see it, and really any industry that has high turnover from the people who make your coffee drinks all the way up to the engineers who make your planes that you write on.
So this is a huge problem, and we will discuss this a little bit later when weâre talking about whatâs going on in the federal government as well. But that is an important point to make that what weâre seeing with this lack of staffing is really a lack of expertise. The ability to have internally these checks and balances that create the safety conditions that we rely on in order for us to live our lives without fear of falling out of the sky literally. And so thatâs a really important point here. And again, unions like the A-F-A-C-W-A and the machinists who work with Boeing are acutely aware of that and are willing and able to bolster this workforce. But you cannot attract a new generation of smart, capable, hardworking, willing people to buy into this industry and provide their expertise to this industry if you donât have a competitive job to offer them.
And that happens a lot in healthcare as well. So itâs kind of a top-down problem. Itâs not that folks donât want to do these jobs, itâs really is this job going to be doable? Am I going to be able to pay my bills? Is my family going to be okay? Am I going to be able to get a pension? Am I going to be able to do this job to the best of my ability without working 120 hours a week and get paid nothing really functionally for it? And again, these unions are really acutely aware of this issue and are bargaining hard to solve these problems. And unfortunately in many cases, theyâre coming up against an intractable management who cares more increasing profits for shareholders than actually creating a workplace that is competitive and that is also operating at a higher standard.
Maximillian Alvarez:
And letâs kind of talk a little bit while weâre sort of closing out this section. It does hook into another key sort of subject that we wanted to talk about today, which is Trump and the Trump administrationâs all out attack on federal workers and the vilification of federal workers as nameless, faceless, useless, even evil bureaucrats of the deep state who need to be chucked out, fired, eliminated, disciplined. And if weâre not kind of understanding who those people are and what they do, that may sound good and people are going to cheer on Trumpâs policies. But what weâre trying to say here is that we need to have a clear-eyed vision of actually who these people are, what they do, and how it directly impacts our lives. And the point being is that you cannot solve these potentially society, destroying society and periling problems if you are not correctly diagnosing the problem itself.
And that is why the sort of attacks on DEI and using the harnessing of DEI to sort of create an explanation for all of this is really, really sinister, right? Because like I said, they tried to do this when the Baltimore Bridge collapsed. They blamed it on DEI here too when the LA fires where Mel and I are from our homes are burning and have been burning for the past two weeks. And while weâre trying to sort of talk to our loved ones and find out if theyâre okay, this whole media cycle is blaming the fires and the destruction on DEI and woke democratic policies. And now this plane crash happens, these people die and immediately before their bodies are retrieved from the Potomac River, Donald Trump is out there from the White House press office saying that it was DEI that caused the problem. And I donât know how it can get any more obvious that this is political snake oil.
It is a built-in perennial excuse crafted by the very same corrupt business lobbies and politicians who are endangering our lives for profit so that they can quite literally get away with killing us and then blame it on a fictional boogeyman. We can talk about the issues with DEI, weâve got plenty of them. But trying to explain tragedies like this through a DEI only lens is nuts. Itâs stupid. It is ignoring the realities that are screaming in our faces and in the workers who are living those realities and who are telling us what the problem is. And thereâs something really telling about that because this attack on DEI and this attempt to turn DEI into the catchall explanation is in fact capitalists their own fake solution to the problem that capitalists themselves have created, capitalizing on the pain that they have caused through decades of rampant union busting layoffs, disciplining of labor, focusing on only maximizing short-term profits for executives and Wall Street shareholders while putting us all at long-term risk by removing necessary safety measures and checks and balances and accountability, the onslaught of deregulation over the course of decades.
And the point being is that I want to be very clear and apparent here. I grew up conservative. Iâve said this many times, Iâve been open about it on our show, on this network. And so I have a living memory of being a Republican and championing other Republicans throughout the nineties and early aughts who kept saying, we need to break the backs of unions. We need to privatize government. We need to unleash the genius of the free market and deregulate as many industries as possible so that the genius of the market can lead us to a better society. I believed in all that stuff. I cheered it on, and itâs like no one remembers that the same Republicans Trump himself included, who cheered this on 20 years ago, the same corporations that didnât want to take ownership over it are now trying to turn around and blame DEI for the things that they got what they wanted.
And it screwed up society the way that people were saying it was going to. And now the same people who profited from that, the same people who push that policy are turning around and trying to create a boogeyman in DEI and woke him to sort of get off scot free. And we are letting them, the corporate criminals, the Wall Street vampires, the corrupt politicians who have put us in this dangerous position, get off scot free and convince us to blame our neighbors and coworkers and policies like DEI for the problems that theyâve created. And thatâs absurd. And I want to bring us to the way to fight. This is not in a conceptual policy only way, but to again, look at the ground level and understand who and what weâre actually talking about and where the problems are and where they are not. And I think that this horrific tragedy does really point us instructively to a couple of core truths and that are deeply relevant as we watch what the Trump administration is doing right now using the corporate crafted language of inefficiency and bloat and overstaffing importing these tactics from the private sector into government.
And it reveals how that kind of thinking from the private market fundamentally misunderstands what and who the government is, right? The evil bureaucrats of the deep state, they are people like the members of the Aviation Security Advisory Committee that Trump fired last week. They are the overworked air traffic controllers that are making sure that our planes donât crash while theyâre getting no sleep. They are the civil servants throughout the government who are being pushed to voluntarily resign and who are being reclassified under Schedule F so that they become at-will employees who are easier to fire. You may not like the government for many justifiable reasons, but without the people who make it work, nothing works for us. And I want to kind of show how the leaders and labor folks in labor that Mel was talking about have actually been telling us this for many years.
On the Real news here, last week I interviewed the great Sarah Nelson, the International President of the Association of Flight Attendants, C-W-A-A-F-L-C-I-O. If you recall, Sarah Nelson became a household name during the Trump LED GOP LED government shutdown of 2018 and 20 19, 6 years ago, it was the longest government shutdown in our countryâs history. And Sarah Nelson steps out of the world of organized labor and into the public limelight as this shutdown, which furloughed 300,000 federal workers while keeping 400,000 federal workers working for 35 days without pay. So people like air traffic controllers working all that time while also working second jobs so that they could feed families. We were at the verge of another horrific tragedy like this back during the government shutdown in 20 18, 20 19, but Sarah Nelson and the flight attendants were the ones who were making that point because in DC it was all, oh, this is about Trumpâs border wall. This is not about Trumpâs border wall. It was the same kind of thing like weâre talking about DEI and woke him now, but weâre not talking about the actual goddamn problem. So letâs tee up these clips of Sarah Nelson speaking to the public in January of 2019, making that case during the longest government shutdown of the US history.
Sara Nelson:
We are here today because we are concerned about our safety, our security, and our economic stability, our jobs for years. The right has vilified federal workers as nameless, faceless bureaucrats, but the truth is theyâre air traffic controllers, theyâre food inspectors, theyâre transportation security officers and law enforcement. Theyâre the people who live and work in our communities and they are being hurt. This is about our safety and security and our jobs and our entire countryâs economic stability. No one will get out of this unscathed if we do not stop this shutdown leader McConnell, you can fix this today. If you donât show the leadership to bring your caucus to a vote to open the government today, then we are calling on the conscientious members of your caucus to do it for you. There is no excuse to continue this. This is not a political game. Open the government today. We are calling on the public on February 16th, if we are in a day 36 of this shutdown for everyone to come to the airports, everyone come to the airports and demand that this Congress work for us and get politics out of our safety and security it.
Maximillian Alvarez:
So I would highly recommend that everyone watching this stream live or after the fact, go watch that full interview that we did with Sarah Nelson, listen to what she says and apply it to the situation that weâre seeing now, especially those final words, that this is not about an ideological battle between Trump, MAGA and the Deep State and woke and DEI. This is about a corporate class of tyrants who are destroying the people, jobs, and agencies that our basic safety and needs depend on. And so thereâs something I think really important here about the lessons that unions and labor specifically can teach us about whatâs going to happen here, whoâs fighting back against this. Mel, I wanted to toss it to you to just kind of give folks a few points about that before we move on to the other stories.
Mel Buer:
Well, itâs like Iâve been saying, unions across this country in small shops, in large shops, in regions, all across the country from a small coffee shop thatâs taking on Nestle to the UAW getting plants reopened in Illinois, all of these struggles are sort of tapped into what I think is a really key thing that we as labor reporters pay attention to, which is to say, workers are experts in their own workplace. They know whatâs working, whatâs not working, because theyâre there every day and they have generally pretty good ideas about how to improve these industries for the people who work in it and for the consumers and the individuals who are touched by these industries. So when you see these labor struggles where you might, oh, I donât know, disagree with tactics or find certain things to be a little odious, or youâre not sure why a certain thing is being offered in a contract or in a bargaining session or on a picket line, you might open up a conversation with those workers if youâre there and ask them why.
Itâs important, because ultimately, from the federal government all the way down to the smallest shop in your city, individuals kind of know whatâs going on and their ideas might actually improve our lives. And thatâs really what the A-F-A-C-W-A is trying to do is what the machinists tried to do at Boeing. I mean, weâre seeing this play out in successive industries all across this country, and even especially now in this new administration that has already sort of styled itself through its actions as being adversarial to the labor movement, itâs important. Itâs important for us to pay attention to these things. So that would,
Maximillian Alvarez:
Just to underline what Mel just said there, I mean, again, as two reporters co-hosts of working people who talk to workers about this stuff every single week, if we sound like broken records, we keep hearing the same thing from all these workers and weâre trying to get people to listen to them. But thatâs a really, really critical point here. If it feels like thereâs no solution to these problems in DC right now, that doesnât mean thereâs no one fighting for a real solution. Over 30,000 machinists, as Mel mentioned, went on strike at Boeing earlier or late last year. Letâs not forget Boeingâs role in all of this. Letâs not forget the Boeing planes that have been falling out of the sky over the past decades and the way the same corporate Wall Street brain disease that took a once the most vaunted airline company or airline manufacturer in the world had the best reputation for its product in the world.
How it went from that to being the laughing stock of the world and the kind of plane no one wants to get on because weâre all terrified that the planeâs going to fall out of the sky. Whoâs fighting for that? And how did that happen? It didnât happen overnight, but the workers who went on strike at Boeing last year, theyâre fighting to have a say in that theyâre fighting to have a say in the corporate policies that have put all of us at danger, just like the railroad workers were not only fighting for pay for themselves and better time off policies for their families, but they were doing that so that they could actually do their jobs well and safely and not put us in danger when their trains are bombing past our T-ball games. So there is an inherent connection between what workers in specific industries, unions in specific jobs are fighting for that we have a vested interest in, and we should really kind of think about that, not only in terms of why we should support those struggles, but what that says about alternative pathways for solutions when it feels like the bipartisan politics in DC are presenting none.
So just wanted to really underline that great point that Mel made and letâs, we got more to talk about here, but if nothing else, we hope that you take that point away from what weâre saying here.
Mel Buer:
I think a great way to kind of move forward in this conversation is to kind of take a moment here to see what break down whatâs been going on over the last week at the federal level. One of the big things, and itâs been probably the most dominant in headlines over the last five days or so, is this funding freeze fiasco thatâs been going on. On Monday night. The Trump administration sent out a late night memo essentially freezing all federal grants and not allowing them to be dispersed to the states and organizations that were scheduled to receive them. Keep this in mind when weâre talking about this, as Iâm sure youâve read about over the last couple of days. But these are funds that Congress has already approved for disbursement to all 50 states. State governments use these funds for a wide variety of items, from SNAP benefits to Pell grants for students to research grants and everything in between to the tune of trillions of dollars.
These grants pay the rent for workers, they keep folks employed, they keep families fed, and in the last couple of days, representatives and governors from states all over the country have registered their alarm and outrage at the move, and they began maneuvering to try and kill the order before it had a chance to really be implemented. But I really do want to underscore something here as I would like to read a piece from this memo that was sent out and ultimately rescinded as of yesterday to kind of underscore the breadth of it and also what may have caused some pretty intense confusion. So this is a quote from the original memo that was sent from the Office of Management and Budget, and it says, financial assistance should be dedicated to advancing administration priorities, focusing taxpayer dollars to advance a stronger and safer America, eliminating the financial burden of inflation for citizens, unleashing American energy and manufacturing ending wokeness, and the weaponization of government promoting efficiency in government and making America healthy again.
The use of federal resources to advance Marxist equity, transgenderism and Green New Deal social engineering policies is a waste of taxpayer dollars that does not improve the day-to-day lives of those we serve, this memorandum requires federal agencies to identify and review all federal financial assistance programs and supporting activities consistent with the Presidentâs policies and requirements. And to implement these orders, each agency must complete a comprehensive analysis of all of their federal financial assistance programs to identify programs, projects, and activities that may be implicated by any of the Presidentâs executive orders. In the interim, to the extent permissible under applicable law, federal agencies must temporarily pause all activities related to obligation or disbursement of all federal financial assistance and other relevant agency activities that may be implicated by the executive orders, including but not limited to, financial assistance for foreign aid, non-governmental organizations. DEI woke gender ideology, and the Green New Deal.
Now, hereâs the issue with this, and this was the issue that many people have pointed out, and that is the subject of many lawsuits as well, is that this is very broad, and Iâm kind of taking a little bit of a charitable reading here, but I really shouldnât. Itâs nonsense is what it is. Itâs called impoundment. Itâs been illegal for many, many years that the federal government, specifically the executive branch, cannot withhold these funds on the basis of political differences, which is essentially what this is when you include things like woke gender ideology, and the Green New Deal. And understandably, 23 states sued to create a temporary restraining order on this, which was a big piece of news on Tuesdays that there were moves from a variety of different places to try and stop the implementation of this directive and ultimately, the executive order as it stands, right? Why does this matter? I mean, this is what running the government a business looks like. Itâs not how you run a government max. I donât know about you, but I think itâs a absolutely ridiculous idea, and I think a lot of people agree.
Maximillian Alvarez:
Yeah, I mean, again, Iâm smiling because as a younger me who used to be a full-fledged Republican loved the idea of running government like a business, and it just kind of baffles me the more that Iâve grown and learned and seen in the world, just kind of how dumb I was to believe that that was a right headed sort of way to look at things. And Iâll kind of touch on that in a second, but letâs step back and when weâre asking why does this matter, there are two key points here that Mel teed up that we really want to drive home. The first reason why this matters is because it is blatantly unconstitutional, but that on its own, sadly, doesnât mean a whole lot to a lot of people out there today. So if we just say, oh, itâs against the constitution, what do we mean when we actually say that?
If thereâs one thing that every four to 5-year-old in this country knows about our country and our national mythology, itâs that America was founded because our ancestors didnât want to be ruled by kings anymore. They did not. They had spent generations, centuries living under top down futile style king type power structures, and it sucked, right? It was a bad way to run societies. And so we came to this new world and created a more democratic system. I say more democratic, not fully democratic. We know there are plenty of reasons in American history for why we were never a full fledged democracy, but the promise of democracy was meant as a direct refutation of the proven evils and inefficiencies of kingly rule. And so thatâs why we have the damn system that we have set up as imperfect as it is, there was a point to it.
And so thatâs what we mean when we say itâs unconstitutional, is it is violating that basic social contract upon which this whole country is founded, where a president should not have by definition and by principle, the unilateral authority to just govern by shooting at the hip through executive orders, and totally circumventing the power of the purse that Congress has been democratically endowed with. There is a reason why the house has the power of the purse, why Congress has that power, because itâs meant to be the most beholden to the people, the most representative of the people. And so the should in theory be the ones with that control over how this country spends its money. And so the President, by definition, by principles should not have and does not have the authority to just freeze trillions of dollars that have already been appropriated by that democratic or more democratic system and just decide that theyâre going to halt that freezing.
Theyâre going to review stuff, and theyâre going to determine who gets their funding and who doesnât. What happens in corporations, thatâs what happens in, again, king societies run by kings and queens. Thatâs not whatâs supposed to happen in a democratic society, and thereâs a reason for that. So when we say itâs unconstitutional and that matters, thereâs a really deep kind of principle at work here that we should not be ruled by the whims and unilateral authority of one person. I think thatâs a good thing. I mean, again, otherwise, everything that all of us have ever learned in school about our country and why itâs good is wrong. So thereâs that. But then thereâs also another reason why this matters that Mel mentioned, right? This just really underlines the stupidity, the inappropriateness of thinking of government, like a business thinking of things like the US Postal Service in the terms of the private market and not thinking about the essential service that a functioning postal service provides to a functioning democracy.
That is what the postal service is there to do to make sure people get their damn mail, not just the people who can afford it. And so if youâre judging things like the US Postal Service by its profit margins or its returns on investment, and youâre not including that social investment and that social benefit, that political benefit, then youâre not going to be able to assess the success of that agency or the government writ large. And so, yeah, I wanted to kind of just tee up a clip that we had poll for a previous section, but I think itâs really apt here, but itâs a clip from James Goodwin who is the policy director for the Center of Progressive Reform. Now, I actually spoke with James on when I was guest hosting an episode of Laura Flanders, a show. Shout out to the great journalist Laura Flanders and her show Laura Flanders and friends.
So Laura and I spoke with James last summer about project 2025. Its authors, its plans, but also one particular aspect of Project 2025, which is Schedule F, which is the order that Trump has already brought back in that recategorize, thousands of federal employees who have certain protections that are there for a reason, reclassifies them as at-will employees, the same way that like workers in this country, most workers in this country are, you can be fired like that without just cause. So I asked James what the effect of this was going to be if these federal workers with their worker protections were suddenly made at will employees under this regime, what effect would that have? So letâs play that clip really quick.
James Goodwin:
Yeah. So what makes the foundation of our administrative state is the people, professional, apolitical experts. This is something we started building in this country in the late 18 hundreds to replace what was known at the time as a spoil system. These jobs were essentially done by friends of the president or people in political power, and that was just a breeding ground for corruption and incompetence. This is what Schedule F would do, is it would return us to this system. And so under this proposal, we would take all these experts, these tens of thousands of scientists, engineers, attorneys, what have you, weâd fire them who theyâre getting replaced with as somebody whoâs somebody whose only real skill is unquestioned loyalty to the president.
Maximillian Alvarez:
All right? So weâre not on the campaign trail anymore. This is no longer a what if situation, this is happening. This is what theyâre doing. Now, Russ V, one of the primary authors of Project 2025 is having his hearing right now to be in charge of the Office of Management and Budget so that he can implement the things that he has laid out, and the other authors of Project 2025 have laid out in project 2025 itself, but we donât have to get into that. The point just being is that letâs talk about this now that itâs actually happening instead of like, is this going to happen or not? Right? The point to really make here is what James said. Again, you can have all the justifiable problems that you have that we have with the government as such with certain government agencies that are not working properly or doing enough to serve the people.
We all get that. But when you take the people who are actually making the government work as much as it is, and you turn them into an unprotected, easily fireable kind of class of employee who are, again, through this sort of memo that was sent out to over 2 million government employees asking them to voluntarily leave the government while also pushing folks back to work in person, trying to get them to leave all reclassifying workers under Schedule F so they could be more easily fired. The cumulative effect here is to purge the government of non ideologically federal workers and restock whatâs left of those agencies with Trump aligned loyalists. And this sounds great when youâre thinking in 21st century terms of running government like a business, but as James rightly points out, weâve had this before. Itâs the whole reason that the civil service exists. Because in the 18th century, we had a system thatâs working like how Trump and his administration wanted to work now where appointees were loyalists, friends, family members, and it was a corrupt nightmare, and nothing got done, and people were furious about it. So they spent the 20th century trying to get the government to not be that. Now weâre going back. That perspectiveâs important. Thatâs why this also matters.
Mel Buer:
Yeah, agree. I think this kind of makes a, I donât know. Itâs a rising mass of corruption that is just getting larger. The farther we get into the Trump administration, they have a very clear policy agenda that they, I think know that they might not realistically be able to slim through via legislative means, which is why the executive orders are happening in this way because they know that many of these bills that they would like to see happen will not get passed. Theyâll get stopped. Theyâll get sued out of existence. So the best thing they can do is do an executive order. And this is whatâs happened with this particular federal funding freeze memo, right? The outcry was really big this week. We had governors going on the TV to say, this directly affects my constituents. These people rely on unemployment insurance and SNAP benefits, WIC and everything else in order to make sure that their families are fed.
Iâve been receiving phone calls from panicked constituents for two days. This is not okay. This needs, there needs to be some pushback. What ended up happening is that there are multiple lawsuits that have been filed, including one where I think 23 plus states filed a lawsuit against this directive. Theyâre trying to get a judge to grant a temporary restraining order on it after that lawsuit was filed. The White House rescinded that memo yesterday and the White House press secretary leave, it took to Twitter to clarify that it was just the memo itself that was rescinded and not the original order to begin to examine which federal funding could be frozen based on the investigations that they want to do into these appropriations.
Lawyers took that quite reasonably, I would say, to mean that the lawsuits they filed were still worth pursuing. Right. I know there was some confusion on social media yesterday that the memo being rescinded meant that the entire executive order was rescinded, and the press secretaryâs clarification on Twitter keyed us into the fact that it was just the memo itself and that they were absolutely planning on continuing to move forward with the directives in the executive orders relating to this. So lawyers made that case to Rhode Island, US District Chief Judge John McConnell yesterday, and they quoted that tweet in their case that despite resending the memo, the plans were still in place to freeze funding at some point in the future, if not in the next week. And the judge agreed and allowed that TRO suit to proceed. So where weâre at with this right now is that the memo has been rescinded, the plaintiffs in this case, for a temporary restraining order.
The lawyers representing 23 plus states refiled their suit last night that seeks to prevent any blocking of federal financial obligations now and in the future, and also prohibits any reiss issues of the now rescinded directive. So the White House canât, or the Office of Management and Budget cannot put out another memo under different wording. They canât kind of wiggle their way around it by directing only some agencies to freeze their funding while this TRO is in effect. So theyâve submitted this proposal to the judge, the DOJ has 24 hours to respond, which as of right before we went live, I donât think they have responded quite yet. And then the judge will signal that a ruling is likely going to come at some point in the next couple of days. So if he grants this TRO on this particular thing, that means that for at least 14 days, there is no federal freezing of the funds.
It means that SNAP benefits will be funded. It means that Pell Grants will be paid out. It means that federal work study will still be available to students at universities and all the way down the list. And that TRO proposal also says that if needed, they can extend that by another 14 days. So what weâre looking at is 14 to 30 days. Presumably it gives additional lawsuits, the chance to kind of move forward with this or the Trump administration can take the L and back away from this policy and rescind this executive order. I think this amongst the 38 that have been filed, and Iâm sure more that will be signed today and tomorrow and the next day. This seems to be the one that really kind of kicked up a lot of dust and also kicked the opposition into gear a little bit more than what weâve been seeing over the last two weeks to three months, because it really is confusing and broad, very, very broad and affects a lot of people.
So in terms of that litigation, hopefully itâs successful. Weâll see in the next couple of days. One thing that I do just want to end on with this specific issue is that thereâs a lot of information thatâs blurring past your tl, right? Weâre getting headlines every other day about some absolutely obscene, harrowing directives coming out of the White House, and theyâre coming at this breakneck speed. And there is a tracker that you can follow. Just security publication has a tracker specifically about executive orders that the Trump administration is putting out, and any litigation that is trying to challenge those orders in the future, including updates, they have a pretty solid team thatâs doing this across the board, not just about the executive orders, but the tracker that they have is specific to that. And I know that I was looking yesterday on Blue Sky trying to find someone who is aggregating all of this, because you can only listen to so many group chats before you start getting stuck and not spiraling a little bit because the information is, ah, we will just say that thereâs so much of it. So I found this tracker, I went through it, and I think itâs really great. Weâll put a link in our description, weâll drop it in the chat for you, because if youâre like me and you want to stay informed, but you want to stay informed without doom spiraling and see how folks are actually challenging these things to varying degrees of success, then thatâs a good place to start. I think I
Maximillian Alvarez:
Oh, yeah. Yeah. And again, please let us know here at The Real News in the live chat now, reach out to us on social media. Email us. That is our explicit goal too. As I said at the top of this live stream, itâs more important now than ever when it is an explicit tactic of this administration. It is an explicit prerogative of the social media platforms that we use to bombard us with information so that we stay on those platforms like waiting for the next bit of information to come, but weâre not actually doing anything with that information except consuming it, fearfully reacting to it, or angrily reacting to it, and then moving on quickly to the next thing. And the more of us who are in that position, the less mobilized we are as a populace. And we here at The Real News believe that people, real people, working people across this country and around the world are the solution to the problems that weâre experiencing.
Like we are the ones who are going to work together to build the world that works for all of us. We fundamentally believe that you me, everyone watching this is part of the solution. And so we want to provide information, updates, analysis. We want to give you access to the voices. Youâre not hearing the workers on the front lines, the people living in these sacrifice zones, the people brutalized by the police, the people brutalized by our broken healthcare system and our war industry that is wreaking death and destruction across the planet like we are trying to bring you in touch with those people, those voices, the movements that are trying to address them, and to get you to feel that you are part of that and to understand that you can be part of these solutions. So we want to hear from you if weâre doing a good job of that, and if thereâs other kinds of information, other voices, other perspectives that you want us to provide so that you feel more empowered to act and to do something and to be part of the solution here.
So please do also reach out to us and share with us any suggestions or recommendations that youâve got there. And weâve got about 25 minutes left in this live stream. We also want to hear if this was helpful to you, and we are not going to be able to kind of get to some questions from the live chat itself today, but we have been sourcing questions from yâall leading up to this live stream on social media, we have a text service that you can get real news updates on through text messaging. And folks have been sending us great questions ahead of this live stream through that service, and you can learn more about how to sign up for it in the live chat right now. So we are going to end in a few minutes, kind of like Mel and I will step back a bit and sort of assess based on these questions that we got before the stream began in the final 15 minutes here. But before we get there, I know Mel, there are kind of another key story that weâve both been really concerned about, but you really want to impress upon viewers why this is one of those headlines passing your timeline that you should actually focus on.
Mel Buer:
Yeah, so in the last week or so, thereâs been a bit of a, I hesitate to use the word shakeup, but there has been some changes with the NLRB and what weâve been seeing is that NLRB, Jennifer General Counsel Jennifer Bruso was fired. Honestly, I think most folks were kind of expecting that there was sort of a changeover. And what she does is sheâs kind of the top adjudicator prosecutor investigator for the NLRB. Sheâs been really good at bringing forth some really important sort of policy changes and also rule changes that really kind of have helped workers organize. Sheâs been really tough on bosses and really holding corporations like Amazon to feet to the fire kind of expected that to happen. It happened when Biden took over in 2021. There was a shakeup there with the general counselor, if I believe correctly. And so we kind of expected that to happen.
What is surprising is that the NLRB chair G, when Wilcox was also fired, she was appointed in December, I think appointed and confirmed in December, and she is the first black member, black woman member of the NLRB. She is also supposed to keep her job through the next couple of years, and that as it stands, the NLRA and the various policies do not have provisions. These board members are not at-will members. Theyâre supposed to serve out their term unless there is some sort of malfeasance or a specific event that someone can point to in the administration to fire any member of the board. You canât do it. And so it was very surprising to see G when Wilcox fired at the beginning of this week. And there is a statement here from the A-F-L-C-I-O President Liz Schuler, that I kind of want to just read a little bit here that says, president Trumpâs firing of NLRB member Gwen Wilcox, the first black woman to serve on the board, is illegal and will have immediate consequences for working people by leaving only two board members in their posts.
The president has effectively shut down the National Labor Relations Boardâs operation, leaving the workers at defenses on their own in the face of union busting and retaliation alongside the firing of NLRB General Counsel bruso, these moves will make it easier for bosses to violate the law and trample on workersâ legal rights on the job and fundamental freedom to organize. Now this is important and weâll kind of talk about this just in a moment about what exactly the NLRB does on a sort of granular level. But the way that the NLRB essentially operates is that the board is the sort of adjudicators. They make decisions on union elections, they make decisions on investigations into workplaces. They make decisions on unfair labor practice charges that will bring consequences against employers when they treat their workers badly. Break the law, retaliate fire workers for union organizing, any number of things in order for the board to operate, there has to be quorum.
So of the five members, there has to be at least three appointed working members of the board. Right now, there are vacancies, which is also surprising. Normally in the normal course of things, an incoming president will use those vacancies to kind of shift making. And there were two vacancies on the board that wouldâve, I think if youâre talking about the strategy here would have changed policy at the NLRB by itself. Now, thereâs only two members of the board after Gwen Wilcox has been fired, which means the board doesnât have quorum. They do not have the authority to make decisions until they have quorum. So any of the sort of things that the board could do to uphold the NLRA, which is to say the enforcement of the law that protects worker rights in this country canât happen until a new person is appointed and confirmed or until Wilcox is reinstated, which she has indicated that she will pursue whatever legal avenues that she has to be reinstated to fight this firing.
Because again, itâs illegal. Itâs illegal. What Trump did, and Iâm not trying to create this doom spiral, but this is concerning. Itâs very alarming and itâs important that we kind underscore that I know that there are folks among the labor movement who would love to see the sort of wild west of labor organizing return. We may actually see that at some point in the future, but at the moment, what we have with the NLRA is workable. Itâs not great, but it is workable and it does keep individuals employed. It keeps individuals from getting hurt on the job. It keeps individuals from being fired for organizing. And if we donât have an NLRB that can enforce that because itâs been hobbled by this particular thing, itâs not great Max,
Maximillian Alvarez:
No. Itâs like, yeah, I forget who the quote came from. I think it was a democratic legislator, but it was like the message right now is workers are on their own. And functionally that is correct because the NLRB insufficient as it is, and we have reported on that too. Weâve reported on how understaffed, underfunded and the NLRB is and has been for years. Weâve reported over the years about how the NLRB should be more aggressive in enforcing labor law. Again, we can walk and chew gum at the same time. The NLRB cannot be perfect, but things can be a lot worse without it, right? Weâre capable of having that conversation, but we need to understand also what that means in real terms. And so I want to kind of tee up a clip here from Mellon MAâs podcast working people where I spoke with workers at the National Labor Relations Board, like rank and file workers, labor lawyers, people who are doing the work of the agency and who are also both representatives in the NLRB Union.
So this was actually an interview that we did when we were approaching the threshold of a government shutdown in, I think that was September, 2023. Remember that was the kind of congressional Republicans internal fighting over more spending cuts, border security, no military aid to Ukraine. It was a high stakes fight between McCarthy and Matt Gates. So it was in that period that I spoke with Colton Puckett and Michael Billick legislative co-chairs of the NLRB Union and full-time NLRB workers about just what it is that they and other NLRB staff do and the role that that work plays in our daily working lives. So letâs listen to that clip right now
Colton Puckett:
At a high level sort of the core functions that we do that I think most folks that know about our agency know about what we do and thatâs we investigate unfair labor practice charges. So someone believes that their employer or their union has violated the law in some way. They can file a charge with us and we investigate it and figure out whether or not the charge has merit. Thatâs a big portion of the work we do and Iâll talk a little bit more about what that means. But another big thing that we do is we run union elections essentially, right? And so when workers come together, they decide we want to form a union, we want to join a union, theyâll file a petition with us. Thereâs a certain process that entails. And then when it comes time to actually hold the election, we in the field go to wherever that election is taking place and we make sure that itâs done and done as fair and impartial away as is possible.
And then the last thing we do, another big thing that is sort of a part and parcel with unfair labor practice investigations is we try cases. And so if we find that there is merit to one of these unfair labor practice charges that we get, we always will try to settle a case of course, but sometimes it doesnât work out. And so that means we actually go to trial before an administrative law judge and we litigate the case and we try and prove the violation. And itâs similar to, itâs not exactly like going to federal court, but itâs the same general idea. And so thatâs another sort of big portion of the work that we do. And so thatâs kind of the big three things at a very high level. But I think sometimes getting into sort of the day to day, some of that can get lost.
And so as field staff, I think Mike mentioned sort of at the top, we work in offices spread all around the country. And so we are essentially the frontline of the agency for working people all across the country. And that means that we interface directly with workers every single day, whether thatâs a charging party, weâre trying to help them figure out how to e-file their evidence, for example, or figure out what they need to send to us that might be useful versus what not to, or if weâre just answering questions about where their cases in the process or what certain processes means. Because a lot of this is like legalese, right? And we donât expect everybody to know exactly what an unfair labor practice is. Thatâs a big portion of the work we do. One of the things that we do, thereâs in every regional office, thereâs an information officer on duty every day.
And so you can call your regional office, they might not answer immediately, but leave a voicemail and you will talk to a live person that day and they will walk you through any questions that you have. If you want to file a charge, they can assist you in preparing the charge and informing you how to do that. And I donât necessarily know that a lot of other federal agencies have that type of direct person to person interaction in that way. And so thatâs a big thing that we do. We talk to folks all the time and then just try and help them understand what it is we do and what it is their rights are.
Maximillian Alvarez:
Alright? So thatâs not nothing, thatâs not evil bureaucracy, thatâs real shit that real working people depend on. And in the final kind of minutes here, Mel and I just wanted to drive this point home because we could be playing clips for the next five hours of real world examples that real world workers have told us on our podcast about when they needed the NLRB to adjudicate an injustice, a violation of their rights, and how important that was to their livelihoods, how important it was to their union drive, how important it was for the labor movement itself. But thatâs what weâre trying to get yâall to see is that this is not just conceptual, nameless, faceless bureaucratic stuff. Thatâs what they do. Thatâs what folks at the NLRB do. And just to give one example, that was the first field report that I did when I started here at the Real News in the middle of Covid in 2020.
Letâs not forget that early in 20 21, 1 of the biggest stories in the country was that workers in Bessemer, Alabama majority black de-industrialized Bessemer, Alabama with twice the national poverty rate that they were leading the charge to form the countryâs first unionized workforce at an Amazon facility. Now we know that they ended up being unsuccessful in that union drive, but that drive sparked so many of the other labor struggles that weâve reported on over the past few years, including it contributed to the Amazon Labor Union successful unionization drive in New York. And so thatâs a real world example. I was there on the ground, Mel was talking to these workers, Iâve talked to these workers, Iâve been in their union hall. They tried to hold a union election, which is their right, that is their Democratic right to vote on whether or not they want a union, even if it is at the second largest private employer in the country and one of the biggest international behemoths in the world.
These workers had that right? And they exercised it. And the National Labor Relations Board ruled that Amazon had illegally interfered in that election by placing a US Postal Service mailbox on Amazon property right in front of the employee entrance with the Amazon cameras pointed on it. And so the NLRB said, Hey, thatâs not a free and fair election. This is intimidation, this is surveillance. You guys have to have another election. They had that enforcement ability to give workers in Bessemer an another chance, a fair shot at a union election. So thatâs just one example of a high stakes ruling that both shows how Amazon is a much bigger behemoth than the NLRB can take on by its own. But that ruling really mattered for workers who were really fighting for what they believed in. Mel, I know youâve seen tons of others. Are there any few you want to highlight here real quick?
Mel Buer:
Well, I think I want to just, I could name âem all up top of the bat. We can do Pittsburgh Post Gazette. Strike is A ULP strike, right? We can do half of the walkouts it Starbucks started with ULPs fired because bargaining wasnât starting fast enough. We can talk about pretty much I would say a sizable chunk of a workerâs ability to withhold their work legally begins with the filing of A ULP. And the NLRB has to reach a certain place with that, right? Where you are filing this grievance and you say, we have checked our boxes and weâve filed this ULP that says bargaining is not going well. The companyâs bargaining in bad faith, which means they are not actually giving a good faith effort to sit across the table and work through this contract negotiation like we are. They have actively endangered workers, for example, at Starbucks during the LA firestorm.
They have enacted policies that are retaliatory. They have held captive audience meetings. When we are trying to form a union, all of these rulings that the NLRB rules on are designed to free and fairly investigate these complaints and then to actually offer some sort of recourse for workers, whether that means ordering a management back to the table and telling âem to stuff it and get the job done, or whether that means enacting no captive audience meetings in workplaces, right? Whether that means allowing individuals to be on company grounds to organize off hours, to pull in people and have conversations to work on a union campaign thatâs gone public. All of these things are what the NLRB helps us do. And there are dozens, dozens of people, dozens of campaigns that Iâve talked to that Iâve reported on in the last just year where the outcome in some way or another depends upon what the NLRB can do for them.
And thatâs just the place that weâre in. And thatâs really the recourse that we have right now. We have to kind of thread that needle and to use the law as inadequate as it is to our benefit and be able to work within that and use the NLRB as an agency for what itâs there for, which is to say often I look at the nlrbs sort of policies in the last 10 years or so. And when we have a board that is really focused on pro worker focus, a lot of things can happen. Final example Iâll give is that in 2017, the NLRB was full of pro business folks that Trump had appointed and during Trumpâs administration and then the subsequent administration after, there was really this kind of watershed moment with graduate student organizing where during Trumpâs administration there was restraints on which type of graduate students could organize on college campuses.
That rule changed in the last five, six years as a result of a more pro worker NLRB makeup. And there has been an explosion in new organizing on university campuses that we didnât see before. And by some metrics, it is the fastest and most consistent organizing that has happened in this country in the last five years. So it kind of underscores the importance of what this agency can do for us as and what this agency can do for us as a workerâs movement. And so when itâs hobbled by an administration as it has been in the Trump administration, things become exponentially more difficult.
My fellow union workers at the Pittsburgh Post Gazette waited for a year and a half for a decision on the ULP that they filed. Theyâve been on strike for over three years at this point, trying to get the company at the Pittsburgh Post Gazette to bargain fairly and to stop playing games with their health insurance and their livelihoods. And the NLRB is really the thing thatâs driving those consequences so that they can get back to the table and get back to work. And so as much as we want to sit here and say that, oh, itâs just another bunch of feckless bureaucrats, no, it has real world implications for how we can organize in the future. And I truly believe that in terms of movement building in this country, the labor movement is an integral part to that for all its faults. And that institution needs to use the tools that it has at its disposal. So when an administration, any administration, because Iâm not saying that democratic administrations in the past havenât used the NLRB as a cudgel, havenât deliberately underfunded it and understaffed it because they are also only worker in name, but not really in action.
Itâs important for us to be able to uphold this institution because it helps us maintain some semblance of control over our workplaces, at least for now. We will see what the next 10, 15 years look like. As Hamilton Nolan has said, the Democrats squander their chance to really rebuild the labor movement. I agree. And we are now in single digits a little bit in terms of union density, but weâre not cooked by any stretch of the imagination. And if we can pay attention to and internalize the fact that some of these agencies and the work that they do is actually really useful for our movement building, then I think we have a better chance of staving off the worst impulses of this fascist government. So
Maximillian Alvarez:
No, I think thatâs powerfully put melon just again, a plea to everyone watching. If youâve been watching our reporting over these past few years or other peopleâs reporting on the Starbucks Union Drive, the Amazon Union Drive, but not just those, I mean healthcare workers going on strike for their patients, teachers and educators going on strike for their students, their communities like manufacturing in the auto industry and beyond. John Deere workers journalists at the Pittsburgh Post Gazette entertainers at medieval times. I mean these struggles of working people where people like you and me have realized that if they band together exercise their rights form a union and work together as a union, that they can actually change their lives, they can change their circumstances, they can even change our society circumstances like the machinists going on strike at Boeing or the railroad workers fighting for rail safety that impacts all of us like we were talking about earlier in the stream.
All of that is going to be so deeply impacted by a nonfunctional NLRB or an LRB that is functional but actively hostile to the workerâs side of the struggle and is doing the bidding of the employer class. I donât know what the stories we report are going to be. I donât know what the workers we interview are going to say in the coming years if that is the case, but I promise you itâs not going to be what itâs been in the past few years where workers have seen this groundswell and theyâve wanted to be part of it and theyâve seen a path to unionization with an NLRB that actually is functional enough to serve the needs of working people trying to exercise their rights. We are not in that territory anymore. And so even if you donât give a shit about anything in dc, which I would totally forgive you for, if you give a shit about the labor movement and working people, this is going to impact that this is going to impact you.
And we donât know what the ripple effects are going to be to the business class, to the private sector, to all the employers out there who now know that workers are on their own like they did after Reagan fired the PATCO strikers in 81. We donât know what the cascading effect is going to be if employers decide to go more on the offensive in squashing unionization efforts, more on the offensive in rolling back workersâ rights, treating workers with shit, knowing that theyâre going to have fewer options for recourse through the NLRB. So if nothing else, letâs remind ourselves that matters. And that concerns us, our neighbors, our coworkers, but also that we, as Mel said, are not cooked here. We are not powerless here. We have a vested interest in the story and we ourselves are part of the outcome. I say, I donât know how this is going to shape out because I donât know what you are going to do about it.
I donât know what everyone watching this is going to do about it, but thatâs going to determine what the outcome is. And so again, if anything, we want to leave yâall with that note that this is meant for you for us to figure out what we do next. And with that kind of wrapping up the 90 minutes where weâre sort of looking at these key headlines, I wanted to just have 10 minutes of bonus time here so that we could Mel take a step back and sort of breathe a bit and address these really great questions that some of our supporters and viewers sent into us that helped us think about how to frame this live stream in a way. Weâve been trying to answer the questions over the past 90 minutes, but I wanted to just toss these out there and get your thoughts.
And also what you guys in the live chat think about this. But one of the key questions that we got from Giovanni R, which was really great, which was how much do you estimate this regime will affect whatâs left of workersâ benefits and safety standard? So we kind of started to addressing that now, and weâre going to talk about it a little more in a second, but thatâs one key question that weâve been trying to answer here. Another question that we got from David B, which I think is also really crucial is David asked, will labor only present a front for or a front of resistance and fight back, or is it actually going to push the limits of what we as working class people need and demand? Will labor stop seeing the Democratic party as the vehicle for that fight back and resistance? Will labor exert itself as if it understands and believes that the laboring class is the Sina quinan of production and wealth?
Great question so much that we could say about there. But yeah, I want you guys watching to think about that. And the last question that I wanted to throw up on the screen here, which helped us kind of prepare for this live stream was from Edward S. And so Edward wrote to us saying, when will the unions educate their membership about labor history and that the GOP is their foe? Itâs atrocious that a huge percent of union members vote for Trump. And so Mel, I wanted to just kind of, now that weâve gotten through the last 90 minutes, do you feel like there are any kind of other lingering answers to those questions that we didnât get to or things that are really kind sticking in your mind?
Mel Buer:
I think Iâll start with the first one with Giovanniâs. Maybe we can just kind of do a couple of minutes for each one. But I think when we talk about how much this regime will affect whatâs left of workersâ benefits and safety standards, I think one thing that Iâve learned over the course of my reporting, whether itâs been on OSHA agencies in California or in the healthcare industry on the West coast or the railroad industry in the Midwest or wherever else, is that oftentimes these agencies can be equipped with the ability to maintain safety standards, to maintain workersâ benefits. And oftentimes thereâs no political will to maintain those subsequent administrations may cater to lobbyists, to understaff these agencies to re-appropriate funds away from these agencies. Just like anything else in the government, you need money to operate. And if youâre being appropriated less and less money each year, that means youâre hiring less and less OSHA inspectors each year.
That means thereâs less OSHA inspectors to handle the complaints that happen that are called in, and then they start making hard decisions about which ones to investigate and which ones not to. Or it sits on a waiting list as what happens with the NLRB, where oftentimes, for example, the Pittsburgh Post Gazette complaint was essentially on a waiting list for investigation for over a year because thereâs just not enough people who have been tasked with investigating these things. And so I think what weâve kind of been talking about Max is thereâs a bit of a breakdown in the system itself that perpetuates these problems. Something that happens a lot is that workers see this breakdown in an acute area like the aviation industry, like the agriculture industry, like the healthcare industry, and the fight at their disposal is, for example, I just did reporting in Southern California on the Kaiser health system and mental health professionals who are still on strike after a hundred days, who saw these breakdowns in the system that was disproportionately affecting their patients because there werenât enough people getting hired.
And these are critically, acutely mentally ill patients who require regular treatments who arenât getting that illegally so in the state of California. And so what they do is they view these as workersâ rights issues, patient issues or workersâ rights issues in the healthcare industry. So what do they have at their disposal? They went on strike, their contract expired, and theyâre not going to get off the picket line until they get real written in stone, in paper, signed by Kaiser that these conditions will cease being as horrendous as they are because that means that they can take care of their patients better. So in that sense, subsequent administrations have done something to the effect of deregulating portions of the industry to serious, they create serious problems. The railroad strike happened, almost happened under the Biden administration and was stopped last minute. And if you talk to some railroad workers, they arenât happy about that. They feel like they lost leverage because the Biden administration stepped in at a critical time where he could have said, actually, I donât have to do this. So I donât know, man, I think itâs going to get worse before it gets better are obviously we are looking down the barrel of four years at least of extreme MAGA GOP policies that have their own ideology. Obviously they have their own plan and a lot of us are going to get left out in the cold.
Maximillian Alvarez:
Or
I wanted to jump in on that point too, because when I think about what these conditions are going to be for our fellow workers, current generations and future generations, to answer Giovanniâs question, I guess what we would say is what railroad workers told me and Mel, when we first started investigating that story years ago, every single worker we talked to told us the same thing at the top. What you need to understand is this goes way back. And so if anything, thatâs an argument for why all yâall out there should stop fucking watching mainstream political news or even independent news junkie stuff that only focuses on bipartisan politics and follows the news cycle of Washington DC because it rots your brain and you lose the ability to think like a real regular person. Now when you talk to other real regular working people, you get a better frame on the problems that weâre experiencing.
And so when railroad workers are saying, hereâs the problem, now hereâs how far back this goes, and thatâs how far back our memories go because weâve experienced it. And that is decidedly different from the political election cycle. And this is something that weâve been bringing up on our reporting here over and over again, is that Donald Trump Biden, these last few election cycles have been characterized by a sort of like, what did the previous administration do that the next administrationâs blaming them about and overturning? And why are people voting for Trump? Because theyâre mad at Biden and his policies. But really what we are talking about here in the political world is that voters are responding every two to four years to a crisis thatâs been building for the last 40, 50, 60 years. And so the cumulative effects of this death by a thousand deregulatory cuts, that is kind of what weâre trying to get a handle on here because that is the frame you need to have to understand how conditions have gotten this bad.
And as Mel said, theyâre probably going to get worse before they get any better. I mean, from the air traffic controller staffing shortage to the pollution of industrial pollution of communities in sacrifice zones around the country from East Palestine to South Baltimore. I mean, this stuff starts happening in more and more places year after year when unsexy uninteresting legislation gets kind of passed through, doesnât really, itâs not really a blip on peopleâs radars when it happens 15 years ago and then 15 years later, you end up living next to a lake that you canât swim in that youâve swam in your whole life. Public policy bioaccumulates, it accumulates in our bodies, it accumulates in our jobs, it accumulates in our communities. It doesnât all happen overnight. But I guess thatâs the point Iâm getting at is that we are still in the process of experiencing and feeling the full weight of decisions that have already been made that were made in Trumpâs last administration and Bidenâs last administration and Obamaâs administration in Reaganâs administration, right?
We are still finding out the repercussions of those decisions that have already been made, and we are laying the groundwork for even more impactful decisions to hurt us well into the future. And thatâs why I jumped in when you said that weâll be left out in the cold and I said, or even in the heat, because thatâs another storyline that we follow here too. What are workers and workersâ rights and labor unions going to do as the climate crisis continues to spiral out of control, which it sure as hell is going to the more we do this drill, baby drill crap pull out of the Paris Climate accords while LA is burning Western North Carolina is obliterated by hurricanes. We are barreling in the exact opposite direction. But what makes me think of that example is that I remember when the Supreme Court overturned Bidenâs attempt to require workplaces of over a hundred people to have covid vaccine mandates, or for folks who didnât want to take the vaccine that they did regular testing.
The Supreme Court said that they rejected that order and it was hailed as a victory for the anti-vax crowd for the Trump MAGA crowd. But what you and I saw, Mel, and what we talked about because we actually read the ruling, was that the Supreme Court said, because COVID-19 is a general condition that it just exists in the world, no one employer can be responsible for implementing these kinds of policies to address it. And so what they were doing was laying the groundwork for employers off scot-free as the climate gets worse, as people are working in hotter conditions when theyâre dying in the summer heat or theyâre breathing in toxic chemicals. And basically, we have set the stage for employers to not be liable for our deaths when theyâre putting us regularly at hazard in our working conditions as the climate crisis worsens. Thatâs what Iâm trying to point to is these decisions are going to have ripple effects for generations.
So there are things we can do now, but we have to have a full kind of clear sense of the problem. And thatâs what weâre going to try to keep taking apart and analyzing piecemeal in these live streams in our reports. Like I said, at the top of this live stream, our goal is to not get overwhelmed by the news cycle, but to practice focus, to use our journalistic tools to give you the information you need to act and not be immobilized and hopeless. And so thatâs what weâre working on doing and doing better here. And so we really want to hear from you guys and let us know if we are doing better, if there are things that youâd like us to see do people youâd like us to have on subjects that you really need help breaking down in our team here, not just our journalists, but our incredible whole team of editors, producers, studio technicians, let us be usable to you.
Let us know what you need and we will use our skills to try to help. But ultimately, you are the solution. You are the one who is going to determine with your neighbors, your coworkers, your fellow working people, what happens in the future, what kind of future we are leaving for our children. And so our job here at The Real News is to make sure youâve got what you need to make change, and we want to hear from you, and we want you to hold us accountable if we are not following through on that. And so please let us know what you thought of this live stream, let us know what youâd like us to cover in future Live streams, and please keep sending questions so that we can be answering them better and more directly. Weâve got so much to say on it, but ultimately what matters is that weâre saying what you are looking for and need to hear and not just listening to ourselves talk, right?
And so thatâs the goal here. Thatâs what we at the Real News are here to do. We are a team that is here for you, and weâre a strong and mighty team. And Mel, I could not be more honored to be on this team with you guys in the back, our whole studio team, Adam, cam, Dave, Kayla, Jocelyn, James, looking at the live chat, everybody on this team is here to help and we are here for you and we really appreciate your support and we look forward to seeing yâall next Thursday when we go live again. But until then, please support our work so that we can keep bringing you important coverage and conversations like this. And more important than ever, take care of yourselves and take care of each other. Solidarity forever.
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