The Conservative Class War, Continued
Thursday 03 February 2011
by: Eric Alterman | The Nation | Op-Ed

Robert Dziedziech, an employee of the parks department in New York, was on his first snow duty and worked long into the night on overtime with other plows from across city departments and private tow companies to clear snow from city streets. (Photo: Benjamin Norman/The New York Times)
It was a terrible tabloid tale. While New York City was buried under a blizzard, widows and orphans freezing and starving in their apartments, union fat cats swigged brewskis and chuckled to themselves as sanitation workers conspired to stage a slowdown to gain leverage in their contract negotiations. “The selfish Sanitation bosses who sabotaged the blizzard cleanup to fire a salvo at City Hall targeted politically connected and well-heeled neighborhoods in Queens and Brooklyn to get their twisted message across loud and clear,” screamed Rupert Murdoch’s New York Post. From there, the story ricocheted across the media, to Investor’s Business Daily to Fox News (naturally), and even to Saturday Night Live. The Washington Times ran an op-ed that began, “Cross us and people will die.”
Alas, it never happened. The source of all this hysteria was a sketchy story told by Daniel Halloran, a rookie councilman and Tea Party Republican—who is also an adherent of the neo-pagan religion Theodicism. A New York Times investigation weeks later found no evidence to support the allegation, and it turns out that Halloran isn’t so sure about what he thought he heard after all. But the damage is done. (Murdoch properties are not exactly famous for correcting their errors; though, to be fair, if they did, there would hardly be time or space for anything else.)
Can it be mere coincidence that the right-wing media promoted this phony-baloney story at a moment when, as Charles Loveless, legislative director of the American Federation of State, County and Municipal Employees, points out, conservatives are “readying a massive assault” on the pensions and benefits of these same employees?
Led by Newt Gingrich, conservatives are floating the notion that states should be allowed to declare bankruptcy to escape their pension obligations to firefighters, cops, teachers and, yes, sanitation workers. Gingrich called on House Republicans “to move a bill in the first month or so of their tenure to create a venue for state bankruptcy.” This was followed by a plea in The Weekly Standard by University of Pennsylvania law professor David Skeel titled “Give States a Way to Go Bankrupt.” Skeel later told a reporter that he had “never had anything I’ve written get as much attention as that piece.” He said he had been contacted by lawmakers from all over.
Depending on the audience, this discussion serves multiple purposes. Most obviously it is intended to blame the unions for local fiscal woes and garner support from the public for the coming assault on their pensions. Second, it serves to intimidate the unions and encourage givebacks lest these same officials be forced to go before taxpayers with a plan to cut services, raise taxes or both—making public unions the culprit in any of those options. Third, it weakens the unions’ appeal to new workers, for if they can’t protect the pensions of their workers, what’s the point of joining in the first place? Given that public unions provide the lion’s share of poll workers, envelope stuffers and other volunteers for Democratic campaigns, this is hardly an ancillary benefit, from the right’s perspective. With private union membership now in single digits, public unions remain just about the only institutions with sufficient financial and organizational muscle to make a difference in close elections at the state and local levels or to organize progressive pushback against corporate malfeasance.
The assault on public employee unions is the next phase of a forty-year class war in America by the rich against the rest of us. It is of a piece with the steady dismantling of our progressive taxation system and the explosion of economic inequality. Total income going to the wealthiest 1 percent of Americans has risen from about 8 percent in the 1960s to more than 20 percent today. As Jacob Hacker and Paul Pierson demonstrate in their recent book, Winner-Take-All Politics, this is the result of deliberate policy choices made by politicians in the service of those who fund their campaigns. Congress has repeatedly cut tax rates on top earners, along with capital gains and estate taxes. And as Robert Lieberman, writing in Foreign Affairs, recalls, during the 1990s the Financial Accounting Standards Board, which regulates accounting practices, attempted to put a stop to the practice of allowing corporate CEOs to compensate themselves with massive stock-option packages, correctly predicting that it would lead to an epidemic of deceptive accounting practices. “But Congress, spurred on by the lobbying efforts of major corporations, stopped the FASB in its tracks.” The result? For the past twenty years we’ve allowed CEOs to enrich themselves at the expense of employees and stockholders “through the mutual back-scratching habits of corporate boards.”
In the meantime, statistics demonstrate the speciousness of the conservative case for states facing budget crises to default on their public pension obligations. The Center on Budget and Policy Priorities released a report recently demonstrating that, in fact, they have “adequate tools and means to meet their obligations.” To the degree that some states appear to be in real trouble, explains a June report by two Federal Reserve Bank of San Francisco analysts, this the result of a “profound macroeconomic shock” rather than pension obligations. Yet another recent study—this one from Boston College’s Center for Retirement Research—found that while many state pension funds may be “substantially underfunded,” they account for just 3.8 percent of state and local spending and could be covered with an increase to just 5 percent.
Yet snowjobs like those promoted by Murdoch, Gingrich and New Jersey Governor Chris Christie are painting a bull’s-eye on the back of public unions. “People I don’t even know are calling me horrible names,” Marie Corfield, a New Jersey art teacher who found herself on the other end of Christie’s antiunion rant, told the New York Times. “The mantra is that the problem is the unions, the unions, the unions.”
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Comments
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Problem is the rich, the
Sun, 02/06/2011 - 10:51 — Anonarcmous (not verified)Problem is the rich, the rich, the insatiable rich.
Has anyone gotten into this
Sun, 02/06/2011 - 11:44 — Anonymous (not verified)Has anyone gotten into this Halloran's face? It's about time Tea Gagger politicians got confronted for their lies and schemes.
Crooked politicians,
Sun, 02/06/2011 - 12:34 — Anonymous (not verified)Crooked politicians, propagandist media and the ignorant minions of the wealthy elite are driving our country into moral bankruptcy.
Again, and again.. further
Sun, 02/06/2011 - 12:47 — Anonymous (not verified)Again, and again.. further evidence that challenges the fundamental notion whether or not this society is any longer capable of self-governance. And so it goes..
In order to self-govern in a democracy, a nation's citizenry - an overwhelming majority of them - must be willing to engage and participate in that government -- and not attempt to delegate this responsibility to an oligarchy. Newscorp shouldn't even be legally allowed to operate in this country - there used to be laws prohibiting foreign ownership and control of broadcast media. But not only did Murdoch skirt around the laws, he built a news network that consistently ranks number one in popularity - amongst the very same citizenry that should have opposed it in the first place. This is a train wreck happening in slow motion, and people are standing motionless - spectators to their own demise...
You wanna explain what
Sun, 02/06/2011 - 12:55 — Stormkite (not verified)You wanna explain what Halloran's religious beliefs (which you misspelled, btw) have to do with the story? Or are you just trying to paint him as a wierdo?
This is so far beneath even your minimal standards for "truth"....
"The modern conservative is
Sun, 02/06/2011 - 16:00 — Anonymous (not verified)"The modern conservative is engaged in one of man's oldest exercises in moral philosophy; that is, the search for a superior moral justification for selfishness."
John Kenneth Galbraith
Bien sur, rich always expect
Sun, 02/06/2011 - 17:06 — Anonarcmous (not verified)Bien sur, rich always expect the workers to go out there and do this with less or no pay or tools, regardless of the risk or difficulty. Always some1 else always has 2 do a better job than them 4 less.Like we owe them gratitude 4 privilege of being their slaves.
Good op-ed, and for a nice
Sun, 02/06/2011 - 18:26 — Cynthia (not verified)Good op-ed, and for a nice change of pace, some decent posts! Tally-ho.
the US could have an Egypt
Sun, 02/06/2011 - 19:13 — Anonymous (not verified)the US could have an Egypt moment - simply by not shopping - for 11 days or however many we want
Show a little support for the unemployed, the underemployed, those bankrupt by medical bills, those sick of Corporate Welfare - from AgriBiz to Wall St
Pick a day - Perhaps May Day
Good idea! I've been saying
Sun, 02/06/2011 - 19:34 — Sayward (not verified)Good idea! I've been saying we need a national strike. No shopping at all for 11 days. (Of course, I think that, in addition, we should NOT WORK for 3 days, too---now hat would REALLY get their attention!) But they need to be reminded that we do the work. They only collect the benefits from what we produce.
The extent of the calamity
Sun, 02/06/2011 - 20:11 — J M Damon (not verified)The extent of the calamity of the fall of the Soviet Union becomes clearer and clearer.
It was indeed highly repressive of the rights of its citizens, but it kept world capitalists on their good behavior with its slogan "Expropriate the expropriators!"
They will keep pushing, and
Sun, 02/06/2011 - 20:15 — Anonymous (not verified)They will keep pushing, and at some critical point, the masses will react. That is what is happening in Egypt, and it has the potential for happening everywhere. Because the same pattern is at play. You have a small ownership class that thinks its entitled to enrich itself endlessly at the expense of everyone and everything else. And it doesnt work, history has shown it doesnt work. History has also shown that it doesn't end well for the oligarchs who think they can just keep spitting on people forever. Think Marie Antonette.
Progressives need to insist
Sun, 02/06/2011 - 20:41 — Not-Homeless-Today (not verified)Progressives need to insist loudly that: "Oh no, they're not Nazis -- so-called 'conservatives' in America today are not using the Nazi's 'big lie.' They're perfecting, the much better, strategy of a million lies, from big to small and everything in-between.
A thousand points of Lie.
Sun, 02/06/2011 - 21:23 — cake eater (not verified)A thousand points of Lie. Excellent point, not-homeless (may you remain so).
So, don't fight them, agree
Sun, 02/06/2011 - 23:47 — Bob From District 9 (not verified)So, don't fight them, agree with them. Bring down pensions. State and local employees, federal employees, congressmen and senators and former presidents. Railroad retirement and Social security come down next. Then why not military pensions.
Many private sector pensions were long ago taken over the the govt's Pension Benefit Guarantee program. End those also.
Maybe this is one of Pliven's plan, abolish all pensions to bring on a crises. No, she's probably getting a pension. This is Fox New's Pliven moment. Bring on a crisis and force the govt to change, to end all social programs and put this country on the road back to feudalism.
As Judy Tenuda would say, "It could happen".
Oh, I mean it about agreeing with them. Make them see how far it could lead.
The 2012 Presidential
Mon, 02/07/2011 - 01:01 — David Brookbank (not verified)The 2012 Presidential campaign is underway The Democratic wing of two-party ruling class consensus has already begun fund-raising, intending to raise $1 billion from the "US electorate" to re-elect a eloquent, pretty boy Democrat in the classic mold of Kennedy, Carter, Clinton. He was bait for the left and most bit. Are we going to begin now, making it resolutely clear that this time, in 2012, we will not vote for Obama or Hillary or the next ruling class vetted candidate, and that we will make them pay by not voting for them? We will get a thousand arguments about why we should caste our votes before ruling class swine rather than voting our consciences. In 2010 many (not I) bought the liberal ruling class line about hope. What did we accomplish? We failed to organize a viable left. We demobilized in the face of our hope. We exchanged Bush for Obama and gave him a pass for nearly 2 years. We empowered the "liberal" (in point of fact right of center) faction of the ruling class. Every four years we get 10 minutes of democracy in the voting booth (that's 4 hours and 10 minutes every century) and we squander it. The ruling class -- which gets the other 99 years, 19 hours and 50 minutes -- then carries on its wars, its outrageous profiteering, its lies about the rest of us, and conspires to destroy what we have created in common. Basta ya! Enough already!
http://buildingapowerfulleft.org/2011/02/04/show-5-february-4-2011/
http://www.rootsaction.org/
http://www.harpers.org/archive/2010/10/hbc-90007615
David Brookbank
Unions are made up of people
Mon, 02/07/2011 - 01:21 — MeasureTwice (not verified)Unions are made up of people with varying traits, just like everybody else, and I don’t always respect the positions that various unions sometimes take, but I am aware of a debt of gratitude I and millions of other US workers owe to the union movement even if we have never belonged to one. The appearance of legal rights that most workers take for granted parallels the rise of influence of the union movement, and the security and treatment of most US workers has declined (in case you haven’t noticed) along with declines in union membership.
Before there were unions, the lot of many US employees was quasi-Dickensian.
Why is there NO push back
Mon, 02/07/2011 - 02:00 — Anonymous (not verified)Why is there NO push back against the lies routinely spread by Murdoch?
Charge him with incitement to violence!
Demand FCC intervention to allow rebuttals to his
propaganda lies!
FIGHT MURDOCH!
SEND MURDOCH BACK TO AUSSIESTRALIA
NOW!
"The assault on public
Mon, 02/07/2011 - 05:27 — jahf (not verified)"The assault on public employee unions is the next phase of a forty-year class war in America by the rich against the rest of us."
This is true, but is not the salient point. Their victories stem as much from the greed of the rest of us as from their ingenuity in exploiting our weaknesses. As long as the rest of us are willing to throw *anyone* under the bus, they can divide us against ourselves and goad us into self-defeating action.
Their continued success is sure proof that Americans are--to borrow famous turn of phrase--a little people, a silly people, petty, barbarous and cruel, even to each other.
If we are headed for darkness, we have only ourselves to blame for it.
JAHF=has the operative
Mon, 02/07/2011 - 08:01 — Anonarcmous (not verified)JAHF=has the operative word:these relatively few people are empowered by us-- the masses of Teabags, Latina/o, etc and others who vote against their own %s b/c the wealthy have taught them they are just 1-step away from being there themselves...of course this is not true...Bank HSBC [I believe] is advertising to this point:"that 61-67%of all millionaires started out from scratch.." Hey that is me! I identify with that so I will blindly agree with everything...Not true, there was an enhanced societal structure that made this possible, paid for by others' work and taxes. Correct narrative: U STAND ON SHOULDERS OF THOSE GONE B4U,and donot forget it.
The ownership classes are
Mon, 02/07/2011 - 08:34 — cj (not verified)The ownership classes are just using the same tactic they have employed for years: divide and conquer. Convince those who actually do the work that someone else is getting more than their fair share or even stealing from the rest of us. It doesn't say much for the level of intelligence of those of us who fall for it. But then no one in this country studies enough economic history to figure out that a strong working class and strong effective unions are good for the economic health of the majority. Much more fun to watch cable TV and the rest of the cheap entertainment and ill-disguised propaganda that passes for information.
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