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Does Labor Need Another Wimpy?
by Steve Early
The Huffington Post
February 21, 2011

http://www.huffingtonpost.com/steve-early/does-labor-need-another-w_b_825931.html

One of the great mysteries of American labor four
decades ago -- for those of us first encountering its
then-dominant culture of blue-collar machismo -- was
how anyone known as "Wimpy" (or "Wimp" for short) could
become president of an AFL-CIO union. In the militant
1970s, a moniker like that was not a great boon to
getting elected shop steward in many workplaces.
Patrick Halley's new authorized biography of William
Winpisinger (called Wimpy, of course) shows how the
International Association of Machinists (IAM) leader
transcended his anomalous nickname during a colorful
41-year career. By the time Winpisinger retired in
1989, no one in the top ranks of labor seemed less like
J. Wellington Wimpy, the cowardly comic strip pal of
Popeye.

The IAM leader was, instead, a very unusual profile in
political independence, whose example is worth
recalling in 2011. His outspoken criticism of another
disappointing Democratic president, Jimmy Carter,
stands in sharp contrast to the tabby-cat role that
labor leaders seem to be playing at the Obama White
House today, no matter how much their members get
kicked around on trade deals, health care reform,
workers' rights, deficit reduction, or business-
friendly appointments. When Carter let unions down on
labor law reform and other legislative priorities in
the late '70s, Winpisinger wasn't afraid to organize
within the Democratic Party to challenge him from the
left. "To me," he told an IAM conference in 1978,
"President Carter is through. He's a weak, vacillating,
and ineffective President."

The AFL-CIO was headed, at the time, by George Meany,
an octogenarian cold warrior. As Halley reports, "Wimpy
was disgusted by what he viewed as Meany's capitulation
to Carter's weakness on labor issues." He became a
leader of "the dump Jimmy Carter and dump George Meany
forces." In 1980, he backed an ill-fated presidential
primary run against Carter by Ted Kennedy who was,
perceived by many, as being more liberal and labor-
friendly. Now, thirty-one years later, some Obama
supporters are so disillusioned that a few have even
called for a Kennedy or Gene McCarthy-style protest
candidacy against Obama next year.

Before labor's alienation with Carter reached that
stage, Wimpy urged the AFL-CIO to build more active
alliances with civil rights groups, feminists,
religious leaders, environmentalists, and consumers.
When Meany balked at this approach, the IAM worked with
the Citizens Labor Energy Coalition (CLEC) to fight
Carter's proposed deregulation of natural gas prices.
(In 1978 -- the year labor law reform went down to
defeat in a Senate filibuster after getting "lukewarm
support" from the White House -- "Carter's real number
one legislative priority" was an energy package that
included deregulation.) By 1979, Dan Rather was
introducing Wimpy to 60 Minutes viewers as "the only
card carrying radical" on the AFL-CIO Executive
Council. "Where older colleagues shied away from the
media spotlight, Wimpy basked in it," Halley writes.
"Where more cautious labor leaders were still cowed by
the stigma of being called a 'communist' and went to
great lengths to avoid any hint of socialism, Wimpy
proudly claimed the socialist label."

A card-carrying labor radical who outed himself on
national TV today would be quite a target for Glenn
Beck and his crowd (who see reds under the bed in SEIU
and other unions when, in fact, real left-wingers are
pretty hard to find there). Union leaders with a less
conservative membership base than Winpisinger's
wouldn't think of using the "S" word in public now. In
fact, SEIU's "president emeritus," Andy Stern, even
wanted to abandon welfare state liberalism. In his 2006
book, A Country That Works, Stern dismissed the New
Deal, and its accompanying regulatory regime, as
historically irrelevant to the challenges facing
workers in the 21st century. (Stern, of course, failed
to foresee the Wall Street collapse just two years
later that quickly brought New Deal ideas roaring back
to life, albeit only briefly and in watered-down form
inside the Beltway.)

The irony of Winpisinger being a far bolder champion of
business regulation, Pentagon budget cutting, nuclear
disarmament, and economic conversion than almost any
male labor leader today, active or retired, becomes
apparent in Halley's book. On his way up, Wimpy was
very much a product of the IAM's insular business union
culture; he actually made his bones as an FBI helper
during the McCarthy era. Winpisinger's career began
inauspiciously in Cleveland, where he dropped out of
high school. After serving in World War II, he became
an auto mechanic, then an IAM local officer, and "Grand
Lodge" organizer and rep. In the early 1950s, he
assisted raids on the United Electrical Workers (UE)
and fingered "Communist infiltrators" in IAM shops. As
late as 1976 -- when he was serving as national V-P of
the Machinists and about to become its president --
Wimpy warned about the "motley crew of small splinter
groups" spawned by the New Left that were still trying
to "infiltrate a few union halls" and make a "nuisance
of themselves."

Despite his lack of formal education, Winpisinger had
what Halley calls a "restless intellectual talent,"
uncommon in the U.S. labor movement. It enabled him to
embrace new ideas and people, rethink old
organizational positions and take the political risks
necessary to push a broader social agenda on behalf of
his own members and other workers. Soon, he was
defending one prominent New Left alumna, Heather Booth,
against virulent red-baiting by Lane Kirkland, the AFL-
CIO apparatchik who replaced Meany in 1979.

Kirkland was trying to discredit the CLEC, the first of
many progressive formations funded by the IAM,
including Jesse Jackson's Rainbow Coalition.
Winpisinger pushed back hard against AFL-CIO
conservatism, at home and abroad. He flouted the AFL-
CIO's attempt to ban U.S. union contact with Communist-
led countries by traveling to Cuba and the Soviet Union
to discuss issues related to trade, labor, and world
peace, while simultaneously criticizing KGB treatment
of Russian dissidents. "There's no reason in the world
organized labor has to be the biggest hawk in the
country," he told the Cleveland Plain Dealer. "Lane
Kirkland is worse than George Meany."

Unlike Kirkland's inner-circle of right-wing social
democrats (who backed U.S. intervention in Central
America and other Reagan Administration mis-
adventures), Winpisinger's brain trust included Booth,
Barbara Shailor (who became a top IAM staffer), Dick
Greenwood (his longtime speechwriter and political
muse), and activists from Michael Harrington's
Democratic Socialists of America (DSA) and the
Committee for a SANE Nuclear Policy (SANE)

As an IAM-hired biographer, Halley veers off into
hagiography here and there. (His previous book is
called On the Road with Hillary, an account of his nine
years spent as an advance man for the former
presidential spouse and U.S. Senator from New York.)
The less valorous episodes in Wimpy's career, like the
1981 PATCO strike, are downplayed. The 12,000 air
traffic controllers fired by President Reagan needed
some real solidarity and risk-taking by other unions,
particularly those in the airline industry. "Unlike
Kirkland, Wimpy made his sympathy for the strikers
clear: 'I expect our people to act like trade unionists
[and] not cross a picket line if they confront one.'"

As former head of the IAM's airline division, this was
a union constituency that Winpsinger knew well; he had
personally negotiated many airline contracts. Yet there
was little serious effort made to engage "the 40,000
ramp workers, mechanics, and maintenance people"
covered by them, without whom "there would be no
airline flights." The IAM joined the pilots and flight
attendants on the sidelines, shifting the blame for
everyone's impending defeat onto PATCO members who
"failed to build public support for their action" or
"do the spade work necessary with their fellow trade
unionists." It was a cop-out with lasting consequences.

One doesn't have to be a Wimpy-worshiper -- and there
are many quoted in the book -- to appreciate that his
union presidency was still better than anyone else's in
the IAM before or since. Wimpy is well worth reading at
a time when his brand of progressive, blue-collar
iconoclasm is pretty rare, in the Machinists and other
unions -- although Rose Ann DeMoro of the California
Nurses Association does a pretty good job of keeping
the Wimpy tradition alive.

Other top-level labor figures, like Rich Trumka, no
longer speak out about curbs on military spending,
nuclear weapons, or America's ruinously expensive
foreign wars, the way Wimpy did in his heyday. (Trumka
is now partnering with the Chamber of Commerce on "job-
creation," something it's hard to imagine Wimpy ever
doing.) The idea that factories should be converted to
socially useful -- and less environmentally destructive
-- forms of production has caught on, in new form, as
part of the "Green Jobs" movement. But economic
conversion of military to civilian production, as
bravely advocated by Winpisinger thirty years ago, is
rarely on the radar screen. As a result, members of the
IAM, UAW, IUE-CWA, and other manufacturing unions now
cling desperately to any remaining unionized employment
in plants sadly dependent on Pentagon contracts like
GE's big aircraft engine factory in Lynn,
Massachusetts.

Once one million strong, the IAM is now well on its way
to becoming a union half that size. Its ranks have been
decimated by automation, free trade, overseas out-
sourcing, deregulation (in the airline industry) and
de-unionization of manufacturing generally. What
Winpisinger called "the delusion that defense spending
creates secure jobs" is little disabused by any high-
ranking industrial unionist today. The current
Machinist president, Tom Buffenbarger--who comes from a
GE plant where the UE was ousted--never met a missile
system he didn't like. (Although he has been outspoken
enough in his own criticism of Obama to get himself
excluded from a recent White House meeting with other
labor leaders.)

In contrast, when Wimpy got an angry letter in 1983,
from a McDonnell Douglas machinist who was critical of
his membership in SANE, the IAM president politely
rebutted the worker's contention that "without defense
work, we would not have jobs for our families." He
supplied the relevant facts and figures about the
relative job-creating impact of different forms of
federal spending and argued, in his return letter, that
a "peacetime economy" was far more desirable than one
organized around endless preparations for war. "The
continuing build-up of more and more and evermore
implements of mass destruction is suicidal, and I
intend to go on saying so," he pledged. And, indeed he
did until the day he left office, under his own steam,
in 1989. He died eight years later, at age 73, leaving
behind political memories that grow fonder the more
present day labor leaders stray from his path.

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