As CFIF Vice President of Legal and Public Affairs Tim Lee explained in this week’s Freedom Minute…
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Labor Groups Promise to Double Down on Democrats in November

As CFIF Vice President of Legal and Public Affairs Tim Lee explained in this week’s Freedom Minute, the largest American labor unions are promising to spend a combined $150 million of their members’ dues money to preserve Democratic control of Congress.

To put that into perspective, here’s a partial list of what President Obama did for unions after receiving $60.7 million from the Service Employees International Union (SEIU) in the 2008 cycle:

»  Only 10 days after taking the oath of office, Obama signed three executive orders that, respectively, limited what federal contractors can say to employees during union organizing drives, made it harder to fire incompetent employees of government contractors, and directed federal contractors to insure that employees are aware of their…[more]

September 04, 2010 • 01:45 pm

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Democrats Exempt Big Labor Benefactors from Legislation Abridging Freedom of Speech Print
By Timothy H. Lee
Thursday, May 06 2010
There is simply no logical or ethical justification for exempting union bosses from the same restrictions that would limit their employer counterparts, considering the hundreds of millions in union members’ dues redirected toward union-friendly politicians.

“Congress shall make no law … abridging the freedom of speech, or of the press, or the right of the people peaceably to assemble, and to petition the Government for a redress of grievances.” 

Those timeless words enshrine the freedoms of speech and political participation within the First Amendment to the United States Constitution.  They also constitute the necessary starting point for any discussion of so-called “campaign finance reform” legislation, which limits citizens’ latitude to engage in free speech and political activity in modern society. 

“Freedom of speech for me, but not for thee.” 

That, in contrast, is the self-righteous mentality of every aspiring despot against whom the First Amendment was specifically drafted to protect.  Invariably, such restrictions upon the freedom of speech are rationalized in the name of “the public interest,” which always coincidentally happens to match the partisan objective of the despot in question. 

The latest illustrations:  Senator Charles Schumer (D – New York) and Congressman Chris Van Hollen (D – Maryland). 

Reminding us again that the fight to protect individual freedom against politicians intoxicated by their own power and self-righteousness is a never-ending one, Schumer and Van Hollen have introduced legislation (supported by the Obama White House, of course) reimposing the same type of First Amendment restrictions that the United States Supreme Court recently declared unconstitutional in Citizens United v. Federal Elections Commission (FEC).  In other words, their response to having free speech limitations overturned by the Supreme Court is to roll the same rock back up the same hill. 

Under their bill, all contractors with the government and recipients of Troubled Asset Relief Program (TARP) funds would be prohibited from U.S. election spending.  The legislation would impose that same prohibition upon American businesses with as few as 20% of shares owned by foreign nationals, or whose boards of directors happen to have a majority of foreign nationals.  (No word yet on whether Schumer, Van Hollen or the Obama Administration will recognize their error and suddenly amend their bill to except illegal immigrants.) 

But note one big-spending group that Schumer and Van Hollen suspiciously omitted from their prohibition:  labor bosses. 

According to a report in The Hill quoting Loyola Law School election law professor Richard L. Hasen, Big Labor may receive a free pass in the bill: 

“Hasen said some of the biggest campaign spending restrictions in the summary would only affect corporations.  For example, large federal contractors, recipients of government bailout funds who have not repaid the money and foreign-owned companies would be banned from election spending.  ‘There are no foreign-owned unions, and unions are not government contractors,’ Hasen said.  ‘The biggest limitations in this bill apply only to corporations because there are no parallels in the labor world.’” 

There is simply no logical or ethical justification for exempting union bosses from the same restrictions that would limit their employer counterparts, considering the hundreds of millions in union members’ dues redirected toward union-friendly politicians.  The Service Employees International Union (SEIU) alone spent approximately $85 million to elect Obama and Democrats in 2008. 

That’s 85 hardworking union members that the SEIU could make millionaires using the same money that it instead spent on political campaigns. 

Sadly, that enormous campaign spending explains why Big Labor is excluded from the bill. 

Recall that the supposedly “post-partisan” Obama also conveniently omitted powerful labor unions from his vitriol toward the Citizens United decision: 

“The Supreme Court has given a green light to a new stampede of special interest money in our politics.  It is a major victory for Big Oil, Wall Street banks, health insurance companies and other powerful interests that marshal their power every day in Washington to drown out the voices of everyday Americans.  This ruling gives the special interests and their lobbyists even more power in Washington, while undermining the influence of average Americans who make small contributions to support their preferred candidates.”

“Powerful interests” other than Big Labor, that is. 

Our Founding Fathers knew very well that every governmental effort to limit citizens’ freedom of speech invariably unlocks the floodgates to partisan favoritism and endless future efforts to suffocate individual rights. 

Government efforts to impose so-called “campaign finance reform” abridge the First Amendment’s free speech protections regardless of political favoritism, but the fact that powerful special interests like Big Labor receive free passes makes them all the more shameful and destructive. 

Question of the Week   
Labor Day is observed annually on the first Monday in September. When is Patriot Day observed every year?
More Questions
Quote of the Day   
 
"... [T]he House of Representatives was built with two-year terms for a reason: to be the barometer that measures both the pressures on the public and the pressures exerted by the public. At the Constitutional Convention of 1787, James Madison favored a three-year term, but the delegates settled on two years, in part, as Roger Sherman of Connecticut was quoted in the official notes of the proceedings…[more]
 
 
—David Shribman,Pittsburgh Post-Gazette
— David Shribman,Pittsburgh Post-Gazette
 
Liberty Poll   

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