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Employers increasingly telling workers how to vote GOP candidate Romney encourages workplace electioneering by owners By DON McINTOSH Associate Editor Three years after the U.S. Supreme Court’s Citizens United decision opened the floodgates to money in pol- itics, corporations are flexing their “free speech” like never before. As the election nears, more and more compa- nies are breaking away from tradition and propriety to tell workers how to vote. That practice was illegal just three years ago: Under the Federal Election Campaign Act of 1971, corporations were prohibited from advocating for specific candidates to rank-and-file em- ployees. But that was swept away by the Supreme Court, along with restric- tions on “independent expenditures.” Now companies around the country are telling workers which candidates they prefer. Leading the way is Koch Industries, a conglomerate owned by billionaire Republican funders David and Charles Koch. Koch Industries owns Georgia-Pacific, and even in 2010, distributed guides urging work- ers to vote for certain candidates. This year, as reported online by the maga- zine In These Times, Koch again mailed ballot guides to all 45,000 Georgia-Pacific employees. “If we elect candidates who want to spend hundreds of billions in borrowed money on costly new subsidies for a few favored cronies, put unprecedented regulatory burdens on businesses, pre- vent or delay important new construc- tion projects and excessively hinder free trade, then many of our 50,000 U.S. employees and contractors may suffer the consequences, including higher gasoline prices, runaway infla- tion and other ills,” writes company president Dave Robertson in a cover letter accompanying the guides. Boiled down to basics, it’s billionaires telling workers, “Don’t vote for Democrats.” In Oregon, for example, only Re- publican candidates have the Koch en- dorsement. And other employers are following the Kochs’ example: • David Siegel — a billionaire time- share developer who’s trying to build himself America’s biggest house — told all 8,000 employees in an Oct. 8 e- mail, “The economy doesn’t currently pose a threat to your job. What does threaten your job, however, is another four years of the same presidential ad- ministration …. If any new taxes are levied on me, or my company, as our current president plans, I will have no choice but to reduce the size of this company. Rather than grow this com- pany, I will be forced to cut back. This means fewer jobs, less benefits and cer- tainly less opportunity for everyone.” • In a memo to 2,300 employees an- nouncing a bonus, the CEO of a Michi- gan auto parts supplier included this note: “Talk of additional tax increases by the administration, if re-elected, will have an additional negative impact on the organization … It is always impor- tant to remember the more government takes, the less there will be available to spread around to the working people of this company.” Never mind that the company bene- fitted from the auto bailout; his and Siegel’s statements aren’t even true: The federal government doesn’t tax companies before they pay workers; it taxes profit, which is what’s left after workers and others are paid. But the important thing about the newly-permitted electioneering is the effect it has on employees, and democ- racy, says Gordon Lafer, associate pro- fessor at the University of Oregon's La- bor Education and Research Center. “This is one of the things we criti- cize and deem illegitimate in other countries,” Lafer said. In 2002 and 2004, the Bush-era State Department questioned the legitimacy of Ukraine’s presidential election after universities and other state-owned enterprises told people who to vote for. And an Armen- ian election in 2003 was called into question after factory and other em- ployees were forced to attend rallies of the ruling party. Now, those practices are coming home. Workers at a Beallsville, Ohio, coal mine owned by big-time Republican donor Bob Murray were told that attendance at an Aug. 14 cam- paign rally for Mitt Romney was both mandatory and unpaid. Romney may not have known the miners were made to attend, but he has encouraged business owners to propa- gandize workers, saying in a June con- ference call to the National Federation of Independent Business: “I hope you make it very clear to your employees what you believe is in the best interest of your enterprise and therefore their job and their future in the upcoming elections. And whether you agree with me or you agree with President Obama, or whatever your political view, I hope you pass those along to your employ- ees. [There’s] nothing illegal about you talking with your employees about what you believe is best for the busi- ness, because I think that will figure in to their election decision, their voting decision.” Defenders have asked: If unions may make election recommendations to workers, why shouldn’t employers have that right? But longtime cam- paign finance reform activist Janice Thompson, former director of Com- mon Cause Oregon, says there are cru- cial differences: “Unions have a demo- cratic process to make their endorsements,” Thompson said, “and they don’t have any ability to coerce.” Employers may say their speech is not coercive, Lafer says, but it can still have a chilling effect on workers: “Even if there’s a secret ballot, when you tell employees who you want them to vote for, it scares everybody into not having a bumper sticker or wearing a button or being photographed at a rally.” “These are the same tactics employ- ers use against workers trying to organ- ize,” said AFL-CIO President Richard Trumka in a press statement. “The Supreme Court has long recognized that even what appears on its face to be mere persuasion becomes inherently coercive when it’s an employer urging its employees to take particular ac- tions.” Low Prices! 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BOX 13150, PORTLAND, OR 97213-0150 NOVEMBER 2, 2012 NORTHWEST LABOR PRESS PAGE 3