Categorized | General Interest

Why Are Democrats Taking Money From Wal-Mart?

   Where does a politician, or a political party, draw the line in the willingness to sacrifice principles for a few bucks? When we talk about the need to "change" the political environment and the culture of money and politics, isn’t there some place where you can say, "right here, this is the perfect example and we aren’t going to let this go on anymore"? I would argue that the place to draw the line is the relationship between the Democratic Party and Wal-Mart. And the time to draw the line is now.

  I outline the facts in a moment. But, the premise for the need to draw the line now is this: There may be no corporation in American today that has been a more persistent, regular violator of the law than Wal-Mart. There may be no corporation in America that has been as virulently anti-union as Wal-Mart, firing workers repeatedly for trying to organize. There may be no corporation in America that has attacked the rights of workers and undercut the living standards of Americans more than Wal-Mart.

  Wal-Mart has at least 80 class-action lawsuitsin 41 states pending against it.

  Wal-Mart illegally denied full rest or meal breaks in violation of state wage and hour laws–a violation that may cost the company $2 billion.

  Wal-Mart abuses women, and is the defendants in the biggest sex discrimination case in history.

  Wal-Mart is a habitual tax-dodger.

  Wal-Mart’s heirs buy expensive paintings but won’t give their workers decent health care.

  Wal-Mart sued a disabled women, demanding she give back money she won in a settlement.

  Wal-Mart exploits children in Mexico.

  Wal-Mart lead a global corporate lobbying campaign to block a very modest improvement in Chinese labor laws–because Wal-Mart’s business model depends on exploiting cheap labor, here and abroad.

  And that’s just a sample. Why would any political leader, who represents him or herself to be a defender of the working person, want to be affiliated with such a company?

  The answer is clear: money. The Democratic Party is almost even with the Republican Party in the money it receives from Wal-Mart, according to the Center for Responsive Politics. The Center’s data, published in an article in today’s Wall Street Journal (I’ll come back to that article in a moment), shows that 12 years ago, Wal-Mart’s PAC gave 98 percent of its money to Republicans. In the current cycle, Democrats have received 48 percent of Wal-Mart’s PAC expenditures.

  Here is the list just for the 2008 cycle, according to the Center for Responsive Politics. In the House, the list is breath-taking in its scope:

 

Altmire, Jason (D-PA) $12,000

Arcuri, Michael (D-NY) $10,000

Baird, Brian (D-WA) $2,500

Barrow, John (D-GA) $10,000

Becerra, Xavier (D-CA) $6,000

Berry, Marion (D-AR) $6,000

Bishop, Sanford D Jr (D-GA)$5,000

Boren, Dan (D-OK) $7,500

Boswell, Leonard L (D-IA)$5,000

Boucher, Rick (D-VA) $6,000

Boyd, Allen (D-FL) $6,500

Butterfield, G K (D-NC) $3,500

Cardoza, Dennis (D-CA) $2,500

Chandler, Ben (D-KY) $2,500

Christian-Green, Donna (D-VI) $1,000

Clarke, Yvette D (D-NY) $1,000

Cleaver, Emanuel (D-MO) $1,000

Clyburn, James E (D-SC) $6,000

Cohen, Stephen Ira (D-TN)$2,000

Cooper, Jim (D-TN) $5,000

Cramer, Bud (D-AL) $2,500

Cuellar, Henry (D-TX) $7,000

Davis, Artur (D-AL) $7,500

Davis, Lincoln (D-TN) $5,000

Donnelly, Joe (D-IN) $5,000

Edwards, Chet (D-TX) $10,000

Ellsworth, Brad (D-IN) $12,500

Etheridge, Bob (D-NC) $2,000

Gonzalez, Charlie A (D-TX)$6,000

Gordon, Bart (D-TN) $5,000

Green, Gene (D-TX) $3,500

Hill, Baron (D-IN) $10,000

Hinojosa, Ruben (D-TX) $5,000

Holden, Tim (D-PA) $2,500

Hooley, Darlene (D-OR) $1,000

Hoyer, Steny H (D-MD) $6,000

Jackson Lee, Sheila (D-TX) $2,500

Johnson, Hank (D-GA) $1,000

Kilpatrick, Carolyn Cheeks (D-MI)$4,000

Kind, Ron (D-WI) $7,000

Klein, Ron (D-FL) $10,000

Larsen, Rick (D-WA) $2,500

Larson, John B (D-CT) $3,500

Lewis, John (D-GA) $2,500

Lofgren, Zoe (D-CA) $2,000

Maloney, Carolyn B (D-NY)$1,000

Matheson, Jim (D-UT) $5,000

McDermott, Jim (D-WA) $1,000

McIntyre, Mike (D-NC) $1,000

Meek, Kendrick B (D-FL) $7,500

Meeks, Gregory W (D-NY) $7,500

Melancon, Charles J (D-LA)$6,500

Moore, Dennis (D-KS) $3,500

Moran, Jim (D-VA) $2,500

Neal, Richard E (D-MA) $2,000

Oberstar, James L (D-MN)$1,000

Ortiz, Solomon P (D-TX) $3,000

Pastor, Ed (D-AZ) $5,000

Payne, Donald M (D-NJ) $1,000

Peterson, Collin C (D-MN)$5,500

Pomeroy, Earl (D-ND) $5,000

Rangel, Charles B (D-NY)$5,500

Reyes, Silvestre (D-TX) $5,500

Richardson, Laura (D-CA)$2,000

Rodriguez, Ciro D (D-TX)$10,000

Ross, Mike (D-AR) $5,000

Ruppersberger, Dutch (D-MD)$4,500

Salazar, John (D-CO) $7,000

Sanchez, Loretta (D-CA) $5,500

Scott, David (D-GA) $5,000

Scott, Robert C (D-VA) $2,000

Shuler, Heath (D-NC) $10,000

Sires, Albio (D-NJ) $2,000

Skelton, Ike (D-MO) $3,000

Snyder, Vic (D-AR) $2,000

Spratt, John M Jr (D-SC)$1,000

Tanner, John (D-TN) $9,000

Tauscher, Ellen (D-CA) $5,000

Taylor, Gene (D-MS) $5,000

Thompson, Bennie G (D-MS)$7,500

Thompson, Mike (D-CA) $4,500

Tiberi, Patrick J (R-OH)$2,500

Towns, Edolphus (D-NY) $3,000

Watt, Melvin L (D-NC) $3,500

Waxman, Henry A (D-CA) $2,500

Wilson, Charlie (D-OH) $5,000

Wynn, Albert R (D-MD) $5,000

  In the Senate:

Baucus, Max (D-MT) $7,000

Landrieu, Mary L (D-LA) $5,000

Lincoln, Blanche (D-AR) $2,000

McCaskill, Claire (D-MO)$5,000

Pryor, Mark (D-AR) $3,000

Salazar, Ken (D-CO) $2,000

 Unfortunately, this is nothing new. In November 2005, I asked why Democrats were doing Wal-Mart’s bidding, including helping block an important piece of labor legislation. Two years later, as the 2006 election drew near, Wal-Mart put on a big push to woo Democratic lawmakers, in particular, African-American and Hispanic representatives.

  In one sense, this was inevitable in the culture of Washington politics: money flows to power. And, since 2006, Democrats are an equal power in the political power landscape.

  Here is why the line must be drawn now and why this trend is particularly worrisome. The Wall Street Journal article reveals the background in a piece about Wal-Mart’s internal political drive to organize its managers to vote Republican in the coming election as a strategy to defeat the Employee Free Choice Act, the single-most important legislative priority for organized labor:

Wal-Mart Stores Inc. is mobilizing its store managers and department supervisors around the country to warn that if Democrats win power in November, they’ll likely change federal law to make it easier for workers to unionize companies — including Wal-Mart.

In recent weeks, thousands of Wal-Mart store managers and department heads have been summoned to mandatory meetings at which the retailer stresses the downside for workers if stores were to be unionized.

  And…

"The meeting leader said, ‘I am not telling you how to vote, but if the Democrats win, this bill will pass and you won’t have a vote on whether you want a union,’" said a Wal-Mart customer-service supervisor from Missouri. "I am not a stupid person. They were telling me how to vote," she said.

  And…

The U.S. Chamber of Commerce has made defeat of the legislation a top priority. In the past six months, it has flown state and local Chamber members to Washington to lobby members of Congress. On Thursday, the Chamber began airing a television ad in Minnesota and plans to run ads in other states as part of a broader campaign.

The bill was crafted by labor as a response to more aggressive opposition by companies to union-organizing activity. The AFL-CIO and individual unions such as the United Food and Commercial Workers have promised to make passage of the new labor law their No. 1 mission after the November election.

First introduced in 2003, the bill came to a vote last year and sailed through the Democratic-controlled House of Representatives, but was blocked by a filibuster in the Senate and faced a veto threat by the White House. The bill was taken off the floor, and its backers pledged to reintroduce it when they could get more support.

The November election could bring that extra support in Congress, as well as the White House if Sen. Obama is elected and Democrats extend their control in the Senate. Sen. Obama co-sponsored the legislation, which also is known as "card check," and has said several times he would sign it into law if elected president. Sen. John McCain, the likely Republican presidential nominee, opposes the Employee Free Choice Act and voted against it last year.

  Putting aside the important point about whether Wal-Mart’s internal political electioneering is illegal under federal election law, the far bigger issue is that Wal-Mart is making it quite clear that it will spare no effort to defeat EFCA. Wal-Mart and the business community believe that the passage of EFCA will allow millions of workers who want to be in a union to be able to exercise their rights without intimidation and fear of losing their jobs.

  To cut to the chase, Wal-Mart’s PAC spending is aimed at one thing: to make sure EFCA does not pass and, if it does pass, to make sure that the bill that reaches the president’s desk will be weakened (which, by the way, is what happened to labor law reform in the 1970s). Let’s look at the possible scenarios, assuming Barack Obama is president in 2009:

  1. A 2008 election brings Democrats a large majority in the House and even 60 seats in the Senate. EFCA comes to the House floor and passes largely intact. EFCA arrives to the Senate and, lo and behold, one or more Democratic Senators block the bill, not to kill it but to exact changes that gut the effectiveness of EFCA.
  1. A 2008 election brings Democrats a large majority in the House and even 60 seats in the Senate. EFCA comes to the House floor and a large number of Democrats from the list above introduce a series of amendments that seriously weaken EFCA.
  1. A 2008 election keeps Democrats in control of the House and Senate with larger numbers. In both chambers, EFCA will face significant attempts to change its basic thrust.

  I have always been a bit skeptical about using the large numbers of legislators who have signed as co-sponsors of EFCA as a barometer of the chances for the legislation to pass–and pass in a form that changes the playing field for union organizing from one grossly tilted towards employers to one that gives workers the real right to choose a union.

  The Wal-Mart contribution list above remind me of that scene in "The Untouchables" where Eliot Ness, sure of the evidence against Al Capone, finds out that the entire jury has been bought of. Of course, the movie ends with a happy resolution but we aren’t in Hollywood when it comes to EFCA.

  So, what should be done:

  1. The Change To Win Coalition and the AFL-CIO should jointly send a letter to Harry Reid, Nancy Pelosi, Charles Schumer (head of the Democratic Senatorial Campaign Committee) and Chris Hollen (head of the Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee) demanding that party members return every dime to Wal-Mart.
  1. Both Federations should also write to every member of Congress declaring that any Democrat receiving or keeping Wal-Mart money can kiss any labor donations or labor support good-bye.
  1. Both Federations should, then, send a letter to every supposed Democratic campaign consultant and make it clear: you work for us OR you work for Wal-Mart. You can’t do both.

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