Address of
International President Edwin D. Hill
IBEW
10th District Progress Meeting
Gatlinburg, Tennessee
July 22, 2003
Thank you, Bobby. And thank you, brothers
and sisters for your warm reception.
Vice President Klein, IEC Members Plott
and Turner and as always my good friend and working partner
Jerry OConnor.
This is my second trip to Gatlinburg
in less than a month and Ill be in Knoxville in August for
the National Training Institute, so maybe I should apply
for Tennessee residency. I think they could use a few more
Democratic voters around here.
This is one of the most beautiful spots
in the Southeast with plenty to see and do, and I hope you
all have a chance to recharge your batteries. Im glad were
at a place where we can kick back a little and relax -- I
am sorry that I will not be able to spend more time here
-- because we are going to need our strength for what lies
ahead, because Brothers and Sisters we have issues that need
to be addressed and we must stop pussyfooting around about
them.
All of us in this room have chosen to become
active in our Brotherhood -- to take a leadership role in
fighting for the principles upon which this union was built.
We are not passive observers of events that shape our lives.
Our goal is much more important -- we must influence and
direct these events.
But for anyone who takes his or her role
as union leader seriously -- and I know that includes all
of us -- these are difficult days. To talk about progress
in the labor movement seems hollow at a time when so many
factors are working against us and so many problems confront
us in every industry we represent.
The question that is before us every day
is: How do we survive, -- how do we grow, in times like these?
That is the question -- the answer is that we must survive
-- we must grow -- we must not allow ourselves to remain
stagnant and I submit to you Brothers and Sisters with all
due respect -- that we have for the last 7 years become satisfied
with the status quo it is time to reenergize our efforts
and to that end we need to change again -- a correction in
course if you will.
Those of you who were at our various conferences
this year have heard me talk about getting back to basics.
You heard me say that by taking care of our core areas of
responsibility, we will be taking the necessary steps towards
progress. This is true. But those steps must lead somewhere.
We must have a vision for where we want to go, -- so that
these basics that we all believe in -- will enable us to
deliver bold strokes for the future.
It was 35 years ago that we lost Martin
Luther King, Jr. and Robert F. Kennedy within the space of
two months. Thirty-five years -- for those of us who were
around then, it doesnt seem possible that so much time has
passed. And it makes us think about the loss not only of
two good and inspiring men,-- but also about what else has
been lost over the years.
The United States has created record amounts
of wealth since 1968. We became the only military superpower
on the globe. We were the cradle of technology that has transformed
the world.
But something much more valuable than any
of that seems to have been misplaced along the way and we
must find it. The deaths of King and the Kennedy Brothers
underscored a loss of idealism in our society an idealism
that included support -- not just tolerance -- for the Trade
Union Movement. We talk about them and other inspirational
leaders like them, -- including a labor leader or two. We
quote them and teach our school kids about them -- however
as you know our school children are never taught about the
positive impact that the Trade Union movement had on the
upward growth of North America. But do we do anything as
a society to live up to the ideals of those types of men
from a few years ago?
Have we stopped being concerned about fairness
for all and for a concern for the underdog? Have the brightest
minds stopped thinking in grand terms about addressing social
problems and started focusing on how much money they could
make. In a span of eight years we went from John F. Kennedy
in his inaugural address challenging us to ask what we could
do for our country to Richard Nixon in his inaugural address
telling us to ask what we could do for ourselves.
Even the trade union movement got too comfortable
during the postwar years of growth. We went from our high
of representing some 30 percent of the workforce to barely
representing 10 percent. Was that drop due to our shift from
keeping up the fight for the working class -- to being more
interested in protecting our gains and covering our asses
-- did that shift lend itself to the beginning of the loss
of the middle class in America. Did that lead to an "I
got mine" attitude so that when Ronald Reagan busted
the air traffic controllers,-- we didnt have the guts or
even the inclinations or the instinct to fight back. Did
it also lead to many in the Trade Union Movement to even
scoffed at the controllers saying they deserved it -- because
they were breaking the law and they had no legal right to
strike. It wasnt too long after that happened that legal
rights for the Labor Movement became almost meaningless --
like the right to organize, the right to a first contract
and the right to strike. We have even seen the defense of
trade union rights slandered as unpatriotic, -- as this administration
takes the away the right to organize from more and more federal
workers under the guise of "national security."
I question what we have lost as a union
and why? Did we lose the ability to know what is right? How
to act on a job? How to perform our job in a workman like
manner on time and on budget? How to treat each other --
as well as our counterparts in other unions?
I am sure that we all think that we are
doing the right things to promote the Union culture, -- but
I am asking that we all rethink what we are doing each and
every day of our working lives and see if we can get back
to doing it "the Union way" in the spirit of Brotherhood
-- in a manner that will make us more marketable for the
future and provide for our survival.
The late 60s and early 70s were no picnic.
They were times of political, social and cultural upheaval
that were tough to live through. But is what we have today
better?
The September 11 attacks and the fighting
in Afghanistan and Iraq brought out a sincere and overwhelming
expression of patriotism in this nation. Even before those
events, -- IBEW members were notable for their love of country
and willingness to defend America, -- as we have showed yet
again in recent months. But while people are waving the flag
-- a flag that was probably made in China -- they need to
stop and remember -- just what that flag stands for. Among
other ideals, -- it stands for liberty, -- justice and dignity
for all -- not just some, -- not just the favored few, --
but all.
Some days, it seems as if the social gains
of the mid-20th century never happened. It feels
like were back in 1903, instead of 2003. Corporate executives
rake in pay,-- bonuses,-- stock options and perks that are
many thousands of times what the average workers makes. Even
as company performances slide,-- workers lose their jobs
-- and shareholders are stiffed, -- as the greed fest continues.
Weve seen the de-industrialization of America,
as good paying jobs that once powered the middle class and
were the basis of the mightiest industrial power on earth
are disappearing. We used to export products -- made with
American labor to other countries; now we send them our manufacturing
jobs. America rebelled against Britain because that country
used the colonies as a source of raw materials and made us
a captive market for their manufactured goods. Now, we have
come full circle,-- shipping our raw materials to developing
countries to let them do the manufacturing. Then we imported
finished products back for the sake of saving a few bucks
at Wal-Mart and lining the pockets of the executives who
slashed the payroll -- resulting in the loss of millions
of jobs.
We have seen the authority of the government
weakened not by revolutionaries in the streets, -- but by
a right-wing ideology that promotes a distorted version of
freedom. Instead of protecting the greater good against the
excesses of the few, -- we now have a government bought and
paid for by the wealthiest and most powerful of our nation.
We are told that any kind of regulation of vital services
such as transportation, telecommunications and utilities
is bad. We are told that tax cuts for the top percentile
are just the ticket to make things better for the rest of
us. And, brothers and sisters -- we believed it.
And we have a media that now is full people
who identify more with their corporate masters than with
working people. They seem to have lost their desire or its
ability to ask the tough questions and stand up for the public
interest. They accept with little or no protest the elite
positions on issues such as free trade, -- taxes, -- health
care and other vital topics. And of course, -- more of the
media is becoming the province of conservative screaming
heads who stoke the worst instincts in people, -- including
many of our members.
None of this happened out of thin air. This
was not just a natural return swing of the pendulum. America
looks like it does today because the forces of wealth and
the ideological conservatives came together to make it happen.
I remember when Hillary Clinton as First
Lady once blamed her husbands problems partly on "the
vast right-wing conspiracy." I shook my head because
I thought she was exaggerating and being a little paranoid.
She wasnt.
There has been much documentation of how
the right wing in this country marshaled its considerable
resources -- with the patronage of super-rich ideologues
like Richard Mellon Scaife -- to mold policy, -- politics
and popular opinion. There is too much evidence to dismiss
the power of the right wing as a paranoid fantasy. They funded
think tanks to turn out position papers, -- books and arguments
for their positions. They bankrolled media figures like Rush
Limbaugh to fan the flames. They invested in political action
in a big way ranging from the grassroots cultural conservatives
to the big-time corporate contributors. They founded legal
societies to develop a deep bench of legal and judicial activists
-- many of whom are sitting on courts now, -- while we are
trying to prevent others from being confirmed even as we
speak. Their money and power bought the presidential election
of 2000, -- the congressional elections of 2002, and are
threatening to blow us out of the water in 2004.
And they did all of this with tremendous
patience and perseverance.
So now we look around and wonder why things
are so screwed up. Too many of our construction members are
out of work. Manufacturing has dried up to the point of crisis.
The utility, -- telecom -- and broadcasting industries are
in turmoil. Our railroad members fight for survival. Government
employment has been decimated. Workers are too scared to
organize and have to jump through legal hoops to get companies
even to negotiate with them.
Brothers and Sisters -- our country got
sucker punched. And things will keep getting worse until
we change them.
Wheres the passion for change? Wheres
the outrage over our current predicament? As we pour billions
of dollars into Iraq, -- wheres the demand that we rebuild
the schools, -- roads and bridges in our own country? Wheres
the burning desire for justice and dignity that shone through
in the words of Martin Luther King, Jr. -- Robert Kennedy
-- Hubert Humphrey and others? I recall personally standing
on a corner in working class section of New York City --
as a young trade unionist assigned to work with Hubert Humphrey
-- when he said that he was here on a corner with the working
people discussing their issues -- while his opponent -- Richard
Nixon was in the Midwest talking against the same issues.
Our country will not change for the better
until the people decide to take it back. We have got to be
part of a long-term solution to the problems facing America.
There is no more logical place for the process of change
to start --than with the trade union movement, and no union
more fitting to be at the heart of it all than our own Brotherhood.
Our opponents dont have the answers. Their
formula has been a disaster for the honest, hard-working
Americans -- North and South, East and West -- who live right,
-- obey the law, -- work hard, and love their country. We
speak for those Americans, brothers and sisters, whether
they belong to a union or not. And if we dont make our voices
heard and make this country live up to its best ideals, --
who will?
We will not be able to turn our country
around all at once. We will not accomplish miracles overnight.
And we will not be able to do it by ourselves. The way we
change things is to focus on what can be done and live up
to our principles. Most of all we must understand
that we are working toward a goal bigger than our immediate
circumstances. We are working toward the day when we can
restore the sense of social justice and human dignity that
America is lacking today.
In a society thats become as greedy as
ours, and a culture thats become as crude as ours, those
kinds of ideals would probably be dismissed as too idealistic.
That is exactly right -- it is idealistic -- and worth fighting
for.
We have to see the bigger purpose behind
everything we do on a day-to-day basis. We cant let ourselves
fall into the mindset of being victims, worrying about what "they" are
doing to us. Ive said it before, and it bears repeating.
Henry Miller, -- J.T. Kelley, and the rest of the founders
of the IBEW are revered today because they took responsibility
for their future and the future of all electrical workers.
They focused on the task at hand -- organizing a union and
creating a structure in which it could grow. But they also
saw beyond the present and envisioned a future where the
electrical industry was safe, and prosperous for workers.
And we are the beneficiaries of their vision.
If we are going to carry on that vision,
we need to start by living up to our ideals. We need to be
the best-trained work force delivering the highest quality
performance. We need to live up to our commitments and agreements
and provide a fair days work for a fair days pay -- both
to our employers and to those who buy our services and products.
We need to be the very best at what we do so that others
will want to join us and be part of our Brotherhood and our
movement.
Those are the basics of our work. The basics
of our calling in the trade union movement are to seek justice
beyond the job site as well. We need to raise our collective
voice as part of the public debate. We need to mobilize our
members to give back to their communities -- to prime the
pump that provided us with the water of life -- if you will.
Weve got to counter the big money interests with spirit
-- numbers and hard work to elect officials who respond to
the needs of the people.
This is what we do on a daily basis. This
is what makes the IBEW stand out. If I harp on our responsibilities
and if I push our officers and our local leaders on issues
like organizing, -- quality of work, substance abuse and
others, its because I see how vital it is that we be the
best. If we are going to make a mighty contribution to a
better future for our country, we have got to stand tall
and lead the way.
Internally, we are going to start by trying
some different approaches in obtaining employment opportunities
for outside and inside members -- as well as organizing the
non-union. We will be making some changes, so that we can
better service our customers -- those that we have presently
and the new ones that we will be dealing with. You will hear
more about this in the weeks and months ahead. I am telling
our potential customers that it is a new day and a new IBEW
in the Tenth District stronger and more in tuned to the needs
of those we service. How do I know this? Because you told
me, and I believe you.
As we make changes,-- I am asking that you
keep in mind the bigger purpose behind everything you do.
Yes, we are up against some very powerful opponents. But
as Lee Greenwood sang at our convention in 2001, "The
flag still stands for freedom, and they cant take that away." They
cant take our spirit -- they cant buy our hearts and minds
either.
You all work hard to make life better for
your brothers and sisters. I am asking you to dig deep and
find the strength to carry on the fight. That kind of spirit
is what made the IBEW great, will sustain us in good times
and bad. Our principles as trade union members will help
us not just see things as they are and ask why, but to see
what could be and should be and demand to know -- why not?
Our cause is bigger than any single one
of us. And our goals cannot be won by any one of us alone.
It is only when our countless individual efforts come together
as one mighty force that we will turn our ideals into a new
reality for our members and our country.
Brothers and Sisters -- keep up the good
work and I know that you will continue to give just a little
more of yourself to the ideals of your local union our brotherhood
and all of the trade union movement.
Thank you and God bless each and every one
of you.
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