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WORKING-CLASS VOTERS DEMAND A FAIR DEAL

Story ID:4076
Written by:Dick Meister
Story type:Musings, Essays and Such
Location:everywhere USA
Year:2008

WORKING-CLASS VOTERS DEMAND A FAIR DEAL
By Dick Meister

What of the working-class voters whose support is so eagerly being sought by
political candidates? What do they want from the politicians?

Steven Greenhouse, the New York Times’ excellent labor reporter, has lots of
answers to that important question, based on hundreds of interviews he had
with working people in researching his new book, “The Big Squeeze: Tough
Times for the American Worker.”

What workers want is nothing more -- and nothing less – than “a fair deal,”
says Greenhouse. “Or at least a fairer deal.”

Many workers are certainly getting far less than that these days, and
they’re angry and frustrated about it. Their incomes have been
declining steadily over the last eight years, at the same time that
corporate profits and worker productivity have been increasing by more than
15 percent.

The situation has been getting even worse for workers in recent months,
given the steady increase in food and fuel prices and increase in
foreclosures.

What’s more, the incomes of the top one percent of American households --
those whose incomes average more than $1 million a year -- have more than
tripled over the past quarter-century. That one percent of Americans has
more after-tax income then the incomes of the bottom 40 percent of Americans
combined.

The wages of many workers are so low they need to work two jobs. And, as
Greenhouse notes, many women with children of pre-school age can’t
afford to stay home and care for them. They have to work full-time to help
their families make ends meet.

Workers find it "devilishly difficult" to balance job and family. What they
need is what workers in other industrial nations get: guarantees of paid
sick days, paid maternity leaves, and paid vacations. Only a relatively few
U.S. workers have those things.

That’s but one of many needs workers want politicians to meet. Greenhouse
says they “want someone to battle for them as they struggle with economic
insecurity and income inequality.”

Workers’ specific demands include action to combat the effects of
globalization that has destroyed many American jobs and helped hold down
wages. Greenhouse says they “would love to see the nation’s political
leaders do some high-visibility jawboning to discourage companies from
moving jobs overseas.”

Workers are particularly concerned about the steady decline in manufacturing
jobs. Almost four million such jobs have disappeared since 2000, fully
one-fifth of the total. Workers also would like much better retraining
programs for those whose jobs are shifted abroad.

They’d also like increased opportunity and mobility, mainly steps to make a
college education affordable for their children. Every year more than
400,000 high school graduates who are qualified to attend a four-year
college don’t do so because they can’t afford it. As a consequence, says
Greenhouse, “many working-class voters view America’s promise of equal
opportunity as largely an empty promise.”

Another item high on the working-class voters’ wish list is strengthening
the nation’s social safety net. It’s been severely weakened by the
widespread loss of job security and by many workers losing health care
benefits and pensions. What’s wanted most is an expanded Social Security
system that would guarantee virtually every worker enough for a secure
retirement. Many retirees now have far too little to support themselves.

That and the other wishes of working-class voters would indeed help
guarantee them the fair deal that’s too long been denied them. Politicians
who want their votes would be wise to heed them. That could very well
determine whether they're elected to office.

Copyright © 2008 Dick Meister





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