THE WAR IN VIETNAM

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January 29, 1966
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Approved For Release 2006/11/06: CIA-RDP67B00446R000400010003-3 January 29, 1966 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD- SENATE 1443 Carl Schurz and Samuel Gompers, E. L. God- There is, alas, a tragic example of this at- critics from the country. Southerners kin, of the Nation, and Felix Adler, of the titude toward criticism before our eyes, and found criticism of slavery so subversive that of the Ethical Culture Society, Jane Addams, of in a people who inherit, if they do not Cher- they drove critics out thought cou h. t- Hull House, and President Jordan, of Stan- ish, our traditions of law and liberty. Like torney Plmer ford University, and Andrew Carnegie and the slaveocracy of the Old South, the domi- our Siberian misadventure-now remem- scores of others. And when the defenders of nant leaders of South Africa today are con- bered only with embarrassment-so sub- the war raised the cry "Don't haul down the vinced that whites are superior to Negroes, versive that he hounded the critics into flag," it was no other than William Jennings and that Negroes must not be allowed to en- prison for 20-year terms. McCarthy found Bryan, titular head of the Democratic Party, joy the freedoms available to whites. To almost all teachers and writers so subversive the librar who asked, "Who will haul down the Presi- cismaintain tb . Is policy and to m--criticism cismcoming from the academic 1 aaand riwas ticism niversi ies.n Experience dent?" We need not decide now whether those community and from the press-they have should harden us against the argument that who protested this war were right or wrong. dispensed with the traditions of due process dissent and criticism are so dangerous that It is sufficient to remember that we honor and of fair trial, violated academic freedom, they must always give way to consensus. cri Mark Twain and William James, regard Jane and are in process of destroying centuries of And as aifor d the argument to that some encism Addams as one of the greatest of American constitutional guarantees. And with criti- may give women, and still read Godkin, and that Bryan cism silenced, they are able to delude them- that is a form of blackmail unworthy of is somewhat better remembered than William selves that what they do is just and right. those who profess it. If it is to be accepted, McKinley. Those infatuated patriots who Now, it would be absurd and iniquitous to we have an end to genuine discussion of now assert that it is somehow treasonable to equate our current policies toward Vietnam foreign policies, for it will inevitably be in- criticize any policy that involves Americans with the defense of slavery, or with Nazi or voked to stop debate and criticism whenever in fighting overseas would do well to ponder Afrikaner policies. But the point is not that debate gets acrimonious or the criticism the lessons of the Philippine war. whether these policies have anything in cuts too close to the bone. And to the But, it will be said, as it is always said, common. The point is that when a nation fevered mind of the FBI, the CIA, and some this war is different. Whether history will silences criticism and dissent, it deprives Senators, criticism always gives aid and judge this war to be different or not, we itself of the power to correct its errors. The comfort to the enemy or cuts too close to the cannot say. But this we can say with cer- process of silencing need not be as savage as bone. tainty: a government and a society that si- in Nazi Germany or in South Africa today; it "The only thing we have to fear," said lences those who dissent is one that has lost is enough that an atmosphere be created Franklin Roosevelt, "is fear itself." That is its way. This we can say: that what is es- where men prefer silence to protest. As has as true in the intellectual and the moral sential in a free society is that there should been observed of book burning, it is not nec- realm as in the political and the economic. - be an atmosphere where those who wish to essary to burn books, it is enough to dis- Wese do hip riot ideasneed to Wear ideas but the fcen ear do nt need to dissent and even to demonstrate can do so courage men from writing them. so of without fear of recrimination or vilification. It cannot be too often repeated that the criticism, but the silencing of criticism. We What is the alternative? What is implicit justification and the purpose of freedom of do not need to fear excitement or agitation in the demand, now, that agitation be si- speech is not to indulge those who want to in the academic community, but timidity lenced, that demonstrators be punished? speak their minds. It is to prevent error and and apathy. We do not need to fear resist- What is implicit, in the insistence that we discover truth. There may be other ways of ance to political leaders, but unquestioning lead "pull up by the roots and rend to pieces" the detecting error and discovering truth than acquiescence lis adopt. in whatever policies td to fear protests from students-it is Senator STEN- that of free discussion, but so far we have ers aeWtoo literally the anguished leas of a who P take o a Paul VI a y the moral lessons xis we are quoting here. What is implicit in not found them. those the charge that those who demonstrate There is one final argument for silencing pf the of a Pop o the or th th but those who against the war are somehow guilty of trea- criticism, that is reasonable and even per-Serm, son? suasive. It is this: that critics of our Viet- reject the notion that morality has any place For It is, of course, this: that once our Govern- nam policy are in fact defeating their they and politics in . the dark that, indeed, is to stumble ment has embarked upon a policy there is to ends. For by protesting and agitating, be no more criticism, protest, or dissent. All may persuade the Vietcong, or the North must close ranks and unite behind the Gov- Vietnamese, or the Chinese, that the Amer- THE WAR IN VIETNAM ernment. - ican people are really deeply divided, and that Now we have had a good deal of experience, if they but hold out long enough the Ameri- Mr. LONG of Louisiana. Mr. Presi- first and last, with this view of the duty of cans will tire of the war and throw in the dent know wt that hat Senators crisis are that this the citizen to his government and it behooves sponge. As there is in fact no likelihood of dent, I the far astray. troubled. bled the us to recall that experience before we go too agony of artics are merely prolonging the Nation faces, and they are certainly priv- We ourselves had experience with this phi- These predictions about the effect of criti- ileged to speak out and express their losophy in the ante bellum South. The cism in other countries are, of course, purely views. I concede that right. However, . dominant forces of southern life were, by the speculative. One thing that is not mere it somewhat dismays me to hear our Na- 1840's, convinced that slavery was a positive speculation is that American opinion is, in tion accused of being an aggressor, en- good, a blessing alike for slaves and for mas- fact, divided; that's what all the excitement gaged in all sorts of illegal, corrupt con- ters; they were just as sure of the righteous- is about. We do not know how the Vietcong duct in the world. That is not the case. ness of the "peculiar institution" as is Sena- or the Chinese will react to the sounds of I am proud of this great Nation. I sup- Vietnam. Donn of the righteousness of the war in argument coming across the waters. Perhaps Vietnam. And they adopted a policy that they will interpret criticism as a sign of port my Nation. I support the President, so many Senators now want to impose upon American weakness. But perhaps they will who is our Commander in Chief. us: that of silencing criticism and intimi- interpret it as an indication of our reason- On January 27, 2 days ago, I placed in dating critics. Teachers who attacked slav- ableness. And assuredly they will, if they the CONGRESSIONAL RECORD, beginning at ery were deprived of their posts-just what have any understanding of these matters at page 1236, the argument which the over- Mr. Nixon now advises as the sovereign cure all, interpret it as a sign of the strength of whelming majority of international law- for what ails our universities. Editors who our democracy-that it can tolerate differ- raised yens believe to be correct: that is, that their voices in criticism of slavery lost ences of opinion. yers Nation, to on 125 be occasions res: th including has gone to their papers. Clergymen who did not realize But there are two considerations here that the War of Independence, that slavery was enjoined by the Bible were invite our attention. First, if critics of our forced out of their pulpits. Books that crit- Vietnamese war are right, then some modifi- war, has sent our forces into action, prior icized slavery were burned. In the end the cation of our policy is clearly desirable, and to a declaration of war. dominant forces of the South got their way: those who call for such modification serve a When we were attacked at Pearl Har- critics were silenced. The South closed its necessary purpose. We do not know bor, we did not wait for a declaration by ranks against critics, and closed its mind; whether they are right or not. We will not Congress. We had to start defending it closed, too, every avenue of solution to the find out by silencing them. Second, if gov- ourselves by attacking those who at- slavery problem except that of violence. ernment, or those in positions of power and tasked us. General MacArthur did not Nazi Germany provides us with an even authority, can silence criticism by the argu- t ak for s d General of war, but didt his more sobering spectacle. There, too, under ment that such criticism might be mis- Hitler, opposition to government was equated understood somewhere, then there is an end troops into action in the Philippines. with treason. Those who dared question to all criticism, and perhaps an end to our In World War II, President Roosevelt the inferiority of Jews, or the justice of the kind of political system. For men in au- ordered the Navy, when it came upon conquest of inferior peoples like the Poles, thority will always think that criticism of German submarines, not to wait for a were effectually silenced, by exile or by the their policies is dangerous. They will al- ddeclaration of war, but to attacck. The the gas chamber. With criticism and dis- ways equate their policies with patriotism, amara message came t from a he sent eliminated, Hitler and his followers were and find criticism subversive. The Federal- cacti and the world, Is bts found versive criticism of President they legislated toy expel same," .1 recently r ferred toba state- dow to lead their nation, down the path t to destruction. Approved For Release 2006/11/06: CIA-RDP67B00446R000400010003-3 Approved For Release 2006/11/06: CIA-RDP67B00446R000400010003-3 `144 CONGRESSIONAL RECORI) - SENATE January 29, 1966 mcnt by 25 of the most outstanding pro- A large number of Senators harbor in- PROPOSED REPEAL OF SECTION lessors of international law, including ward fears and doubts about what is tak- 14(b) OF THE N all of whom agreed that such a procedure dangerous world. W Any time the Soviet The Senate resumed the consideration was correct. Union decides that it wants to make war of the motion of the Senator from Mon- The 125 examples I cited were taken on this country, it can do so and inflict tana CMMr. MANSFIELD] that the Senate from a memorandum prepared for the great damage upon this Nation. If they proceed to the consideration of the bill Committee on Armed Services and the deem the time to be ripe, they may (H.R. 77) to repeal section 14(b) of the Committee on Foreign Relations at the well decide to attack us at such time as National Labor Relations Act, as time we were discussing whether Presi- they may choose. But so far, we have amended, and section 703(b) of the La- dent Truman was correct in relieving convinced them of our determination to bor-Management Reporting Act of 1959 General MacArthur of his duties in Ko- fight for freedom. and to amend the first proviso of section rea. 'T'hat was the conclusion of the This nation will fight whenever we 8(a) (3) of the National Labor Relations document. No one argued that that was must. We engaged in acts of warfare Act, as amended. not the prevailing view. and turned back the Russian :;]hips when The PRESIDING OFFICER. The When our ships were attacked in the they sought to go into Cuba.. Senator from Mississippi is recognized. Gulf of Tonkin, we knew what our ships We must recognize that the Soviet Mr. EASTLAND. Mr. President, once were doing there. They were there to Union might some day seek to make war again the well of this historic assembly help the people of South Vietnam and to on this great Nation. However, we have has become the scene of one of the great help the Government of South Vietnam the weapons we need with which to national debates of our time; a contest defend itself. We were providing them fight them if that happens, and that is involving a basic, fundamental issue that with various communications assistance one reason that nothing occurred, goes to the very root of a free society; a which we thought they needed. When We know very well that the Chinese struggle between two irreconcilable prin- our ships were attacked, we struck back. Communists may decide to engage in ciples which are of their very nature so We committed an act of war, well know- warefare against this country at any repugnant and contradictory to each ing that that was what we were doing. time. That is not too likely to occur other as to be insusceptible of co:mpro- We blasted the harbors from which the now. What we had better be worried mise. For the basic issue before the North Vietnamese torpedo boats had. about is not what the Communist Chi- Senate is simply a conflict between the come. nese might do now, but rather what they idea of individual liberty and freedom of The American people rose up in en- might do 5 years from now when Red association versus the concept of com- thusiastic acclaim and support of the China has built up its atomic potential. pulsory unionization and involuntary President. The President went before We shall then have a real threat directed regimentation of the American working- the people, and the people had a chance at us. man. to vote on whether they wanted him to If Red China decides that she wants to Mr. President, the right-to-work issue continue after that. The people gave come into the situation in Vietnam today, Was presented to the people of 1Missis- the President a 15 million majority vote. she can come in at any time she wishes. sippi on June 7, 1960, in the form of a I am frank to say that the President's Red China will not be worried about constitutional amendment. On that opponent, who was at that time the dis- the men she might lose or the men that date, after a full, free, and fair debate, tinguished senior Senator from Arizona, we might lose. That nation will be more the people of my State voted to place the Mr. Goldwater, took the same view; concerned about the danger inherent in right-to-work law in their constitution namely, that we not only should have whether this Nation will seek on that by an overwhelming vote of 105,724 to done what was done, but should have occasion to destroy Communist China 47,461. Section 198-A of the Mississippi gone further in fighting the aggressors as an atomic power. That is something Constitution now reads as follows: of North Vietnam. for them to think about. Section 198-A: It is hereby declared to be Congress adopted a resolution not only We are committed. Our forces are the public policy of Mississippi that the right approving what the President did, but there. We cannot let one little Cammu- of a person or persons to work shall not be nist power, consisting of 16 omini million denied or abridged on account of member- approving whatever measures he might ship or nonmembership in any labor union deem necessary to defeat North Viet- people, run the greatest power on the or labor organization. Any agreement or namese aggression. The action the Pres- face of the earth out of there when we combination between any employer and any ident is taking is in furtherance of an are committed to defend the people. labor union or labor organization whereby act of war that had been committed by I applaud the President for the action any person not a member of such union or this Nation under the powers of the Cam- he has taken. I do not envy him. He organization shall be denied the right to work has a very difficult job. I would not want for an employer, or whereby such mernber- mander in Chief. to have his job and be subject to further all the ship is made a condition of employment or Congress stated that it approved such burdens and pressures which are exerted continuation of employment by such cm- o acts of war as the President upon a President. payer, or whereby any such union or olly y in na might deem necessary. In some respects, tion acquires an employment monopoly that resolution is a declaration of war. When we disagree with him, we should any enterprise, is hereby declared to be an It gave affirmative approval dthe Pres- not make speeches available for the Cam- illegal combination or conspiracy and against It gave the United efor the Conn- munists to spread around behind the Iron public policy. No person shall be required enemy Curtain unless we first communicate with by an employer to become or remain a mem- ident o in the Chief, to nStaae our the in the President and tell him what we sag- ber of any Gabor union o3rr labor organization warfare, understanding that that was gest about the matter, and, only in the as a condition of em to ment or continua- ploy No exactly what the resolution meant. So event that he does not heed our sugges- plansta of shall employment required by such an e employer. let us understand that we are at war tions, fr an shi er to right now. That is what our boys are , should we communicate with him abstain or refrain from membership i n any there for. through the Nation's press. Such con- labor union. or labor organization as a con- duct encourages the Communists to think dition of employment or continuation of em- Che United States is in South Vietnam that if they will continue this action, ployment. No employer shall require any in pursuance of a resolution that Con- continue to kill some of our American person, as a condition of employment or con- inuation of employment, to pay any dues, i?ress adopted, only two Senators voting boys, and continue to kidnap our people tfees o other charges of any against it. Since that resolution was and chop their heads off we will lose heart union or labor organiz tion. kAny p toy any labor adopted, the Senate has been treated to and surrender. g erson who m be denied emploment or be deriv at least one speech a week by those two The American people are not that kind of ay continuation of hisemployment in viola Senators, or at least one of them. of people. We can unite behind our tion of any paragraph of this section shall be Some of us are proud of our great Commander in Chief in time of war. entitled to recover from such employer and country, proud of our boys who are fight- We are doing that. from any other person, firm, corporation, or ing for freedom. We are proud of them, We have been very fortunate to have association acting in concert with him by and we are proud of our President. We good national leaders in times of danger. appropriate action in the courts of this State are proud of the President's action to re- I am such actual son mages as of such he may have sva- sus- proud that we have the Present tamed by reason of such denial or deprlva- list aggression. President of the United States. tion of employment. e62,,1w,?1??~~P6700446R000400010003-3 Approved For Release 2006/11/06: CIA-RDP67B00446R000400010003-3 January 29, 1966 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD SENATE 1445 The provisions of this section shall not ap- in a conference report on .the bill, ex- him a useful service. It is, therefore, ply to, any, lawful contract in force on -the plained the purpose of 14(b) as, easy to see that union leaders could be- effective date of this section, but they shall Many States have enacted laws or adopted come beset with concern relative to this apply to all contracts thereafter entered into constitutional provisions to make all forms aspect. Over the years, closed shop and and to any renewal or extension of an exist- of compulsory unionism in those States fl- union shop contracts have made the ing contract thereafter occurring. The pro- legal. It was never the intention of the organizer's job easy. The new employee visions of this section shall not apply to any National Labor Relations Act (the Wagner must accept union membership along employer or employee under the jurisdiction Act) as its legislative history discloses, to with his new job. If he fails to pay dues; of the Federal Railway Labor Act. preempt the field in this regard so as to w 1S discharged. It would seem that Our people are proud to be counted as deprive the States of their powers to prevent wi he is are rged fearful woul to test their one of the 19 States where the concept of compulsory unionism. Neither the existing individual liberty has prevailed in the act nor the conference agreements could true value to employees by giving men be said to authorize arrangements of this and women what should be an inalienable confrontation with compulsory, involun- sort in States where such arrangements were American right to refuse to join if they tary unionization, and regimentation, contrary to State policy. wish not to do so. and we resent this effort to deprive us When the Taft-Hartley law was passed, Under the Wagner Act passed in 1935 of our choice. 13 States had statutes which prohibited unions were able through closed shop Simply stated, so right-to-work th that the thinherent laws right the closed shop-that is, a form of labor- contracts to force employers to hire of a ndividu l to secure hold a job management agreement under which an union members only. This law gave not be abridged do sged ecure any and union a secu- employee is required to be a union mem- union officials a monopoly of labor where- shall an individual ity ere m entered into by the h em- ber in his State in order to obtain a job by they could dominate their members, ply er and the union. h more or to retain that job after he gets it. dictate to employers, challenge the Gov- proper and de union. Perhaps mm- Four States permitted the closed shop ernment to a point of paralyzing the na- ployeay stated, human voluntary liberty yiquigems only after specific approval by employ- tional economy. Union members who ploys a individual a freedom p ech, religion, n, ees in an election. Section 14(b) reads disobeyed the edict of union officers fre- or assembly. eyBy tenactment ceof as follows: quently suffered economic resprisals. the Congress By the h recog- Nothing in this act shall be construed They not only lost their current job, but the preserved theto the United ctso of f the as authorizing the execution or application frequently their right to another job. they so de- e of agreements requiring membership in a Such shocking abuses were disclosed-that nized several and d States the right, if citizens sev labor organization as a condition of employ- the elected representatives of the people sired, to enact legislative statutes or con- meat in any State or territory in which such by overwhelming vote in both Houses of stitutional amendments which would execution or application is prohibited by the Congress outlawed the closed shop in protect the freedom of choice of their in- State or territorial law. 1947, and permitted the States to outlaw and liv chows ou that their very jobs Essentially, the right-to-work statutes compulsory unionism in any form under uld and livelihood h co not be placed e in make it unlawful to deprive a person of the authority of 14(b). jeopnydy through eompulsinn ab a result a job because he does not belong to a The ninth amendment to the Constitu- ofa agreement and acquiescent into be - union, or conversely, because he does be- tion of the United States reads that the ployer. union and an at em- long to a union. They also make it un- "enumeration in the Constitution, of cer- voluntary snbmis that the principle of . lawful for an employer to enter into tain rights, shall not be construed to deny promise, A is not open to co me agreement with a union to make mem- or disparage others retained by the promise. A person must believe ievo or in tmust he bership in such union a condition of em- people." fre ac ede of view that choice c proper to ployment. In other words, they insure The Declaration of Independence pro- shackle to the the cwill lew of the unwilling em- the right to work with or without union claimed to the world the "self-evident" shackloline em- membership. Consequently, the only is- truths "that all men are created equal; ployee pical ri compuwor law devices. sue involved is one of compulsory union- that they are endowed by their Creator A typcal right has thekaw provides ism, in that employees are to be forced with certain unalienable rights; that t join an employee has the right or unioneither to join a union in order to hold a job. among these are life, liberty, and the pur- ni 19 or States from laws joining a labor whereby . One would immediately conclude that suit of happiness." I Sta are inion membership fw co onttr contracts requiring laws requiring union as within the democratic process of this The Declaration of independence, it a condition of employment are unen- great Nation, the United States, that should be noted, was careful to state that forcible. The language which has been there could be no argument against a liberties and human rights were not man not govern adopted by either enactment by the State man's basic right to work without being made. raTheir ther sour e was endowed by the legislatures or by an amendment to the forced to join a union or without being State constitution is framed in a tenor compelled to refrain from joining a "Creator" of all men. John Adams, our similar to the following: "Any agreement union. Certainly, Mr. President, the second President, assured the people: or combination between any employer existence of any contrary position would You have antecedent cannot be all reahly and any labor union organization where- seem to be contrary to and in violation governments; o rent rights human aa wn; of be prealed o w the Universe. by persons not members of such unions of the basic principles and tenets of our from the Great Lelarights shall be denied the right to work by the constitutional government which pro- employer or whereby such membership is vides for and genuinely befits a great This basic concept of individual sov- made a condition of employment or con- and free society which all our citizens ereignty and liberty was absolute in the tinuation of employment by such em- enjoy. Strangely enough, the union offi- theory of American Government from the was not granted by ployer or whereby any such union ac- tcers passage over aperof the t law iod frma yearsksince vv ery Constitution. quires monopoly to be in any ninth amendment is a basic state- public is hereby declared to be against have directed a continuing assaulof this t to- The meet of the inherent rights of the indi- or co poricy and an illegal combination legislative the esafeguard. and This is a repeal curious vidual. See Patterson, "The Forgotten Section thing-the more so because all their Ninth Amendment," Bobbs-Merrill, 1955. egen n 14(b) a part of the Labor objections seem not to succeed in hiding On its face it declares there are unenu- p by an Relations Act which was a what appears to be their one real fear; merated rights that are retained by the 1947. In n amending the 1935 Wagner- n Act namely, that when unionism is placed people, as a group and individually. in a variety of areas, the ngr r on a voluntary basis, they must get their individual freedom is the basis of our Taft-Hartley, a variety of added in new members on the basis of meriting democracy and is the virtue which marks Tea n the States e Stsection would 1oatt to o the employees' support. ours over other forms of government. make free to continue This as we know it, Mr. President, is Liberty, or freedom, is the equivalent of and to chose right-to-work prior laws a the the way that every other organization the right to live, worship, work, and pur- pas g enforce Taft-Hartley. those enacted prioto the in this country operates. You sell a man sue happiness as an individual. Liberty the was on the value of membership, and then and freedom, I believe, include the right the final of version n of of Taft-Hartley t the time worked out, the conference committee, you keep him sold by performing for of opportunity to seek, secure, and retain No. 14-7 Approved For Release 2006/11/06: CIA-RDP67B00446R000400010003-3 Approved For Release 2006/11/06: CIA-RDP67B00446R000400010003-3 1.'46 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD - SENATE employment free of any form of comiDul-- sion to join or pay tribute to any private organization. This is one of the inalien.- able rights with which individuals "are endowed by their Creator." As such, I .submit, it is preserved by the ninth a amendment and protected by it, at least against any denial or disparagement by a, State or by the Congress. Tn discussing the Bill of Rights before the first Congress, James Madison, the father of the Bill of Rights and author of the ninth amendment, warned the people: The prescriptions in favor of liberty ought W be leveled against that quarter where the greatest danger lies, namely, that which pos- s sses the highest prerogative of power. But this is not found in either the executive or legislative department of the Government, bust in the body of the people, operating by the majority against the minority. But I confess that. I do conceive that in a govern- ment modified like this of the United States, the great danger lies rather in the abuse for. the community, than. in the legislative body. (Gales and Seaton's "Annals of Congress.") Pears of excesses in Government led to the Bill of Rights. Fears of excesses by a majority of the community led to the ninth amendment. The highest duty the Supreme Court can perform is the protection of individual liberty and free- dom. Conscience compels it and the ninth amendment demands it. t'reedom of association is a composite of rights under the first amendment, particularly freedom of speech and of assembly. This right springs from the liberty of the individual to live his life as he sees fit, to choose where he will seek to work, and freely to choose what, if any, private organizations he will seek to join or refrain from joining. Mr. President, freedom of association is a fundamental right and was recog- nized as such by the Supreme Court in NLRB v. Jones & Laughlin Steel Corp., 301 U.S. 1, 33 (1937). There the Court pointed out that the purpose of that statute was to "safeguard the right of employees to self-organization." It than added: 'That is a. fundamental right. Employees have as clear a right to organize and select their representatives for lawful purposes as the respondent has to organize its business and select: Its own officers and agents. in Thomas v. Collins, 323 U.S. 516 (1945), the Supreme Court considered a Texas statute requiring union organizers to register and obtain a card before so- liciting members. The Court ruled that the Texas statute violated the 14th amendment's protections of freedom of speech and assembly. Said the Court: As a matter of principle a requirement of registration in order to make a public speech would seem generally imcompatible with an exercise of the rights of free speech and as- sembly * * *. And the right either of work- men or unions under these conditions to as- semble and discuss their own affairs is as fully protected by the Constitution as the right of businessmen, farmers, educators, politi- cal party members or others to assemble and discuss their affairs and to enlist the support of others, 323 US. at 539. Finally the Court stated: There Is some modiclun of freedom of thought, speech and assembly which all citi- zens of the Republic may exer' ise through- out its length and breadth, which no State, nor all together, nor the Nation itself, can prohibit, restrain or impede, 32:1 U.S. at 543. The right to join a labor organization is not in question here. The right to join has been established. What is in question here is the right not to join- the right not to be compelled to become a member of a labor organization as a condition of continued employment. The right not to join is a necessary cor- ollary to the fundamental right to join for without the right to refrain from joining, there can be no trite right to join. If this corollary right does not exist, then employees have l.io freedom of association. All that remains to them is the freedom to be coerced by the ma- jority, whether of a labor organization or the community in which they live. I be- lieve, Mr. President, that freedom not to associate is as much a part of freedom of assembly and association as the free- dom to remain silent is a part of the freedom of speech, a right which becomes wholly inviolable when it is sought to compel one to utter that which he does not believe. The Supreme Court has consistently recognized that the right to work for a living is a fundamental right possessed by all people. Most of the decisions have dealt with issues raised under the 14th amendment. The principles expressed are equally applicable to the fifth amend- ment, however, Coolidge v. Long, 282 U.S. 582 (1931) ; Twining v. New Jersey, 211 U.S. 78 (1908). In Truax v. Raish, 239 U.S. 33, 41 (1915), Mr. Justice Hughes, speaking for the Court, put the basic proposition very simply when he said: It requires no argument to sh..,w that the right to work for a living in the common occupations of the community Is of the very essence of the personal freedom and oppor- tunity it was the purpose of the amendment to secure. In that case the Court held void an Arizona statute requiring employers of five or more persons to employ 80 per- cent U.S. citizens on the ground that such a law violated the 14th amendment. In Smith v. Texas, 233 U.S. 630, 636 (1914), a Texas statute made it a mis- demeanor for any person to act as a, conductor on a railway train in that State without first having served for 2 years as a freight conductor or brakeman. The Court held this to be an infringement of the liberty of contract contrary to the 14th amend- ment. The Court said, in part: Life, liberty, property, and the equal pro- tection of the law, grouped together in the Constitution, are so related that the depri- vation of any one of those separate and independent rights may lessen or extinguish the value of the other three. Insofar as a man is deprived of the right to labor, his liberty is restricted, his capacity to earn wages and acquire property is lessened, and he is denied the protection which the law affords those who are permitted to work. Liberty means more than freedom rom servi- tude, and the constitutional guaranty is an assurance that the citizen shall be protected in the right to use his powers of mind and body in any lawful calling. Meyer v. Nebraska, 262 U.S. 390, 399 (1.923), involved a conviction under a January 29, 1966 Nebraska statute which made it a crime to teach a foreign language to a child who had not completed the eighth grade. Holding the statute abridged the 14th amendment, the Court said: While this Court has not attempted to de- fine with exactness the liberty thus guaran- teed, the term has received much considera- tion and some of the included things have been definitely stated. Without doubt, it denotes not merely freedom from bodily re- straint but also the right of the individual to contract, to engage in any of the common occupations of life, to acquire useful knol- edge, to marry, establish a home and br.ug up children, to worship God according to the dictates of his own conscience, and gen- erally to enjoy those privileges long recog- nized at common law as essential to the orderly pursuit of happiness by free men. Finally, in Adams v. Tanner, 244 U.S. 590, 593 (1917), the Supreme Court quoted Shylock in the "Merchant of Venice": You take my house when you do take the prop that doth sustain my house; You take my life when you do take the means whereby I live. The worker, impaled on the horns of the dilenuna whether to abide by his principles and forfeit his employment under a union shop contract or abandon his principles and submit to the un- wanted obligations of union member- ship, might well exclaim: "You take my life when you do take the means whereby I live." I submit that the Constitution of the United States protects him in his right to work and that he need not sub- merge his principles, ideals, liberties, and freedoms to avoid economic suicide. The Nebraska Supreme Court summar- ized correctly and succinctly the princi- ples established by the U.S. Supreme Court when it held in the Hanson case, 160 Nebr. 669, 71 NW 2d 526: We also think the right to work is one of the most precious liberties that man possesses. Man has as much right to work as he has to live, to be free, to own property, or to join a church of his own choice, for without freedom to work the others would soon disappear. It is a fundamental human right which the due process clause of the fifth amendment protects from improper in- fringement by the Federal Government, To work for a living in the occupations available in a community is the very essence of per- sonal freedom and opportunity that it was one of the purposes of these axnendntents to make secure. Liberty means more than freedom from servitude. The Constitution guarantees are our assurance that the citizen will be protected in the right to use his powers of mind and body in any lawful calling. ARGUMENT ADVANCED DY TISE ADMIMSTRArION IN SUPPORT OF 14(b) REPEAL What reason is advanced by the ad- ministration in support of this reckless power play which threatens one of the last significant vestiges of State sover- eignty in the area of labor relations: challenges the very concept of irldividu'i[ liberty; and promises to upset that deli- cate, tripartite balance of power between labor, management, and employee. The sole argument upon which they elect to stand, the exclusive premise upon which they base their conclusion. that 14(b) should be repealed, is the so-called need for conformity in our national labor policy. ved' er'Rel s 0 /1,.,1, ~6,? - 7 5.4, E~000400010003-3 Approved For Release 2006/11/06: CIA-RDP67B00446R000400010003-3 January 29, 1966 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD - SENATE 1447 In the President's 1965 state of the Mr. EASTLAND. I yield for that pur- eat his the er i a n toedsc ea for his own Union address, repeal of 14(b) was ad- pose. ght de himself vocated "with the hope of reducing con- Mr. ERVIN. Is not the fundamental whether he will or will not join a union flicts in our national labor policy that objection to union shop agreements that and will or will not pay dues to a union? for several years have divided Americans they deny supposedly free Americans Is not that what the right-to-work laws in various States" and again in the Pres- their right to make a decision which provide? ident's address of 1966 "to make the vitally affects them during all their work- Mr. EASTLAND. Certainly. from labor laws in all our States equal to the ing hours, and, indeed, after their work- Mississippi EpR i I . thI e ask the-toe wnator ank laws labor laws of the 31 States which do not ing hours? have tonight right-to-work measures." Mr. EASTLAND. My friend is cer- deny to a union the right and power to This same, simple, sterile theme has tainly right. The right of decision is have every employee in any factory or in been parroted to the Congress by Secre- certainly a major ingredient of human uany nion industry they pay dues as members tof a tary Wirtz: freedom. The issue here is whether a uniform na- Mr. ERVIN. Does not the Senator that their welfare would be promoted tional labor policy should be established in from Mississippi agree with the Senator by their joining the union. this area (section 14(b)) as it exists in all from North Carolina that during a pre- Mr. EASTLAND. They are still free other areas covered by the National Labor vious generation some employers com- to make the decision whether to join or Relations Act. I urge that, whatever may pelled their employees, as a condition not. They are still free to make the have been the justification 18 years ago for precedent to being granted employment, decision whether their interests would letting the states experiment in this area, to enter into a contract which required be enhanced by joining or not joining. experience since that time has shown that them to agree not to join a union during There is nothing in those laws that de- c i no longer a good reason for this the term of their employment? prives them of an ingredient of liberty. core ourseo of action. Mr. EASTLAND. That is correct. Mr. ERVIN. Do not the right-to-work It is likewise interesting to note that Mr. ERVIN. Does not the Senator laws entirely protect the right of an em- only one-half page of the 46-page Senate from Mississippi agree with the Senator ployee to be persuaded by a union to join report accompanying H.R. 77 is devoted from North Carolina that the labor voluntarily? to the majority explanation as to the unions called such agreements imposed Mr. EASTLAND. Certainly. reason for the repeal of 14(b). The only upon the employees by the employers Mr. ERVIN. I should like to ask the reason stated is found in this simple and ,yellow dog" contracts? Senator from Mississippi if in leaving obviously inadequate comment: Mr. EASTLAND. It was a "yellow dog" that right to a union to persuade mem- The sole purpose of H.R. 77 is to establish contract, which has been outlawed. bers to join their union voluntarily, the a uniform Federal rule governing union secu- Mr. ERVIN. Does not the Senator right-to-work laws leaves to workers the rity arguments. from Mississippi agree with the Senator same fredom to join voluntarily that the That the administration should even from North Carolina that the labor various religious bodies use to have mem- advance such an argument in support of unions called such contracts "yellow dog" bers join their church; namely, to per- a major legislative proposal, much less contracts because they denied the em- suade them that they should join the elect to premise its entire position upon ployee the freedom of choice to join or church of the living God. it, is ample evidence of desperation with refrain from joining unions of their own Mr. EARVIN. ND.an rt i8enator from which they seek to justify this cause. free choice? the Our national labor policy and laws are Mr. EASTLAND. I agree with the Mississippi see anything wrong in say- fraught with nonconformity in every Senator from North Carolina. I think ing to a labor union, "You shall obtain area. Section 14(c) of the Fair Labor it was a form of enslavement. That is your members by persuasion"? That is, Standards Act allows States to legislate what we now face from the other side. in the same manner in which the in areas where the NLRB has declined to Mr. ERVIN. Is the Senator from churches of the living God obtain their take jurisdiction. Workmen's campen- North Carolina correct in construing the members. sation and unemployment compensation argument of the Senator from Missis- Mr. EASTLAND. I agree. laws vary from State to State. Section sippi to be that a union shop contract Mr. ERVIN. Does not the Senator 603(a) of the Landrum-Griffin Act pre- which could be imposed upon employees from Mississippi believe that it is plac- serves State laws regulating the actions at the request of the union is another ing the unions in very fine company when of union officials. Yes, Mr. President, the form of "yellow dog" contract in that the right-to-work law provides that the examples may be cited ad infinitum. It does identically the same thing that unions can and must obtain their mem- But we are now told that the "con- the old "yellow dog" contracts imposed bers in the same way as churches and formity" of compulsory unionization is on employees did-that is, it denies the other voluntary associations obtain their "needed" to avoid "conflicts in our na- employee the freedom to stand on his members? tional labor policy." Thus "necessity" own feet and decide for himself, with his Mr. EASTLAND. I agree with the and "conformity" become the two pillars God-given faculties, whether he would Senator. The idea of compulsion is not upon which the proponents elect to rest or would not join a union? American. their case for repeal of 14(b). This will Mr. EASTLAND. That is correct. Mr. ERVIN. And does not the Senator not be the first time these two principles Mr. ERVIN. Does not the Senator from Mississippi agree with the Senator of expediency have been advanced to ex- from Mississippi agree with the state- from North Carolina that the union shop cuse a proposal which is of its very na- ment made by William Pitt that neces- agreement is a compulsory procedure de- ture, inexcusable, indefensible, and un- sity is the argument for every infringe- signed to graft membership into unions conscionable. ment of liberty? Does it not illustrate by men who do not wish to belong to I seem to recall that line from Milton's that unions want vast power over the unions? "Paradise Lost": lives of all the working men and women Mr. EASTLAND. Of course. It means And with necessity, the tyrant's plea, ex- in the United States, powers which would that a man joins a private organization cus'd his devilish deeds. deny the working people of the United against his will. If that is Americanism, I recall that William Pitt once told the States their God-given right to decide I have lost contact. English Parliament that: for themselves, with their own God-given Mr. ERVIN. Is not the Senator from Necessity is the argument of tyrants, it is faculties, whether they wish to join or Mississippi aware of the fact that several refrain from joining a union? years ago Congress passed an act which the creed of slaves. Mr. EASTLAND. The Senator is cor- provided, among other things, that no While the idea that the subordination rect. Communist could occupy an office in a of individual liberty to uniform national Mr. ERVIN. I ask the Senator from union? Does not the Senator from Mis- policy may be accepted by the docil and Mississippi if the State right-to-work sissippi recall that? enslaved, it is not accepted by free laws, which the bill to repeal section Mr. EASTLAND. The Senator is cor- Americans. 14(b) of the Taft-Hartley Act would rect. Mr. ERVIN. Mr. President, will the nullify, would do anything more than Mr. ERVIN. Is it not true that some Senator yield for several questions rele- merely' give to each American who, in months ago the Supreme Court held that vant to the statement he has just made? the words of Scripture, is compelled to that .act constituted an unconstitutional Approved For Release 2006/11/06: CIA-RDP67B00446R000400010003-3 Approved For Release 2006/11/06: CIA-RDP67B00446R000400010003-3 1448 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD - SENATE January 29, 1966 bill of attainder under the Constitution employees can join or refuse to join discussion as to the question of freedom and was, therefore, invalid? voluntary unions, the union leaders are of association vis-a-vis compulsory Mr. EASTLAND. The Senator is cor- compelled to serve the interests of the unionism in some of the countries of rect. members who pay the dues in order to at- Western Europe. Mr. ERVIN. I will ask the Senator tract and hold the members needed to In the free European democracies the from Mississippi if it is not true that, as a operate an effective union. This forces principle of compulsory unionism has result of that decision of the Supreme! the union leadership to limit pursuing been vigorously resisted wherever at- Court, a union shop agreement may com- selfish interests, thereby increasing com- tempts have been made to provide for pel loyal Americans to become involun- parative honesty. Compulsion removes such in collective agreements. Gener- tary dues-paying members of unions the necessity to attract new members and ally, on the continent of Europe the free- whose officers are Communists, and in this way encourages the less attrac- dom of a person to abstain from joining whose officers are disloyal, not only to tive and less efficient elements of leader- a labor organization developed over the those loyal Americans, but also to our ship. years same country? Closely related to this point is that herecognized right for a person t wbe- Mr. EASTLAND. The Senator is car- what may seem to be good, responsible come associated with a labor organiza- rect. My information is that that con- leadership in a compulsory union will al- tion. Most of these governments recog- dition prevails in a number of States most certainly change over a period of nize that the affirmative side of freedom today. I do not want it to be spread time. Power and the lessening of the of association is the liberty of persons to all over the country, as it would be if necessity to attract will change the char- either form or to join an association, but the pending bill were passed. acter of most leadership. Union officers, likewise, that this cognizance of the neg- Mr, ERVIN Mr. President, I thank with the knowledge that they in effect ative side of such freedom which includes my good friend the Senator from Missis- control the entire work force, inevitably a person's right not to associate and to sippi for yielding and for answering would beccme more prone to make bar- refrain from forming or joining an these questions. gaining demands no matter how stag- organization. Mr. EASTLAND. As stated by that gering, and to use strike threats arbitrar- The principle of voluntarisim has, over learned jurist. the Honorable Learned ily and capriciously. a period of many Hand: With compulsory membership, union velopment years, pons in the op 'e t y in the chiefs can concentrate on perpetuating labor unions communft, is already process generally rally and it t has been een shown that of dissolution ; * * where nonconformity themselves in office and serving their own with the accepted creed, political as well as Selfish motives and interests rather than inconsistent w uwiohism has been entirely religious, is a mark of disaffection; where de- constantly being under pressure with not only legislative ps,unciation, Without specification or backing, dues do opinio , js well opinion, but with public c Lakes the lase of evidence; where orthodoxy something useful for the dues-paying opinion as well. place in order to attract and hold the chokes freedom of dissent; where faith in One of the most controversial problems the eventual supremacy of reason has be- lnernbership and to retain the respect facing the present social law of countries come so timid that we dare not enter our and support required for reelection. This in the stage of democracy in industrial- ,convictions to the open list;, to win or is why many of them become ruthless ism is that of legislative treatment of lose. disciplinarians who wield a club of au-collective thority over their members, rather than which an biployee's g right to woht to wo b Certainly the proponents of this bill is presenting us to advocate democratic procedures within which a employee's rk is with an example of the union that compel the leaders to be cause to depend on member'ship in a haw denunciation, without specification labor organization, Relative to the po- iw backing, takes the place of evidence. servants rather than bosses of their sition taken on this problem in the Their obvious reluctance to give debate members. Thus, the need to hold mom- United States, it has been repeatedly hers on this issue: their fear of having to rest will usually prevent excesses and stated that :legislative treatment of it their case before the American working- unethical conduct. has reflected its extremely troublesome man of the merits of unionism, is con- Decisions handed down by the NLRB nature on the grounds that such an s;l.usiv proof that they fear to center their during 1965 alone should shatter arty il- agreement is a patent interference with "oanve pros ., the open lists, n win or lusion that the rights of individual union an employee's freedom of self -organiza- members will be protected by that. kan- 1,Ise. tion. la has been. inferred that the non- garoo court which presently masquerades conformity caused by section the is a as an impartial arbiter of our national in the United States an approach to 4 :o11Ce y eau wires but that comma labor laws. the problem ;first meets the question of lion can be refuted by the simple fact Within this past year the NLI'B has whether legislative approval of collective upheld the ?ight of unions to fine rriem- agreements maakes, for the sake of labor that; in 1.946, the year before Taft- organizations, too great demands on the Bartley, 4,600,000 workingmen were in- bet's for exceeding arbitrary production individual employee which work to his valved in strikes fora loss of 116 million quotas or for exercising their right to own disadvantage. Ar roan-days, while by 1948, the year fol- cross a picket line. The Board upheld t gume bents on the lowing enactment of 'Taft-Hartley, only the expulsion of two union memb_rs for On then obviously must the in conflion filing a petition with the NLRB decerti_ of the one hand, for is the provision 2,170,000 men were involved in strikes for of the necessity for security prvisu~ns in a loss of only 34,600,000 man-hours. reset the union as their bargaining rep- order to preserve bargaining power and, The argument that union shop ar- esentative, although the proceeding was r:angements produce more peaceful and filed pursuant to a statutory right. on the other hand, it has been pointed In hose States which do not gin; their out that an employer would not willingly satisfactory industrial relations lacks yield to a union's demand for r a union considerable credence in view of the in- people the protection of the rit-,ht-to- shop clause if the union were not power- dustrial strife which continues to plague work. laws, harsh disciplinary action is ful enough to enforce such a demand. those very industries in which the union often the product of arrogant labor hop agreement:; are the most prevalent. bosses. In Milwaukee, Wis., United It is notable that the solution of the 1' }ion.al strikes and strike threats rear- Papermakers Local No 356 recentl fined represented labor-manage by m legislation relations our problem as laxly characterise negotiations in several a woman member for missing union books presents a compromise m our etw en of the Nation's major industries where meetings, even though the meetings were the l idea compromise which compulsory union membership prevails. m scheduled during church hours on Sun- unionism the moral idea should of be freedom originated, and the and the 'i'he strikes, delays and stoppages at some day. The fine was upheld. device of compulsion brought on the of our missile bases due to jurisdictional Within this past year the NLR13 has individual to join a union. In theory, disputes among unions where union shop violated both the letter and the spirit of each employee has a right to be repre- 1:; deeply entrenched constitute a stanch the Taft-Hartley Act by holding tltat; an sented by a union of his own choice, or refutation of the claim that secure employer must negotiate with the union not to be represented at all, but as has unions are stable and responsible. The over the establishment of a union hiring been touched upon previously, it takes a record clearly shows that union abuses, hall which would control all employment certain brand of heroism for an em- including unwarranted strikes, are more of personnel. likely to be encouraged rather than mini- Mr. President, at this point I think it in his exercise of thistrou freedom. it is mized by compulsory unionism. When could be profitable if we made a point of difficult, to say the least, to see how an ! uw!aatwawwMw!pa!wwn~mnrrswn~rrs.~+ur! :r~gw,m ~y.''.l l' "f?'! '?'7""C ..!I ~~' F4~MA'!!Ins t~IxpN!MWuF!Rli~!i~~rak i~wi4 M~!~w!~i7.L. Jima` U~Q,04QL,l 1000 Approved For Release 2006/11/06: CIA-RDP67B00446R000400010003-3 January 29, 1966 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD SENATE employee can really offer any opposition to the union which is party to the union shop agreement which forced him in the first place into membership in a union with whose internal policies he is in sub- stantial disagreement. It can be readily seen that his freedom of choice Is In substantial and practical conflict with such an agreement. An employee's right to join or refrain from joining a labor organization has been a focal point of labor-management controversy in the United States since the passage of the Wagner Act in 1935. The 1935 Wagner Act did not attempt to make closed shop agreements legal in any State where they might be illegal. However, the Labor-Management Rela- tions Act of 1947 has expressly outlawed closed shops and has left it to the States either to prohibit union shop agreements entirely or to regulate them. An objective judgment on the present status of the American law regarding union shop agreements would point it out to be confused and entangled. Any comparison between American law on this subject and that of certain European nations, which in varying degrees might be called counteraprts of this country's indicates that the problem is somewhat similar, but in no instance identical. Al- though a number of European countries have legislated on this matter, the very nature of their legislation and the prevalence of union membership indicate that this issue has never been prominent in political affairs or legal proceedings. Belgium, for example, in the Belgian Act, passed in 1921, expressly provided: Nobody can be compelled to join an organi- zation or not to join it. Further provision prohibits making membership or nonmembership in an organization a condition of employment. Judicial interpretation of this legisla- tion has ruled that conditioning employ- ment upon union membership was in violation of an employee's freedom of association and to make membership a condition of employment is not to pro- tect a legitimate personal interest, but Is something which is void of any legal justification. In the Netherlands, the Act on Collec- tive Bargaining Contracts, passed in 1927, provides the official expression of the Government's protection of the right of employees to refrain from joining unions in the following language: An agreement whereby an employer be- comes bound to employ only members of a certain religion, or persons entertaining a certain political view or members of a cer- tain organization is null and void. In Austria the invalidity of a compul- sory unionism provision is expressly treated by legislation stating: Provisions in collective bargaining con- tracts between employer and employees are null and void if they are intended to insure that no persons other than members of a particular union are employed or to keep from employment persons who are members of a particular union, Similarly, Denmark, in a statute en- acted in 1929, directs: Any act or conduct which in an unjustified manner seeks to restrict the freedom of an Individual. to engage in an occupation or the right to join or. abstain from joining any organization shall be deemed unlawful. The Federal Republic of Germany, in a number of judicial decisions even in the absence of any expressed legislative dic- tate, has decreed that any injury or dam- age inflicted upon an individual because of his nonmembership In a union is vio- lative of fundamental constitutional rights and that clauses in collective agreements which make union member- ship a condition of employment are nec- essarily repugnant to a worker's personal feeling. France has not enacted particular leg- islation concerning union shop clauses, but it has forcefully relied on constitu- tional tenets and on general principles of law to determine that clauses provoking compulsory unionism are unlawful in France. The French Government in the late 1940's took the position that- The democratic state, as the protector of public liberties, has the duty to insure the respect of all aspects of the right to orga- nize-one of the fundamental liberties of modern society. Accordingly, the statement emphasizes that measures taken to protect this right must not only safeguard the posi- tive freedom of association, but also guaran- tee to wage earners that nonmembership in a union may not be taken into account in relation to engagement, maintenance in em- ployment, or dismissal. In a supplementary declaration the French Government further provided: Any provision In the enactment of a col- lective agreement intended to force a worker to belong or not to belong to a particular trade union, under the threat of not' being engaged for employment or losing his em- ployment is * * * incompatible not only with the principle of freedom of association, but also with the principle of freedom of work. In Switzerland there is no specific leg- islation covering closedshop contract clauses. However, by 1949 the Swiss courts had come to the view that the closed shop was beyond doubt an unwar- ranted interference with the right not to organize, that is, a person's right to re- main outside an association without suf- fering any appreciable economic harm- and that, moreover, it was an unlawful infringement of the rights of the in- dividual. There has subsequently been judicial approval of this view. The Swiss Parliament in 1956 enacted an amend- ment to the Swiss Code of Obligations that provided: Any clause of an agreement or arrange- ment between the parties to compel em- ployers or employees to join a contracting association shall be null and void. In Sweden any efforts either by the Confederation of Swedish Labor Unions or by the Swedish Employers' Federation to make membership in a contracting labor organization a condition of employ- ment have been invalidated by the Swed- ish labor courts. In like fashion to the Swedish unions, those in Norway have succeeded in or- ganizing a vast majority of employees comprising a substantial segment of the labor force without resorting to any method of compulsory unionism. Con- sequently, Mr. President, there seems to be little doubt that the general European consensus after many years of trial and 1449 experiment indicates that compulsory unionism is obnoxious, and thus Is either legislated against or judicially decreed as illegal, unlawful, and against moral principle. - Mr. President, there Is even a strong school of thought within the liberal establishment itself, and I daresay that it cannot be catalogued as a minority school, that feel that unions that rely on compulsion. weaken their own effec- tiveness. Only a voluntary membership can feel free to determine policies and leadership and to modify them as the need arises. A comparative membership of employees under union shop arrange- ment must be so categorized, and is so subject to dismissal from employment as to be loathe to act openly, and, as indus- trial history has eloquently revealed, the voluntary system of joining a union is al- ways more effective than being enforced against one's wishes and better judgment to subscribe his or her name to the mem- bership rolls. Another consideration that we should at this point evaluate is the fact that in so many instances where union shop agreements once having been entered into, but later eliminated or repudiated, show that in repeated series of instances many of the higher caliber employees who had chosen not to assume positions of leadership under compulsory union- shop agreements have come forward as extremely capable union officials operat- ing under voluntary membership con- tracts. Contrary to accusations, right-to-work laws do not discourage employees from joining unions, since they are free to join if they so desire and free to with- hold membership if that is their desire. State laws do have the effect of allowing protection to both union members and nonmembers in their own personal and particular choice. They are designed to make sure that whichever choice is made, it is a free choice. Additionally, the Federal Law under Taft-Hartley care- fully protects the right of unions to orga- nize and bargain collectively and law- fully requires employers to bargain with them accordingly. There is no State law that can take away the protections which our present national labor policy affords to those who wish to join unions. In so many instances, it is assumed that unions are operated on a completely democratic basis-and that strikes, for example, are only called after a favorable vote of the majority of the membership. However, this is not a requisite for a labor orga- nization, and many of them have no such requirement spelled out in their constitu- tions. in cases in which there is a con- stitutional provision within a labor orga- nization, very frequently the vote for strike action is conducted by a stand- ing ballot of those present rather than by a secret ballot which preserves the elements of the true democratic process rather than allowing for the contrived and desired result that the leadership would have manifold reasons to desire and against which many of the rank and file members would see fit not to oppose In fear of the incurrence of displeasure of the leaders of their particular union. Approved For Release 2006/11/06: CIA-RDP67B00446R000400010003-3 Approved For Release 2006/11/06: CIA-RDP67B00446R000400010003-3 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD - SENATE January 29, 1966 Who are these labor lords who in their insatiable quest of absolute power have issued their threats and ultimatums to the Congress of the United States with the arrogance and impudence of feudal chieftains? They are the leaders who have betrayed the principles of free choice upon which the American labor movement was founded; who have re- jected the wise council of their friends and have trampled upon the rights of their own members. They are the leaders who fear to rest their case before the American working- man on their record of proven accom- plishment, responsible leadership or ded- ication to the welfare of their members. They are the leaders who are either un- willing to or incapable of purging their movement of the corruption, the racket- eering and the Communist infiltration so clearly revealed and documented by re-* cent congressional investigations and Federal prosecutions. They are the lead-, ers who revealed their obsessive fear of their own rank and file membership when they fought the Labor Management Re- porting Act of 1959, an act which simply guaranteed the individual member's equal rights and privileges to participate in elections and meetings; freedom of speech and assembly to discuss the con- duct of union officers; secret balloting in the election of officers, and the determi- nation of dues, fees, or other assess- ments; the right to take legal action against union officials for misconduct in office; and protection against arbitrary or improper suspension, expulsion, or other disciplinary action. These are the labor barons who casti- gated the Congress in vehement outrage for daring to require them to adopt con- stitutions and bylaws and to file with the Secretary of Labor copies of these, to- gether with other information on such matters as the rules governing admis- sions, dues, audits of funds, selection of officers, and strike votes. But the objects of their most violent abuse were those provisions requiring the filing of annual financial reports and spelling out the fiduciary responsibility of union officers managing union funds with safeguards provided, and the disqualification of con- victed criminals from holding such union positions. In view of the foregoing, Mr. President, is it any wonder that the rank and file of American workingmen are suspicious of these men and refuse to accept them as their spokesmen; that the labor move- ment has failed to grow appreciably in membership since 1947 despite an in- crease of more than 4 million in the labor force; or that the only way such leaders can expect to even hold the loyalty of their present membership is through compulsory, involuntary unionization? No, Mr. President, these bigtime labor bosses do not speak for the rank and file; nor do they speak for the responsible labor leaders of the past and present, or for many other constitent and influential friends of their movement who likewise reject the concept of compulsory unioni- zation. What more conclusive argument could be cited against the repeal of 14(b) than the statement made by Samuel Gompers, the father of the American labor move- ment, to the American Federation of Labor Convention in 1924. Warning against policies based on compulsion and force, Mr. Gompers said: So long as we have held fast to voluntary principles, and have been actuated and in- spired by the spirit of service. we have sus- tained our forward progress and we have made our labor movement something to be respected and accorded a place. in the coun- cils of our Republic. Where we have blun- dered into trying to force a policy on a decision, even though wise and right, we have impeded, if not interrupted, the realization of our aims. Men and women of our American trade union movement, I feel I have earned the right to talk plainly to you. As the only delegate to that first * * * convention (in Pittsburgh) who has stayed with the prob- lems of our movement through !:o the present hour, as one who with clean hands and with singleness of purpose has tried to serve the labor movement honorably and in a spirit of consecration to the cause of humanity. I want to urge devotion to the f undasnentals of human liberty-the principle of volun- tarism. If we seek to force, we but tear apart that which, united, is invincible. Understanding, patience, high-minded service, the compelling power of voluntarism have in America made what was but a rope of sand, a united, purposeful. integrated organization, potent for human welfare, ma- terial, and spiritual. * * * * * As I review the events of my 60 years of con- taot with the labor movement, and as I sur- vey the problems of today, and study the op- portunities of the future, I want to say to you, men and women of the American labor move- ment, do not reject the cornerstone upon which labor's structure has been builded- but base your all upon voluntary principles and illumine your every problem by con- secrated devotion to that highest of all pur- poses-human well-being in the fullest, wid- est, deepest sense. Mr. President, I invite each Senator's attention to Mr. Gompers' statement of the basic moral and legal principle de- bated here today: There may be here and there a worker who for certain reasons unexplainable to us does not join a union of labor. That is his right no matter how morally wrong he may be. It is his legal right and no one can or dare ques- tion his exercise of that legal right. Does anyone dispute the fact that one of the truest, ablest, and most eloquent friends American labor ever had in the judicial councils of this Nation was Mr. Justice Brandeis? Yet can there be found a more clear, cogent or persuasive argument against compulsory unioniza- tion than his following statement quoted by Justice Frankfurter in A.F. of L. v. American Sash Co., 335 U.S.: It is not true that the success of a labor union necessarily means a perfect monopoly. The union, in order to attain or preserve for its members industrial liberty, must be strong and stable. It need not include every member of the trade. Indeed, it is desirable for both the employer and the union that it should not. Absolute power leads to ex- cesses and to weakness: Neither our charac- ter nor our intelligence can long bear the strain of unrestricted power. The union at- tains success when it reaches the ideal con- dition, and the ideal condition for a union is to be strong and stable, and yet to have in the trade outside its own ranks an appreci- able number of men who are nonunionists. In any :free community the diversity of char- acter, of beliefs, of taste--indeed mere self- ishness--will insure such a supply, if the en- joyment of this privilege of individualism is protected by law. Such a nucleus of unor- ganized labor will check oppression by the union as the union checks oppression by the employer. Mr. President, the untenable position in which the proponents have been placed by the legal, moral, and rational im- potence of their cause, as well as their mortal fear of public debate on this is- sue, was clearly exposed by the sheer desperation with which they tried to ramrod this measure through the first session by legislative juggernaut. This strategy was necessarily dictated by the knowledge that such a proposal cannot stand on right or reason but must base its chances on a blitz-like applica- tion of massive political power. Propos- als such as the repeal of 14(b) cannot withstand the light of public examina- tion or the deliberate consideration of the normal legislative processes, for it is predicated not on principle, but on power, not on right, but on might. Certainly no one can question the cre- dentials of Justice Black as a consistent and faithful spokesman for the Liberal establishment. Yet, I would direct your attention to Justice Black's dissenting opinion in the case of International .Asso- ciation of Machinists v. Street, et al., 367 U.S. 740, 6 L. Ed. 2d. 1141 (1961), wherein he stated: Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof; or abridging the free- dom 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. Probably no one would suggest that Con- gress could, without violating this amend- ment, pass a law taxing workers, or any per- sons for that matter (even lawyers), to cre- ate a fund to be used in helping certain po- litical parties or groups favored by the Gov- ernment to elect their candidates or promote their controversial causes. Compelling a man by law to pay his money to elect candidates or advocate laws or doctrines he is against differs only in degree, if at all, from com- pelling him by law to speak for a candidate, a party, or a cause he is against. The very reason for the first amendment is to make the people of this country free to think, speak, write, and worship as they wish, not as the Government commands. There is, of course, no constitutional reason why a union or other private group may not spend its funds for political or ideological causes if its members voluntarily join it and can voluntarily get out of it. Labor unions made up of voluntary members free to get in or out of the unions when they please have played important and useful roles in politics and economic affairs. How to spend its money is a question for each voluntary group to decide for itself in the absence of some valid law forbidding activities for which the money is spent. But a different situation arises when a Federal law steps in and author- izes such a group to carry on activities at the expense of persons who do not choose to be members of the group as well as those who do. Such a law, even though validly passed by Congress, cannot be used in a way that abridges the specifically defined freedoms of the first amendment. And whether there is such abridgment depends not only on how the law is written but also on how it works. There can be no doubt that the federally sanctioned union shop contract here, as it actually works, takes a part of the earnings F~~XMAinMAMkI~AUeae~I111A1*IIAAn Mrisn%aMAMMWiwAF~uNr~IIAIXMnn~nAIMIM11NiIN[II~MAWMMIWi'IMIIIWiN b11IX4!19MMMlI~A~IP~NM~XMIM'I iMMIiNUin x. .?.?~-....?.._ _ Approved For Release 2006/11/06: CIA-RDP67B00446R000400010003-3 January ..9, 19 66 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD -SENATE of some men and turns it over to others, who spend a substantial part of the funds so re- ceived in efforts to thwart the political, eco- nomic, and ideological hopes of those whose money has beenforced from them under au- thority of law. This Injects Federal com- pulsion into the political and ideological processes, a result which I have supposed everyone would agree the first amendment was particularly intended to prevent. And it makes no difference If, as is urged, political and legislative activities are helpful adjuncts of collective bargaining. Doubtless employ- ers could make the same arguments in favor of compulsory contributions to an association of employers for use in political and economic programs calculated to help collective bar- gaining on their side. But the argument is equally unappealing whoever makes it. The stark fact Is that this act of Congress Is being used as a means to exact money from these employees to help get votes to win elections for parties and candidates and to support doctrines they are against. If this Is con- stitutional the first amendment is not the charter of political and religious liberty its sponsors believed it to be. James Madison, who wrote the amendment, said in arguing for religious liberty that "the same authority which can force a citizen to contribute 3 pence only of his property for the support of any one establishment, may force him to conform to any other establishment In all cases whatsoever." And Thomas Jefferson said that "to compel a man to furnish con- tributions of money for the propagation of opinions which he disbelieves, is sinful and tyrannical." These' views of Madison and Jefferson authentically represent the philos ophy embodied in the safeguards of the first amendment. That amendment leaves the Federal Government no power whatever to compel one man to expend his energy, his time, or his money to advance the fortunes of candidates he would like to see defeated or to urge ideologies and causes he believes would be hurtful to the country. The Court holds that 2, 11th denies "unions, over an employee's objection, the power to use his exacted funds to support political causes which he opposes" While I do not so contrue 2, 11th, I want to make clear that I believe the first amendment bare use of dues extorted from an employee by law for the promotion of causes, doctrines and laws that unions generally favor to help the unions, as well as any other political purposes. I think workers have as much right to their own views about matters af- fecting unions as they have to views about other matters in the fields of politics and economics. Indeed, some of their most strongly held views are apt to be precisely on the subject of unions, just as questions of law reform, court procedure, selection of judges and other aspects of the administra- tion of justice give rise to some of the deep- est and most irreconcilable differences among lawyers. In my view, section 2, 11th can, constitutionally authorize no more than to make a worker pay dues to a union for the sole purpose of defraying the cost of acting as his bargaining agent. Our Government has no more power to compel individuals to support union programs or union publica- tions than it has to compel the support of political programs, employer programs or church programs. And the first amendment, fairly construed, deprives the Government of all power to make any person pay out one single penny against his will to be used in any- way to advocate doctrines or views he is against, whether economic, scientific, po- litical, religious or any other. I would therefore hold that section 2, 11th of the Railway Labor Act, in authorizing ap- plication. of the union-shop contract to the named protesting employees who are appel'- lces here; violates the freedom of speech guarantee of , the first amendment. - I cannot agree to treat so lightly the value of a man's constitutional right to be wholly free from any sort of governmental compul- sion in the expression of opinions. It should not be forgotten that many men have left their native lands, languished in prison, and even lost their lives, rather than give sup- port to ideas they were conscientiously against. Unions composed of a voluntary member= ship, like all other voluntary groups, should be free in this country to fight in the pub- lic forum to advance their own causes, to promote their choice of candidates and parties and to work for the doctrines or the laws they favor. But to the extent that Government steps in to force people to help espouse the particular causes of a group, that group-Whether- composed of railroad work- ers or lawyers-loses its status as a volun- tary group. The reason our Constitution en- dowed individuals with freedom to think and speak and advocate was to free people from the blighting effect of either a partial or a complete governmental monopoly of ideas. Labor unions have been peculiar bene- ficiaries of that salutary constitutional prin- ciple, and lawyers, I think, are charged with a peculiar responsibility to preserve and protect this principle of constitutional free- dom, even for themselves. A ,violation of it, however small, is, in my judgment, pro- hibited by the first amendment and should be stopped dead in its tracks on its first ap- pearance, Mr. President, the untenable position in which the proponents have been placed by the legal, moral, and rational impo- tence of their cause, as well as their mortal fear of public debate on this is- sue, was clearly exposed by the sheer des- peration with which they tried to ram- rod this measure through the first ses- sion by legislative juggernaut. . This strategy was necessarily dictated by the knowledge that such a proposal cannot stand on right or reason but must base its chances on a blitz-like applica- tion of massive political power. Propo- sals such as the repeal of 14(b) cannot withstand the light of public examina- tion or the deliberate consideration of the normal legislative processes, for it is predicated not on principle, but on power, not on right, but an might. There were those who believed that the. awesome legislative power of the ad- ministration, combined with the coercive force of the labor bosses who have com- mitted it to this unworthy, would con- stitute an irrepressible combination: But they did not anticipate the ground- swell of public outrage which would rise up against them, having badly misjudged the character and prsonality of the indi- vidual American workingman. As stated by William Jennings Bryan at the National Democratic Convention of 1896: - The humblest citizen of all the land, when clad in the armor of a righteous cause, is stronger than all the hosts of error * * You shall not press down upon the brow of labor this crown of thorns. Mr. President, they will not deprive the workingmen of the 19 right-to-work States their freedom of association or their right to live and work as- they please. - This Congress will not repeal 14(b). Mr. President, I ask unanimous con- sent to have printed in the RECORD an editorial entitled, All 50 States Are In- 1451 volved," published in the . Biloxi, Miss., Herald, September 6, 1965. The PRESIDING OFFICE1 (Mr. BYRD of Virginia in the chair). It there ob- jection? There being no objection, the editorial was ordered to be printed in the RECORD, as follows: [From the Biloxi (Miss.) Herald, Sept. 6, 1965] ALL 60 STATES ARE INVOLVED Some folks seem to be under the impres- sion that the repeal of section 14(b) of the Taft-Hartley law, which is now being con- sidered by the U.S. Senate, would affect only the nonunion wage earners in those States which presently have right-to-work laws. Nothing could be further from the truth. In addition to striking out the freedom of work- ingmen in those 19 right-to-work States either to join or not join a labor union, the repeal of section 14(b) would increase the political power of union bosses far beyond its present level, and thus threaten the citizens of alp States with what would amount to a union-boss dictatorship, based on compul- sory unionism and effected through the in- stitutions of our Federal and State Govern- ments. - - As Reed Larson, exective vice president of the National Right-to-Work Committee, said recently in Detroit: "The existence of 14(b) and the possibility of a State prohibition on compulsory unionism provides an important restraint on. abuses of union power in every State, whether or not they have a State right- to-work law or an active campaign to achieve one." - We do not question the right of union bosses, or anyone else, to participate in pol- itics. But they should not be allowed to do so with money extracted from a wage earner's pockets as a condition for his earning a liv- ing. Unquestionably; the repeal of section 14(b) would enable the unions to do just that, on a nationwide scale. The already dangerous extent of union- boss political power is evidenced by the man- ner in which the political proposal to repeal section 14(b) was bulldozed through the House of Representatives. Our main objection to repeal of section 14(b) is that it further extends Federal con- trol over the rights of the various States. Mississippi is one of the States that has passed and added to its constitution a right- to-work amendment. The Federal Govern- ment would, under the repeal act, prohibit Mississippi, from enforcing an act now in its constitution. - While 'nonunion employees may get ad- vantage of some of the negotiations of unions, this is also true of nonmembers of chambers of commerce. There are no- laws forcing membership in a chamber of com- merce and there should be none. The same should continue to apply to unions if each individual State desires to pass such laws. Mr. EASTLAND. Mr. President, I ask unanimous consent to have printed in the- RECORD an editorial entitled, "The Right To Vote and Work," published in the Greenwood, Miss., Commonwealth, September 14, 1965. There being no objection, the editorial was ordered to be printed in the RECORD, as follows: RIGHT To VOTE AND Woza? Some of the most important and far-reach- ing legislation the current Congress is still considering has to do with labor. At the top of the list is the drive to re- peal section 14(b) of the Taft-Hartley Act which permits States, if they so choose to enact right-to-work laws. This has passed Approved For Release 2006/11/06: CIA-RDP67B00446R000400010003-3 Approved For Release 2006/11/06: CIA-RDP67B00446R000400010003-3 1452 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD - SENATE the House and is now in the Senate. If the Senate succumbs to the powerful, even ruth- less, political pressures which demand repeal. rank-and-file working people will be deprived of an absolutely essential right and protec- tion. No matter what their beliefs and wants, they will be forced to join and pay dues to a private organization, a union, or lose their jobs. This is as unthinkable as if Congress passed a law denying a man the right to join a union. Along with this, another vital issue is at stake. It is the right to vote. This simply means that no union should be certified as a bargaining agent for employees without a secret ballot election supervised by the Na- tional Labor Relations Board. As of now, certification can be gained on the basis of a card count. The weaknesses in this are glar- ing. As the Cincinnati Enquirer has said, "Certification of a union as the bargaining agent for a group of employees should not be made on the basis of signatures to cards, as pressures conceivably could be used to ob- tain these that would not be operative in a secret election ^ * *. No should there be a recognition simply on the basis of a con- tract between employer and union leader be- cause there have been cases where so-called sweetheart contracts scratched the back of the employer and the union boss but sold out the workingman. The weary charge that right-to-work and right-to-vote laws are antiunion is as phony as a $3 bill. They are, instead, protections against exploitation and misrepresentation of the desires and beliefs of the workingman who should have freedom of choice. Mr. EASTLAND. Mr. President, I ask unanimous consent to have printed in the RECORD an editorial entitled, "The Right to Vote in Union Matters," pub- lished in the Clarion Ledger, Jackson, Miss., August 26, 1965. There being no objection, the editorial was ordered to be printed in the RECORD, as follows: (From the Jackson (Miss.) Clarion-Ledger, Aug. 26, 19651 RIGHT TO VOTE IN UNION MATTERS If our U.S. Senators and Representatives were elected to office by some of the same procedures used by a labor union to get se- lected as the employees' representative, there would be a great hue and cry around the Nation. The truth Is that in some instances the National Labor Relations Board in Washing- ton has been depriving employees of the right to a secret ballot in determining whether or not they want a union. Official records clearly show that this has happened in NLRB rulings. In some cases, the Board actually requires businessmen to bargain with a union even though a majority of their employees do not want that union. Senator FANNIN of Arizona said In a recent floor speech: While Congress has legislated to give the vote to all Americans, the Na- tional Labor Relations Board is eliminating such right for the American worker in de- termining union representation. Several members of the Senate have in- troduced bills to guarantee employees the right to a secret ballot election. It will be Interesting to see how these proposals fare with the majority of Senators overwhelm- ingly favorable to the so-called voting rights bill recently steamrolled through Con- gress. Unfortunately, by various reports, many in Congress are not even aware of the legal loopholes under which workers can be de- prived of their right to vote in union elec- tions. Many people believe workers always have the right to decide by secret ballot whether or not a majority of them want a particular union as their representative, This is not true. So before even considering the repeal of section 14(b) of the Taft-Hartley Labor Act which guarantees the right to work, Congress should make certain that workers are guar- anteed the right to vote in any and all elec- tions pertaining to union representation. Mr. EASTLAND. Mr. President, I ask unanimous consent to have printed in the RECORD a guest editorial entitled, "The Union Power Grab," which was published in the Jackson, Miss., Clarion Ledger of August 30, 1965. There being no objection, the editorial was ordered to be printed in the RECORD, as follows: [From the Jackson (Miss.) Clarion-Ledger, Aug. 30, 1965] A UNION POWER GRAB (A guest editorial from the New York Herald Tribune) The House vote to repeal section 14(b) of the Taft-Hartley Act pays the first install- ment of President Johnson's campaign debt to the princes of organized labor. The man- ner in which the repeal bill was railroaded through the House, with debate severely limited and amendments barred, certainly does no credit to its managers; nor does the cynical administration-engineered log-roll- ing in which votes for repeal were swapped for the promise of votes for the new farm bi11. But the House has acted; it's now up to the Senate. The actual importance of 14(b) may be more symbolic than real, but the principle involved is large; whether a worker should be coerced into joining a union, whatever his objections, on pain of losing his livelihood. This is what the unions demand. They defend this demand on the grounds of a supposed "right of contract"-the right of an employer and a union to agree on con- tract terms requiring membership. And if the issue were solely between employer and union, this would be a valid right. But it isn't; the whole point of such a contract is that two parties bargain away the rights of a third--the nonunion worker. The free ride argument, too, is specious. It's true that a union bargains for all em- ployees in a given company, not only for Its own members-but it was the unions them- selves that insisted on being certified as the exclusive bargaining agents even if only 51 percent of the workers elected to join. To parlay, this into an insistence that all should be required to join is to argue that one privi- lege demands another. Unions today are much more than bargain- ing agents; they are, among other things, powerful political organizations, and the whole notion of coerced membership in a political Organization is repugnant to the American ideal of personal liberty. To strip away even the limited protection 14(b) gives the dissenting worker would put the force of Federal law behind an unconscion- able private power grab. Mr. EASTLAND. Mr. President, I ask unanimous consent to have printed in the body of the RECORD an editorial en- titled "Dictates of Conscience," from the Hinds County Gazette of August 21, 1965. There being no objection, the editorial was ordered to be printed in the RECORD, as follows: [From the Hinds County Gazette, Raymond. Miss., Aug. 21, 1965] DICTATES OF CONSCIENCE There are times, so we've been told, when a Congressman or Senator may feel compelled, in good conscience, to take a stand on some January 29, 1966 particular issue which he knows full well is contrary to the wishes of the majority of his constituents. By so doing, he unquestion- ably would risk being voted out of office at the next election. And we would respect such a man for his conscientiousness, even if we disagreed with his position. But, we don't take it for granted, in such cases, that someone is really following the dictates of conscience just because he claims so. We expect, for example, that this might be the claim of many among the 221 Mem- bers of the present Congress who voted re- cently to repeal section 14(b) of the Taft- Hartley Act despite the fact freely admitted by many of them that their constituents were overwhelmingly in favor of keeping that pro- vision in the law. We don't doubt one bit that some of them were voting according to some dictates; but not, we are equally cer- tain, of conscience. Theirs was, in our opinion, an entirely un- conscionable act. It demonstrated a willing- ness on their part to violate several of the basic and inherent rights of all American working men and women, those who are union members as well as those who are not, in order to ingratiate themselves with power- lusting elements in Government and in the hierarchies of labor unions. Mr. EASTLAND. Mr. President, I ask unanimous consent that several addi- tional editorials be printed at this point in the RECORD. There being no objection, the editorials were ordered to be printed in the RECORD, as follows: [From the Jackson (Miss), Clarion-Ledger, Sept. 5, 1965 ] FORCING WORKERS To JOIN UNIONS NOT RIGHT WAY To GET Mzseezas The prounion Senate Labor Committee has voted, 12 to 3, to clear a bill which would repeal section 14(b) of the Taft-Hartley Act that allows, 119 States Including Mississippi, to compulsory union membership with right- to-work laws. While no date has been set for action on this bill by the full Senate, it will certainly face a bitter fight when it does come up for debate. Southern Democrats and conserva- tive Republicans who oppose this measure promise to offer many amendments and ex- tensive arguments. Meanwhile, it is interesting to note results of a study just published by the National Bureau of Economic Research, showing that labor union membership has declined in post- war years. In the 5 years following 1957, while non- farm civilian employment rose by nearly 4 million, membership in American labor unions dropped, by 1,800,000. From a peal: membership of 17,700,000 in 1957, the union rolls fell to 15,900,000 at the end of 1962. Today only I nonfarm worker in 4 is a union member whereas at the peak, it was one worker in three. Labor leaders blame "automation" for shifting many workers to white collar jobs where they don't want to join unions, and unionists also blame right-to-work laws for the membership decline. This has given an excuse to demand repeal of section 14(b), with support from President Johnson. "But if the Senate surrenders to this pres- sure and votes to repeal it, as the House already has done," says the Chicago Tribune editorially, "the unions will have to find other scapegoats, because the right-to-work laws have had almost nothing to do with falling membership. "In the first place, only 19 States have such laws and none of these is a labor stronghold," the Tribune points out. "The establishment of compulsory union membership would yield only a trickle of new union members. What's more, these new members would hardly be happy ones." Approved For Release 2006/11/06: CIA-RDP67B00446R000400010003-3 Approvea or e ease /11/06: CIA-RDP67B00446R000400010003-3 January. 29,.-1966 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD -SENATE 1453 [From the McComb (Miss.) Enterprise-. Journal, August 2, 1965],, ---WOULD SELL US OUT, YET CRY, "KEEP LIBERTY ALIVE" Former President Dwight Eisenhower said, "I have always supported 14(b) because I believe in the right to each State to deter- mine for itself what it wants to do. Sec- tion 14(b) should remain in the law." What is section 14(b)? This is the section of the Taft-Hartley law which provides that States can have their own right-to-work laws. The right-to-work law means what the title suggests-that a worker has the right to work whether he is a union member or not. It means that a man cannot be denied the right to join a union. It means also that 'a union cannot force a worker to belong to a union. Tens of thousands of people in our coun- try today blame all of our evils on the communists. Many will fall to interest themselves in our basic problems. They think that all that is required to be patriotic is to damn the communists and to blame them for our wrongs. This is dangerous be- cause many people who fear tyranny from abroad fail to recognize its development when they see it promoted by Americans right here an our own doorsteps. The effort to repeal the right-to-work laws is not a communist endeavor. It is a propo- sition advocated by Americans. And few things can jeopardize our individual liber- ties than the rescinding of this portion of the Taft-Hartley law. Who is doing this? First the union loaders are seeking the repeal to open the doors to the collection of union dues whether or not workers want to pay them. The President of the United States is pushing this proposi- tion. Many Senators and Congressmen are pushing for the repeal. Why? Because they promised to support the union bosses in exchange for the political support given in the last election. This effort is a shameful attack upon American freedoms. Yet the average Tom, Dick, and Harry is showing little concern. This indifference places the freedoms of Americans in jeopardy. The political indication today is that with the aid of President Johnson and his aids in the House and Senate that the State right-to-work laws will be invalidated; .that the Taft-Hartley law will be modified to outlaw them. It is strange that such a gross attack can be made upon a thing so vital to the per- petuation of freedom and yet so few voices are being raised against it. It appears at times that many Americans would prefer to blame our evils on the communists and let it go at that. This threat to freedom is not a communist threat. It is a threat by Americans, many of whom are waving the flag and crying, "Let's Keep America Free." [From the Meridian (Miss.) Star, Aug. 17, 1965] MORE CONTRADICTIONS The record is replete with contradictory statements made by Lyndon B. Johnson ("night-blooming Judas") on important issues. A striking example of this is Johnson's current position favoring repeal of the right to work law, as opposed to the position he took when running for the Senate in 1948. The House has voted to repeal the law, which is section 14(b) of the Taft-Hartley law. The Senate has not voted on the matter. The statements made by Johnson when he was running for the,Senate against Coke Stevenson In 1948 are interesting to say the least: "I have never sought nor do I seek now the support of any labor bosses dictating to free men anywhere, anytime." (Dallas News, August 10, 1948; Associated Press Story.) "Although I have been a friend of the work- ing man, these big labor racketeers have voted to destroy me_, and other forthright. Congressmen who had the courage to vote for the Taft-Hartley bill." "Lyndon Johnson voted for the Taft-Hart- ley anti-Communist law because he believes that no group of men-big labor or big busi- ness-should possess the power to wreck our national welfare and economy." "Lyndon Johnson will never vote to repeal this law." (Radio program on KRLD as re- ported by the Dallas News, August 18, 1948.) Texans assure him that he is 100 percent correct when he says there are only two great issues before Texas and the Nation today, the Congressman said. "One is whether we should bow our necks to labor dictatorship through the repeal or softening of the anti-Communist Taft-Hart- ley bill, the other is the question of foreign policy." (Dallas News, August 20, 1948.) [From the Natchez (Miss.) Democrat, Aug. 4, 1965] STEAMROLLER TACTICS Just as had been anticipated President Johnson and his ultraliberal administration are using every steamroller tactic possible in an effort to force the U.S. Congress to repeal section 14(b) of the Taft-Hartley Act. This is not only to pay organized labor for their vote in the last election, but is also their bid for their vote in the next election in order to retain and expand the present ob- noxious liberal government and its policies. This move would nullify laws in 19 States, including Mississippi, which now forbids compulsory union membership as a condition for getting and keeping a job. Reduced to essentials, the issue here is freedom-an individual's freedom to choose, freedom to associate with others, or to ab- stain from such membership activity and association as he may see fit. The foundation of American liberty has been the rights of each person. These rights must not be replaced by the alleged right of a group to compel the individual to conform to group purposes. There is no room in this concept for com- pulsory membership and dues-paying in any nongovernmental organization-church, union, farm group, veterans' association, business group, or political party. It is a known fact that the union move- ment uses dues to support chosen candi- dates. The preamble to the famous "Statute of Virginia for Religious Freedom," drafted by Thomas Jefferson himself, has stated this principle concisely: "To compel a man to furnish contributions of money for the propagation of opinions which he disbelieves or abhors is sinful and tyrannical." A United Nations resolution, approved by the General Assembly in 1948, has affixed this concept of civil liberty in these plain words: "Everyone has the right to freedom to peaceful assembly and association. No one may be compelled to belong to an asso- ciation." For a labor union to take a member's dues and use them to finance economic or political programs he may abhor, or to help elect some public candidate to whom he is opposed, is repugnant to freedom. Certainly the forcible herding of member. ship is more akin to foreign dictatorship than to American principles of freedom and democracy. It mocks justice and commonsense to argue that it is wrong to force a worker to stay out of a union-but right to force him .to join one. The best interests of the general pub- lic, individual. workers, and the unions them- selves will be served by keeping section 14(b) of the Taft-Hartley Act as it is now written into the law of the land. [From the Jackson (Miss.) Clarion-Ledger, Sept. 6, 1965] BABSON'S REPORT: Unions To GAIN MUCH BY REPEAL BAasoN PARR, Mass.-The big unions have been waging an uphill battle in recent years. Gains in membership have been hard to come by. As a percentage of the total work- force, unionism has been slipping. But all that will be changed with repeal of 14(b) of the Taft-Hartley Act-doing away with the right of the States to prohibit the union (closed) shop. From now on, we say, watch the unions roll to new heights of power. LOOKING BACK It was 30 years ago that labor was given its first magna carta, the Wagner Act. Un- der the sponsorship of the New Deal, this measure guaranteed the right of workers to organize to negotiate with employers, to strike, and to be protected against unfair labor practices. Employers, in general, claimed that the law was one-sided, giving full consideration to the unions but restrict- ing management. Over subsequent years, Congress has ap- peared to agree with this claim. In 1947 the Taft-Hartley Act was passed, over a Truman veto, giving protection to management's rights. It was promptly dub- bed a "slave labor act" by the unions. The congressional pendulum, nevertheless, continued to swing away from labor and toward management. By 1958 Congress was ready to force unions to file reports on their pension and welfare funds. Further restrictions were placed on orga- nized labor by way of the Landrum-Griffin Act of 1959, which barred certain types of picketing and secondary boycotts. SLOW TO SWING Over the last several years, union heads for the most part have maintained agreeable relations with the White House as well as with Government labor agencies. Labor's progress with Congress, however, has been slow. Not until the current session has there been a safe majority who could be counted on to get behind major demands of the unions and push through legislation favor- able to labor. Partly responsible has been the hard- fought battle of AFL-CIO groups to elect friendly aspirants to both the House and the Senate. Then, too, President Johnson has given encouragement, even though some- times rather muted, to a number of. union legislative targets. Upping of the minimum wage, for example-eventually to $1.75-and wider coverage. HUGE BOON Perhaps no other piece of legislation has netted labor leaders more than section 14(b) of the Taft-Hartley Act. The reason is clear. This section gives individual States the right to pass their own right-to-work laws making the involuntary union shop illegal. In the 19 States which have taken advan- tage of this opportunity under 14(b), it has meant that workers no longer had to join a union and pay dues in order to get or keep a job. Repeal of 14(b) will erase these State laws and bring a return of the union-shop labor contract. As a result, union exchequers in these 19 States could be increased by as much as $10 million by initiation feed alone coming from those employees who will have to become Approved For Release 2006/11/06: CIA-RDP67B00446R000400010003-3 Approved For Release 2006/11/06: CIA-RDP67B00446R000400010003-3 1454 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD ?- SENATE union m.ernbers if they are to work with firms that are under union contract. 'T'his, of course, will substantially improve the financial condition of such labor organi- zations; for the newly signed up members will be contributing regular dues each month. This will serve to strengthen labor's economic position for lobbying as well as in political campaigns. ):From the Jackson (Miss.) Clarion-Ledger, Sept. 19, 1965 j SENATE MTuST FACE REAL ISSUE IN CRUSADE AGATNST "RIGHT To WORK" Senators 1?ASTLWn and STENNIS of Missis- sippi, along with other level-headed srates- men in the Upper Chamber, have a great op- portunity to rescue Congress from its deplor- able reputation of being a "rubber stamp" body of "yes-men" for the White House. This opportunity lies in it Senate chance to defeat legislation passed by the House of Representatives to repeal section 14(b) of the Taft-Hartley Labor Act. This section au- thorizes the right-to-work law now effective in Mississippi and 18 other progressive States, It guarantees the worker's right to get and hold a job without being forced to join a labor union and pay dues. This is not just an issue of employee versus employer, nor is it an issue between union and management. Shall the States be free to pass or not to pass right-to-work laws? Shall the work- ers be free to decide whether they want to join unions nr not? Or shall the only re- maining freedom be the freedom of labor unions to force every worker to join a union where contracts apply? The tired old argument that section 14(b) is unfair to onion efforts to recruit new members, or to organize new industries, sim- ply is not borne out by their increasing power and influence. Nor does the argument stand up that workers suffer because of lower wages and unemployment. U.S. Department of Commerce figures show that personal income, numbers of jobs ava:il- a.ble and rises in hourly wages have increased by a greater percentage in right-to-work States than in. these where unions have monopoly on employment. At a time when Great Society masterminds assuring every minority are obsessed with member the "right to vote," the same clique is hell-bent on destroying the right to work without: union. membership and payment of dues. It seems quite Obvious that foes of section 14(b) are not really concerned with freedom, but are playing politics to the hilt. The Senate should vote to preserve the worker's freedom of choice, as a great service to personal rights, and as proof that "the world's greatest deliberative body" Is not a rcibberstamp for the Chief Executive in his efforts to pay a political debt for CIO-AFL aaapport in the last presidential campaign [From the Meridian (Miss.) Star, Sept. 15, 19651 YOU'RE Tti?.T.iJNr, Me: DISCRIMINATION An- I?nov50 Congress outlawed discrimination in ern- ployment because of color, race, religion, and ocx in the Civil Rights Act of 1964. So it is ironic, according to the Chamber of Com- toerce of the United States, that after ban- ning so many grounds for discrimination a majority of the Members of the House have approved discrimination based on nonunion membership. They did this when they voted 721 to 203 to repeal section 14(b) of the '['oft-Hartley Act. The section permits State right-to-work laws. These laws forbid dis- ;rimination because of nonunion member- rhip. The issue is now before the Senate. ifopefully the Senators will see the paradox of banning job discrimination last year but sanctioning it this year. Labor unions have nothing to fear from right-to-work laws, as shown by the growth they have had in States with these laws as compared to those with- out-Crowley (La.) Daily Signal. [Prom the Jackson (Miss.) Clarion-Ledger, Sept. 8, 19651 Fogs OF RIGHT-TO-WORK LAW IG;3oaE U.N.'s DEC LARA'TION OF HUMAN RIG ~ITs? (By Tom Ethridge) One-worlders and human rights crusaders of the Great Society have painted themselves into a corner, it appears, with their incon- sistent stand for and against compulsion as a policy of government. To repay labor leaders for herding their union flocks to the polls, and for spending huge sums from union treasuries in L.B.J.'s behalf last. year, the Johnson ado::nistration is now pressuring its rubberstamp Congress to nullify all right-to-work laws. These laws, now effective in Mississippi and 10 other States, forbid compulsory union membership and dues paying, as a condition for getting and holding a job. It also happens to be a fact that the United Nations (sacred cow) is firmly on rec- ord against compelling any individual to be- long to any organization against his or her wishes. The so-called U.N.'s Universal Declaration of Human Rights plainly stipulates in article L[ that, "No one may be compelled f o belong to an association," It's amusing to note that our new U.S. Ambassador to the United Nations, Arthur Goldberg, supposedly favors and upholds the U.N. Declaration of Human Rights, including the above quoted article II. But he is the same Arthur Goldberg who was a CIO labor union mastermind before his Supreme Court appointment and resig- nation to accept this new U.N. post. As a big-shot labor mastermind, he has been (and still is?) rabidly against ri;ht-to- work laws because they protect workers In 19 States from compulsory payment of union membership dues, often used for political purposes-such as keeping the national Democratic Party in power as a tool of big labor bosses. Flow on earth did the President manage to talk Arthur Goldberg into resigning bus im- portant job as a U.S. Supreme Court justice to accept the unimportant job as a V.,.;. Am- bassador to the United Nations? Various theories have been advanced but none more plausible than this bit of specula- tion by Commentator Ralph de Toledaa:o: Why, it was asked, would Mr. Goldberg leave a lifetime and prestigious post la the Nation's highest tribunal for the heart )roak and uncertainty of representing the United States at the U.N.? No matter how you looked at it, the tlol.d- berg acceptance made no sense. It was taken for granted that the President had done one of his skillful arm-twisting jobs, leaving Justice Goldberg no choice. The facts are considerably different, Wash- ington Commentator Tocldano goes on to say. Arthur Goldberg left his Supreme Court post. willingly and with joy in his heart. From sources close to the former Justice and after cross-checking at the Great Society's top echelons, Toledano oilers this intriguing theory. The President was anxious to pay off one big political debt and to have a loyal John- son. man on the Supreme Court. His choice was Abe Fortas, presidential braintrusi.er, leagal eagle, and troubleshooter. Mr. Fort-as, however, could not sit on the Court:-given, the rigid ethnic division that now obtains- without replacing a Jewish Justice; namely, Mr. Goldberg. Mr. Johnson, who likes to chalk up h'is- torical firsts, felt that he could use Mr. Gold- berg to achieve this purpose. Mr. Goldberg was quietly approached with this proposition: If he would accept the January/ 29, 1966 U.N. ambassadorship he would be rewarded with a precedent-shattering promotion. "There has never been a Jewish Vice Pree,i- dent," Lyndon Johnson told Mr. Goldberg. "If you will step down from the Supreme Court, I promise you the vice-presidential nomination in 1968. You will. therefore have a chance at the presidency in 1972 when I can no longer run." Justice Goldberg leaped to the suggestion. It has, moreover, been a badly kept secret that President Johnson had no intention to allow Mr. HuMn}IREY a second term in the Veep Spot. In the months to come, the administra- tion's publicity machine will do its utmost to make a national hero of Arthur Goldberg- His every move will be hailed as the acme of statesmanship and diplomatic brilliance. [From the Hernando (Miss.) Times- Promoter, Sept. 17, 19651 THE RIGHT To Wocac (By Vant Neff) Must you join a union to hold it job? It all depends on where you live. In some 31 States, if the company where you start work has a union, you either join or you're out. In 19 others, the choice is still yours-join or not-you can still get and keep a job. How long this choice will last Is up to Con- gress. President Johnson has just asked our lawmakers to take away that freedom. When the Taft-Hartley Labor Act was passed by Congress in 1947, the decision was left to the States as to whether their citizens would be compelled to join unions as a con- dition of employment. Now, 19 States have right-to-work laws, giving each worker the freedom to join a union or remain it non- member. Since 1947 a handful of big labor leaders have kept up the fight to knock out the right-to-work section of Taft-Hartley, section 14(b). Last fall, President Johnson promised to do this if elected. Now he has sent a mes- sage to Congress asking for repeal of 14(b) Many Washington insiders believe the President is paying off a debt for labor's help in his election campaign. Others say he doesn't really care whether the repeal comes through or not. It is a fact that when he was a Senator, he voted in favor of preserving this right to work. However, the bill to re- peal was sponsored by Representative FRANK THOMrsoN, Democrat, of New Jersey, and hearings are being held by a House labor subcommittee. Whatever the President's reasons, a man who carried 44 out of 50 States and beat his opponent by 16 million popular votes hardly owes his election to the labor vote. The cosponsor of Taft-Hartley, former Representative Fred A. Hartley, termed the Presidents recommendations "a ridiculous move." He pointed out that Bureau of Labor Sta- tisitcs figures show there have been less m,cn- hours lost and fewer strikes in right-to-work States than in non.-right-to-work States. Union leaders have spent millions of dol- lars fighting to repeal State right-to-work laws and millions more to keep States from putting them on the hooks. A single cam- paign in California, in 1958 was said to have cost $2 million. Naturally, leaders want to get these funds back and into union treas- uries. If 14(b) is wiped out, dues and fees from workers forced to join up would recoup these losses. Union leaders feel that non- members get a free ride from unions in the 19 States. Whatever the union gets in the way of benefits for members In a shop, non- members get too-without paying union dues or fees. This argument is weak. Many veterans benefit from the activities of the American Legion's campaign for housing, medical care, job opportunities, and the like. Yet they are not Legion members. Busnessmen profit Approved For Release 2006/11/06: CIA-RDP67B00446R000400010003-3 Approved For Release 2006/11/06: CIA-RDP67B00446R000400010003-3 January 29, 1966 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD - SENATE 1455 from the activities of the U.S. Chamber of divisive of their ambitions, will pull every summarily defeated, not just temporarily Commerce, but need not join the chamber. possible string to make their power over all put off again. Many Americans benefit from the services of of us undivided. The people therefore make Now is the time to do something about it- the American Red Cross but no one would sure that any move for 14(b)'s repeal next not waiting until repeal legislation is ac-next session. argue that all citizens should be compelled session will be summarily defeated, not just t ally brae go tup inthosethe 34 Senators and Now l 203 to join, whether they want to or not. temporarily put off again. Is t Labor leaders Congressmen who actively opposed repeal in [From the Jackson (Miss.) Clarion-Ledger, last session, how much we appreciate their work has keppt back c assert economithat c ic the progress crein Dec. 6, 1965] efforts. Now is also the time we should re- years 51953- This fart isn't true. In 10 mind all the others that a vote for repeal of Work States ins ANOTHER POWER GRAB SEEKING M CONTROL section 14(b) is a vote against the wishes of crease 1263 percent nonfarm employment but ut creased 26 in right-to-work UNEMPLOYMENT SYSTEM a majority of their constituents. Next year but only 10 percent in others. Individual Businessmen and industrialists of Mis- is congressional election year, and as that income increased 43 percent against 35 per- sissippi share the nationwide concern over day of reckoning draws closer some of those cent for the rest of the country. Real wealth Federal efforts to gain control over another who rubberstamped the union bosses' de- produced 60 percent in right-to-work States; State function, and that is control over all mand for 14(b) Is repeal last session may 36 percent in other States. the State-managed unemployment compen- become more anxious to please voters than to Industry seems to be attracted to right-to- sation systems. do the bidding of the President or his union work States. As Republican Senator PAUL The House Ways and Means Committee of boss friends. FANIN, of Arizona, has said, "We are con- Congress has held extensive hearings this A coalition of Republicans and Democrats vinced that it (right to work) has been an year on H.R. 8282 which contains the pro- in Congress held the line for us last year, aid to us in our industrial development posed legislation that would authorize a against the power play of the union bosses activities." single federalized unemployment compen- and their puppet politicians. The 2d session Behind the reasons unions give for the re- sation system. of the 89th Congress starts in just a few peal of 14(b), one fact stands out. The peak It would replace the individual State-Fed- weeks-January 10, to be exact--so it's our year for union membership was 1956-17.5 eral programs which have been operating turn now to prevent "a switch rather than a million members. In 1962, the latest figures successfully throughout the country for the fight." We can do this by again turning put union members at 16.6 million. This is last 30 years. loose a flood of mail calling on our Senators almost a million members down the drain in Besides removing the States from con- to stand firm against the Johnson-Meany- 6 short years at a time when 3 million new trolling positions in administration of un- Reuther-Hoffa domestic war on freedom. workers were entering labor's ranks. employment compensation, H.R. 8282 would Has the Federal Government the right to double the Federal corporate unemployment [From the Corinth (Miss.) Corinthian, tell any worker to join or starve? Most taxes over the next 3 years, and would force Sept. 15, 1965] Americans don't think so. A recent national all States to conform to national benefit- As WE SEE IT: RIGHT To WORK AND VOTE? public opinion poll showed 67 percent of all eligibility standards despite widely varying Some of the most important and far-reach- laws. queried, approved of right-to-work regional conditions. laws. This proposed legislation, as analyzed by ing legislation the current Congress is still How most of us feel was summarized by a the Weekly Labor Forecast and Review, would considering has to do with labor. Miami attorney, Bernard B. Weksler, before in effect abolish so-called experience rating, At the top of the list. is the drive to repeal the U.S. Supreme Court. "This right to work which rewards employers with lower tax rates section 14(b) of the Taft-Hartley Act which is a large ingredient in the civil liberty of the if they stabilize their employment. permits States, if they so choose, to enact citizen. The right to work Is equivalent to Although this proposed Federal takeover right-to-work laws. This has passed the the right to eat; and * * * to make one's of unemployment is of great significance, House and is now in the Senate. If the even bread depend on church or union member- news of the committee hearings was sub- Senate political succumbs pto the ice demand repeal- ship or or forced payment of money to a union merged by publicity on efforts to repeal sec- less, pas a condition of employment would be the tion 14(b) of the Taft-Hartley Labor Act rank-and-file working people will be deprived worst species of anti-Americanism. which authorizes right-to-work laws, excise of an absolutely essential right and protec- Labor leaders have gone too far in this tax reduction and other major actions of tion. No matter what their beliefs and forced and join pay latest attempt to extend their subcommittee th.It first the House Ways and duestst thaey organs at on, a u ion, or powers. Witnesses before the au btommittee say they will press for secret-ballot elections Means Committee will report out H.R. 8282 lose their jobs. This is as unthinkable as if for union membership drives, national right- for action as early as next February. After Congress passes a law denying a man the to-work laws, as well as amendments to do House action, this bill would go to the right to join a union. away with most of the special privileges Senate Finance Committee. Along with this, another vital issue is at unions now enjoy. Labor unions favor this legislation, while stake. It is the right to vote. This simply As one of America's great weekly maga- industry and business are opposed to a com- means that no union should be certified as zines wrote: "Let the Federal Government plete takeover of all State-managed unem- bargaining agent for employees without a face up honestly to the fact free collective ployment compensation systems. secret ballot election supervised by the Na- bargaining is impossible when one party The public could be adversely affected by tional Labor Relations Board. As of now, comes to the table with monopoly powers. such a change, so the people should join certification can be gained on the basis of a Labor union membership should be volun- with businessmen in opposing the measure card count. The weaknesses in this are tary-not compulsory." But the pressures known as H.R. 8282-which is another at- glaring. As the Cincinnati Enquirer has on the Con ress are tremendous, including tempted power grab by Federal bureaucrats, said, "Certification of a union as the bar- g gaining agent for a group of employees chances less t hey s to kill serve big their labor's a cob tio al s. If un- should not be made on the basis of signa- believe in of choice Instead. If you [From the Leland 19651 ) Progress, Dec. 9, tures to cards, as pressures conceivably could com- u sio , you freedom of well let tyof Sena- be used to Obtain these that would not be op- op- tors and ys Congressmen do well to lyour Sena- No TIME To RELAX erative in a secret election. * * * Nor should tors know it. The advocates of compulsion-that is, of there be a recognition simply on the basis of [From the Biloxi-Gulfport (Miss.) Daily compulsory unionism-have licked their a contract between employer and union lead- Herald, Dec. 11, 1966] wounds from last session's encounter, and er because there have been cases where so- are now preparing to try again to repeal sec- called sweetheart contracts scratched the To AGAIN SEEK REPEAL 14(b) tion 14(b) of the Taft-Hartley Act when back of the employer and the union boss but The advocates of compulsion-that is, of Congress reconvenes, In a recent letter to sold out the working man." compulsory unionism-have licked their union boss Walter Reuther, President John- The weary charge that right-to-work and wounds from last session's encounter, and son said: "We have made significant progress right-to-vote laws are "antiunion" is as are now preparing to try again to repeal sec- in 1965 toward the long-sought goal of re- phony as a $3 bill. They are, instead, pro- tion 14(b) of the Taft-Hartley Act when pealing section 14(b) * * * We will come tections against exploitation and misre?pre- Congress reconvenes. In a recent letter to back in the next session to remove this sentation of the desires and beliefs of the union boss Walter Reuther, President John- divisive provision from the law." workingman who should have freedom of son said: "We have made significant progress Those Senators who successfully defended choice. in 1965 toward the long-sought goal of re- 14(b) and the workingman's freedom of pealing section 14(b) * * *. We will come choice by filibuster last session have all [From the Jackson (Miss.) Clarion-Ledger, back in the next session to remove this vowed to stand their ground. But it will Dec. 10, 1965] divisive provision from the law." take more than just extended debate to win NEED NEW HOUSE VOTE To NULLIFY THREAT Those Senators who successfully defended again. Those power-mad union bosses and POSED EY COURT DECISION 14(b) and the workingman's freedom of politicians, who consider a workingman's choice by filibuster last session have all freedom to be "divisive" of their ambitions, There is ample merit in a proposal by the vowed to stand their ground. But it will will pull every possible string to make their National Federation of Independent Business essm .chance a to re take more than just extended debate twin power , must therefore make sure that any consid r their pr viousgvote on repeal of sec-- again. Thosese. union leaders ders and nd pal politicians, people, consider a workingman's freedom to be move for 14(b)'s repeal next session will be tied 14(b) of the Taft-Hartley Act, In view of Approved For Release 2006/11/06: CIA-RDP67B00446R000400010003-3 Approved For Release 2006/11/06: CIA-RDP67B00446R000400010003-3 1456 CONGRESSIONAI. RECORD - SENATE January 29, 1966 the recent Supreme Court ruling favorable to unionism States. The average weekly earn- cards" as a determining factor only if an Communists. ings of production workers in the In the session just ended, the House voted Fast; 10 ap ha by unfair means, destroyed years rose 46.8 percent in right-to-work an n e emmplo loyeem ajorfty. by a narrow majority to repeal the section States and only 42.8 percent in those States This, surely, is an amendment to which no which permits 19 States including Mississippi which permit compulsory unionism. In fact, legislator, no union leader should object, 14) enact and enforce right-to-work laws. 6 of the 15 States with the highest weekly and it is needed to protect a resaonable, I"inal action was held up in the Senate. earnings for production workers are right-to- fundamental right of millions of workers. The recent Supreme Court decision has work States. held it illegal to require Communists to regis- Does employment lag in those States which [From the Jackson (Miss.) News, Nov. 5, for with the Government. A ruling earlier allow voluntary unionism, as those who seek this year invalidated sections of the Lan- to repeal 14(h) insist? ,- 1965] ,,,-limes from folding office in labor turin - ---- ro.-;e 26 unions. g jobs in right-to-work k States rose 128 new The Supreme Court also has agreed to ex- manufacturing jobs declined decade. 7.6 But nt in amine a challenge brought against the pro- lion-right- perci:er of to-work States. The number of vision of the. ',Taft-Hartley Act requiring production workers in that period ro?e 3.9 union officers to lake an oath disclaiming percent in the right-to-work States brut fell membership in the Communist Party. 14.1 percent in compulsory unionism States. This grim situation, as emphasized by the Annual retail trade sales rose 20.3 percent National Federation of Independent Business, in right-to-work States, but only 16.7 percent boils down to the fact that there Is little pro- in non-right-to-work States, but onl 9:1.5 section now against Communists taking over percent-or 6 percentage points below the control of labor unions. rational average--in non-right-to-work The only recourse our people have against States. The same pattern can be seen in the possibility of workers being forced to pay bank deposits, motor vehicle registry Lions, union dues to support Communist programs retail trade payrolls, per capita and gross, per- is for States to enact right-to-work legislation sonal income, etc. forbidding compulsory payment of dues. Whether or not these gains in the right- to-in view of serious dangers created by un-? work States are due to the efi'ects of volun- fortunate Supreme Court rulings, it is quite tary unionism on the economy can be de- probable that many Congressmen who prey- bated. But the statistics prove conclusively ionsly voted to repeal section 14(b)--on the that the scare talk-that it hurts the wage basis of party regularity-will want to change earner--whose wish to repeal 14(b) is their vote on this vital legislation. hardly in line with the statistics. When Under procedures of Congress, in January Congress convenes, those facts and figures the House will not get another opportunity will most certainly be presented by those to vote on this measure, despite recent de- who wish to preserve both 14(b) and the vclopments, unless parliamentary procedures voluntary association of workers in free are employed. It; should be done, as quickly unions. as possible after the new session gets under way next month. [From the Natchez (Miss.) Democrat, Nov. I From the Yazoo City (Miss.) Herald, Dec. 23, 1965] 1)OEs TT ITIMRT WORKERS? 14(b) AGAIN To BE TARGET When Congress convenes In January, one of its first orders; of business will be legisla- tion to repeal section 14(b) of the Taft-Hart- ny Labor-Management Act. This provision Oierxnits the individual States to ban compul- sory unionism, and it has been under strong attack for years by the AFL-CIO. Repeal of 14(b) was blocked by the Sen- ate in the waning days of the last session. fnlormed sources report that President John- ~;on and a majority of both Houses would like to see repeal forgotten. It is argued that '.966 is an election year, and with a pre- ponderant majority of the American people opposed to compulsory unionism and favor- ing retention of 14(b) (as all polls show), a legislative battle will hurt the administra- tion. APT_CIi7 President George Meany Is de- termined to press for repeal. Other labor leaders concede that the issue has hurt the unions. Off the record, they will admit that repeal will do then little good. The motiva- tion of Mr. Meany's insistence, it is agreed, s emotional rather than practical. Any battle over voluntary versus compul- 1, 1965 ] MUST KEEP UP FIGHT Now that one of the most active con- gressional sessions in the history of the country is concluded, people are wondering what the 89th Congress will do for an encore when Its 2d session gets underway next year. There would seem to be very little left to do. The Great Society has been launched on a tide of laws whose ripples w Al be felt for decades. The Presidential proposals which Con- gress turned down can be counted on the fingers of one hand-such as repeal of the right-to-work clause of the Taft-Hartley law, raising the minimum wage, home rule for the District of Columbia. The answer given by most observers is that Congress will do very little major lawmak- ing in 1966, although President Johanson says he will put a "must" label on about 23 bills in another Great Society package. Compared to the energetic first. session, however, even this will amount to more or less tidying up of legislative odds and ends and correction of shortcomings and ineffi- ciencies in some of the Great Society pro- grams. The overall impression will he of sober, moderate democratic leadership which deserves approbation at the polls come No- vember. The real question in 1966 will be whether it will get it. The people have given a President a ma- jority of his own party in the legislative branch before, although seldom so decisively as they did in 1964. Traditionally, however, they have taken away or reduced that majority in nonpresi- dential election years. [From the Jackson (Miss.) News, Oct. 26, 19651 Just because the effort to repeal section 14:(b) of the Taft-Hartley Act has been shelved, we should not let up in efforts to insure the retention of the section, if and when the repealer comes up at the next session of Congress. And, in preparation for the renewed ef- fort, probably next year, it would be well for opponents to be read t ff y o o er melli owng RIGHT-TO-WORK NoxsEDxEs amendments to the repealer, should the ad- ministration through its growing deforming- section of the Taft-Hartley Act has sub- the repeal. sided in Congress this year, but by no means In event the is should happen, and is it forgotten. goodness knows that we certainly hope not, Labor took a decisive beating in the Sen- there is definitely one amendment which ate rejection of any steamroller tactics gen- should be added. crated by the administration in other John- It is an amendment sore-favored legislation, but they are not giving rank and file going to remain quiet. workers the right to vote by secret ballot. on the question of whether they do or do not Nineteen States were affected by the drive Want to belong to a union. Stranl;ely to deliberately eliminate the one section enough, present regulations deny employees guaranteeing the right of workers to belong this right, which would seem to be basic? or not to belong to labor organizations as a in :many cases. prerequisite to work. The Leader believes, and often lies st:mind Mississippi has long advocated and that section 14(b) should be rei'eined 111.1 stanchly defended this right of every ixidi- the Taft-Hartley Act. It believes that., if vidual to choose for himself whether lie repeal is achieved, it must be accompai:ied wanted to be represented by a fee-colleci.in by a right-to-vote provision which will in- organization or let the merit of his own pro_ ure that ductio t h n se a majority ofk is conduct with worers in any management. o ie ola.rms of repeal proponents that right particular instance actually do prefer the tabor claims to have the figures a i work damages the economy of the States union that proving wages are higher bft .,eneis greater and which enact it and hurts the wage earner Under present rules of the National Labor security stronger among workers in Stn tes ^110unmicsily. The basis for this argument is Relations Board, a union can be certifier; as backing union shop. slogs unions are weakened and greedy man- bargaining agent for employes if the union It might get faster results, and truer to the al;emenl: takes advantage of this by lowerin spirit of early leaders In the land, to redirect g presents "pledge cards" signed by a major W.iges. i.ty of the employees. These cards are lot some of their expensive lobbying efforts from lint is this true? Statistics from the Labor substitute for a secret: ballot, they are not the Halls of Congress to the factory benches Ilepa.rtment and the Commerce Department even secret, and in numerous instances they in the country, oducg and insisting on bet- would tend to question those allegations. do not represent the worker's true prefer.. ter quality of production. Infact, they point to increased prosperity once for union membership. They m;,ke It is a foregone conclusion that as the next si higher pay for the 19 right-to-work coersion possible and even likely. national elections come closer, labor will ex- states. The intent of the "right-to-vote" provi-. ert every effort to pressure Congressmen and Between 1953 and. 1963, for example, the Sion is to make sure that an uncoerced ma- other candidates for expressions of support I'ouriy earnings of the manufacturing work- Jority of workers wants the union. It would for complete union-dominated legislation. era increased 46.8 percent in right-to-work do this by requiring a fair, secret election, There should be no letup by those still .L,,tns, but only 41.5 percent in compulsory and it would permit the use of "preference convinced that free enterprise and the right d~C111G~?Qo0400010003-3 Approved For Release 2006/11/06: CIA-RDP67B00446R000400010003-3 January 29, 1966 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD - SENATE to work is the individual's choice and not. that of organized pressure. [From the Meridian (Miss.) Star, Oct. 30, 1965] LEGISLATIVE LULL Now that one of the most active congres-. sional sessions in the history of the country is concluded, people are wondering what the 89th Congress will do for an encore when its 2d session gets underway next year. There would seem to be very little left to do. The Great Society has been launched on a tide of laws whose ripples will be felt for decades. The Presidential proposals which Congress turned down can be counted on the fingers of one hand-such as repeal of the right-to- work clause of the Taft-Hartley law, raising the minimum wage, home rule for the Dis- trict of Columbia. The answer given by most observers is that Congress will do very little major lawmaking in 1966, although President Johnson says he will put a "must" label on about 23 bills in another Great Society package. Compared to the energetic first session, however, even this will amount to more or less tidying up of legislative odds and ends and correction of shortcomings and inefficiencies in some of the Great Society programs. The overall impression will be of a liberal Demo- cratic leadership at the polls come next November. The people have given a President a ma- jority of his own party in the legislative branch before, although seldom so decisively as they did in 1964. Traditionally, however, they have taken away or reduced that majority in nonpresi- dential election years. If President Johnson can convince the voters to break that pattern in 1966, and give him another topheavy Democratic Congress for 1967 and 1968, it will put him in the driver's seat again, and in a position to hold even tighter to the one-man rule he has now. [From the Vicksburg (Miss.) Post, Sept. 24, 19651 RIGHT To VOTE AND WORK? Some of the most important and far- reaching legislation the current Congress is still considering has to do with labor. At the top of the list is the drive to repeal section 14(b) of the Taft-Hartley Act which permits States, if they choose, to enact right- to-work laws. This has passed the House and is now in the Senate. If the Senate suc- cumbs to the powerful, even ruthless, politi- cal pressures which demand repeal, rank- and-file working people will be deprived of an absolutely essential right and protection. No matter what their beliefs and wants, they will be forced to join and pay dues to a pri- vate organization, a union, or lose their jobs. This is as unthinkable as if Congress passed a law denying a man the right to join a union. Along with this, another vital issue is at stake. It is the right to vote. This simply means that no union should be certified as bargaining agent for employees without a Secret ballot election supervised by the Na- tional Labor Relations Board. As of now, certification can be gained on the basis of a card count. The weaknesses in this are glar- ing. As the Cincinnati Enquirer has said, "Certification of a union as the bargaining agent for a group of employees should not be made on the basis of signatures to cards, as pressures conceivably could be used to obtain these that would not be operative in a secret election * * *. Nor should there be a rec- ognition simply on the basis of a contract between employer and union leader because there have been cases where so-called sweet- heart contracts scratched the back of the employer and the union boss but sold out thQ workingman." [From the Greenwood, (Miss.) wealth, Sept. 28, 1965] A BASIC RIGHT The battle to save section 14(b) of the Taft-Hartley Act-the section which author- izes States to pass right-to-work laws for- bidding. compulsory union membership as a connection of employment-has not been lost, even though repeal has passed the House. Every legitimate effort is being made to save this essential protection of the worker in the Senate. At the same time, if 14(b) is repealed the workers can be forced to join and pay dues to a union or join the hungry ranks of the unemployed. Congress should at the very least add another stipulation to the law. This has to do with a tightening up of union certification procedures. That should only be done through secret elections conducted by the National Labor Relations Board. Cer- tification-which is gained through the sig- natures of workers on cards is totally un- satisfactory. Investigations have shown that, at times, signatures are forged or fictitious or have been obtained through fraud, misrep- resentation, coercion, or other such methods. What is at stake here is the right to vote. As the Memphis Press-Scimitar puts it, "If a contract is to bind every employee to pay union dues whether he likes it or not, is it too much to ask for a secret ballot to make sure the union at least has majority sup- port?" There is nothing antiunion in this. It would make it accurately and truly known whether any group of workers want or do not want union representation. This is, beyond cavil, a basic right, and so is the right of choice to join or not join. [From the Jackson (Miss.) Clarion-Ledger, Sept. 29, 1965] FORCING WORKERS To JOIN UNION IS AN EAR- MARK OF DICTATORSHIP Typical of every dictatorship, whether Fascist or Communist, has been compulsory membership in trade unions, so it is more than slightly ironic that the United States should be the first "free country" to attempt compulsory union membership-by efforts to repeal section 14(b) of our Taft-Hartley Labor Act. Dr. Melchoir Palyi, consulting economist whose authoritative views are featured regu- larly in the Chicago Tribune, puts the "lib- eral" drive against right-to-work laws in this light: If Congress passes the bill to repeal sec- tion 14(b), prompted as it is by the Presi- dent, who was as late as last year on the other side of the fence, it will have led the Nation a great step in the direction of the totalitarians. In one respect, it will have gone further than they. Their unions are institutions of the regime in power; ours are private associations. It is one thing to be forced into a gov- ernmental straightjacket; it is far more in- equitable and reprehensible to be forced into a private association that uses the members contributions for its own political and "so- cial" purposes, if not for worse. VIOLATES V.N. RESOLUTION The irony is componded by the fact that the imposition of the union shop violates the United Nation resolution of December 10, 1948, called the Universal Declaration of Human Rights. Its article II states ex- plicitly: 1. "Everyone has the right to freedom of peaceful assembly and association. 2. "No one may be compelled to belong to an association." This declaration was sponsored by Eleanor Roosevelt, before she knew on which side the unions' bread would be buttered. There- after, she became a passionate propagandist for what amounts to the suppression of everyone's right to work and free choice of 1457 employment that had been reaffirmed in article XXIII of the same declaration.. By implication, she also denied a person's right to be a conscientious objector in conflict with a private association serving for private gain. LITTLE OR NO DIFFERENCE Legally, the union shop is not a closed shop; in reality, the difference is little more than nominal. Legally, the employee has "only" to pay his initiation fee and dues, But once he is forced to pay dues the union bosses usually find it easy to force on him all the obligations of membership. [From the Natchez (Miss.) Democrat, Sept. 18, 1965] RIGHT-To-WoRK LAW Some of the most important and far- reaching legislation the current Congress is still considering has to do with labor. At the top of the list is the drive to repeal section 14(b) of the Taft-Hartley Act which permits States, if they so choose, to enact right-to-work laws. This has passed the House and is now in the Senate. If the Senate succumbs to the powerful, even ruth- less, political pressures which demand repeal, rank-and-file working people will be deprived of an absolutely essential right and protec- tion. No matter what their beliefs and wants, they will be forced to join and pay dues to a private organization, a union, or lose their jobs. This is as unthinkable as if Congress passed a law denying a man the right to join a union. Along with this, another vital issue is at stake. It is the right to vote. This simply means that no union should be certified as bargaining agent for employees without a secret ballot election supervised by the Na- tional Labor Relations Board. As of now, certification can be gained on the basis of a card count. The weaknesses in this are glaring. As the Cincinnati Enquirer has said, "Certification of a union as the bargaining agent for a group of employees should not be made on the basis of signatures to cards, as pressures conceivably could be used to obtain these that would not be operative in a secret election * * *. Nor should there be a recognition simply on the basis of a con- tract between employer and union leader because there have been cases where so-called sweetheart contracts scratched the back of the employer and the union boss but sold out the working man," The weary charge that right-to-work and right-to-vote laws are "antiunion" is as phony as a $3 bill. They are, instead, pro- tections against exploitation and misrepre- sentation of the desires and beliefs of the working man who should have freedom of choice. [From the Biloxi (Miss.) Herald, Sept. 18, 19651 RELIGIOUS EXEMPTIONS We thought that the lowest in political hypocrisy had been achieved by those Con- gressmen who claimed that they were insur- ing the workingman's economic freedom by voting to repeal section 14(b) of the Taft- Hartley Act. But now the Senate Labor Sub- committee, headed by Senator MORSE, of Oregon, has endorsed repeal of section 14(b) and additionally proposed an amendment which would, in effect, make the National Labor Relations Board and labor officials the overseers of some worker's religious beliefs, while pretending to guarantee freedom of conscience. To be exempt from joining and paying dues to a labor union, under the amendment, a workingman would have to: (1) obtain a certificate by the National Labor Relations Board (that he) holds conscientious objec- tions to membership in any labor organiza- tion based upon his religious training and beliefs, and (2) have timely paid, in lieu of periodic dues and initiation fees, sums equal Approved For Release 2006/11/06: CIA-RDP67B00446R000400010003-3 Approved For Release 2006/11/06: CIA-RDP67B00446R000400010003-3 1458 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD -,SENATE to such dues and initiation fees to a non- religious charitable fund exempt from taxa- tion * * * designated by the labor organiza- tion. This would make the National Labor Re- lations Board the authority for religious ex- emptions for a workingman joining a union. That a Senator would propose or endorse such an amendment, even under the pretext of guaranteeing religious freedom, is evi- dence that he realizes the repeal of section 14(b) would deprive the workingman of free- dom in the first place. l Prom the Biloxi (Miss.) Herald, Nov. 26, 1065) ACTION By NATIONAL CHAMBER OF COMMERCE [.lather than slowing down between con- gressional sessions, the National Chamber of Commerce has stepped up its activities in preparation for the convening January 10, of the 2d session of the 89th Congress. The goal: To press effectively for private enterprise solutions to economic, social, tech- nical, and other problems. More than 20 national chamber Commit- tees, task forces, and study groups with help from outside experts are examining national problems and proposing solutions. Confer- ences, seminars, and meetings are being held all over the country. Special attenion is being given to issues which will likely be debated In the next con- gressional session, Including but not limited to: Repeal of Taft-Hartley section 14(b), ncreased minimum wage, federalization of unemployment compensation, consumer 'redlt and packaging and labeling controls, labor law reform, water supply projects, urban renewal and poverty programs, rent ubsidies, and transportation improvement. Chamber headquarters for the task ahead are the legislative department, Government relations department, and 13 departments involved in program development. The legislative department has held an advisory conference on congressional action with the chairmen of 16 congressional action committees from communities of various sizes. The purpose is to refine and upgrade the CAC operation so as to enable business and professional men to be more effective in tell- ing their Congressmen how they feel about particular issues. The legislative department will provide a complete blueprint for organizing and con- ducting it congressional action committee in local chambers, or trade or professional groups. More than 1,300 are in operation, in- volving more than 30,000 business and pro- lessional men and women. A special advisory committee is at work planning strategy on unemployment com- pensation legislation, which will be a major is sue. j i'rom the Greenville (Miss.) Delta Demo- crat-Times, Nov. 26, 19651 ILI.-'l'TMED STRIKE A powerful labor union threatened to de- lay America's Gemini space effort with an ill- a.dvised strike which idled 71,000 machinist it the giant McDonnell Aircraft Corp. The strike conceivably could have put the United htates far behind in the space race. Cer- tainly, the Ill-timed strike was not in the hest interests of the Nation's space effort. And, this is not by any means the first Lime that national interests and labor in- i.?crests have seriously conflicted. The fight over labor's insistence on repeal of section 14 (b) of the Taft-Hartley Act represents just one other recent conflict of national and Trnion interests. In that scrap, labor leaders :;ought to secure additional union strength at the expense of the Nation's labor force by banning right-to-work laws in 19 States. No one can dispute labor's right to seek advantages for Its members. And no one can seriously fault the strike as a potent collective bargaining weapon. But, it would seem that some legislation is in order to prevent costly labor walkouts on Federal projects, especially when an ill- timed strike can adversely affect crucial Gov- ernment timetables, such as the timetable for the Gemini shot. If the McDonnell ma- chinists must strike, it seems the union could have postponed its walkout until after the planned Gemini shot without seriously darn- aging its bargaining power. And since the Gemini shot was scheduled well in advance, there seems no reason why announcement of a labor strike, or plans for the strike, were delayed until the 11th hour, wasting the time of countless Government labor workers and officials, to say nothing of the cos: t to American taxpayers. It is, however, to the union's credit that workmen on the Gemini project were al- lowed to return to their jobs in order to keep plans for the space shot on schedule-even though the rest of the union's members remained on strike. But the walkout did keep Gemini workers off their jobs for sev- eral clays, until union officials relented and allowed them to resume preparations for the Gemini shot. The delay undoubtedly was costly. Certainly it was not beneficial b- the overall preparations for the Gemini space rendezvous even though NASA officials now say it's still possible to adhere more or less to the original timetable. Perhaps legislation to force labor unions to give adequate warning of strike plans would help ease the situation. Such legis- lation seems especially important when Fed- eral projects are involved. It seems sense- less to allow a small minority of labor officials to order union moves which directly affect the lives of all Americans. The labor unions, traditionally, have pro- vided good and useful service to American workers and, ultimately, to industry as well. But walkouts such as the one affecting the Gemini space shot seem to indicate that labor's usefulness to the Nation could be increased by legislation which would prevent costly, ill-timed strikes. [From the Biloxi (Miss.) Herald, Nov. 20, 19651 RIGHT To WORK As reported by the press, President J . . N ~ d, J 2 u1.~~ -~3pP 7B0044.6R000400010003-3 Approved For Release 2006/11/06: CIA-RDP67B00446R000400010003-3 January 29, 1966 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD- SENATE 1465. not achieving its stated purpose of pro- agent under the provisions of the Na- of the union as though they were mem- moting industrial peace. The increase tional Labor Relations Act. By law, the bers. Recognizing the probable uncon- in industrial strife in 1945 occasioned union is the exclusive bargaining agent stitutionality of forcing someone to join the loss of approximately 38 million for all the employees, both union mem- an organization against his will, the pro- man-days of labor to strikes. But, by bers and nonunion members. Section ponents have modified their request for tha act 1946 this loss was trebled, when there 9(a) of the Wagner Act states specifi- 1 author heit , andia owgonly at s, to t he dues were number million man-days lost, and the tally: ke is numbeer of f strikes reached the unpTOC- Representatives designated or selected for and initation fees-but he does not have bar any actually gainin meetings Houses figure of 4,985. In 1946, Case both mthe a o ty ofPthe mployees in a union appro- The p oponents know that f he is g ing whichs Congress passed the ibill, priate for such purposes, shall be the exclu- to pay for a union he is going to attend which seemed to to reflect past reflect the growing g pub- save representatives of all the employees in the meetings-he would be a fool not to lie concern. The Case bill would have such unit for the purposes of collective bar- expressly do so. Pdo not customarily pay they do not intend to customarily brought secondary boycotts gaining in respect to rates of pay, wages, for so. People - under the antitrust laws. It would have hours of employment, or other conditions of it would b they going into a store and also restored to the Federal courts the employment. it would a watch or some to r item and buying power to issue injunctions in labor dis- In other words, the National Labor then leaving it for the store to sell again. putes, a power which was taken away Relations Act has deprived the nonmem- Obviously, the store owner would like from them by the Norris-LaGuardia Act. ber of his voice in determining and in that very much, but it requires a curious The bill failed to become law because coming to an agreement with his em- sense of justice to justify such arequire- thegroundwork odor the but enact- ployer on such important matters as his ment. While it has been argued that the groundwork for the later ea rate of remuneration, the hours he shall public policy considerations have justi- p ersi of the veto. The Taft-Hartley act over a work, and all other conditions of his em- fled the abrogation of the individual's was considerably veto. The TfCase loyment. These rights have been taken right to negotiate the terms of his own was considerably milder than the Cae from him and granted to the labor union employment contract, I know of no pub- bill, ie it. did dote se, but labor at- without his consent. He has forfeited lie policy consideration which would re-, ol o per course rather la- his fundamental right of freedom of quire those deprived of their rights to, tempt d s as "bad" tempted The follow the course then, was contract. He has given up his voice in in addition, pay tribute to those to whom tion. predicated The upon Act, than, was the selection of his bargaining agent, and their rights have been transferred. This qon the belief that a fairer he has also given up his voice in directing kind of reasoning would require an inde- po- by q Labor policy can best the internal affairs of the union-which pendent voter to contribute to both po- be achieved more equitable in manner which encourage free, has by law become his bargaining agent. litical parties. The independent voter in vbargaining. r which will the same me, He is at the mercy of that bargaining forfeits his opportunity to participate in there was b a recognition that same time, agent. He has done this to exercise his the selection of the candidates of one of t Government freedom of choice, to exercise a right the major parties. Personally, I think if free for free granted to him under section 7 of the this is a great sacrifice to maintain one's agre mercan note parties if substituted agreve ag inthe to exist, col- National Labor Relations Act-that is, independence; but, I believe every citizen de- However, the increased is to Government ant role . to join or not to join a labor organiza- should have the right to make that de- in the negotiations ations of Governmeel tion. The rights he has given up may cision, and I am sure that such decisions in negotiations of last year's Sr be likened to an act of forbearance. In are made only upon compelling reasons contract tract leads one to wonder whether contract law, forbearance in the exercis- of conscience. this policy has been discarded. carded. In and Ing of a right has been held to be legal Another facet of compulsory unionism thant, the Taft-Hartley Act recognized consideration and is sufficient to make and the free-rider argument which have that eve interests of the general public an otherwise valid contract binding. In received attention is the effect of the in preserving peace beeI think other words, in contract law, forbearance union shop upon summer employment of I underscore that because h the is held to be something of value; its students. interest of the public ay large is the exact value would, of course, depend In May of last year, the President par in eamount interest in any strike. in This, upon the precise nature of the right not launched a program which he called the mageme youth opportunities campaign. The ob- mffect, anagement injected a relationsnew, and nd that element at t is is the the being exercised. Therefore, under these public interest. The hands off policy of circumstances the nonunion member has jective of this program was to increase the Norris-LaGuardia and the Wagner contributed something of value to the summer job opportunities for high school Acts was, at least, partially reversed. In union cause. He has contributed his and college students. Two letters, writ- other words, Congress recognized that right to negotiate the basic terms of his ten by Mr. Gerald H. Phipps, president of monopolistic practices of labor unions employment. a general contracting company in Den could also result in a restraint of trade, What are the benefits that flow to the ver, Colo., graphically display how com- because once again the adage "power union due to this legislative grant of pulsory unionism may work to defeat na- corrupts and absolute power corrupts ab- exclusive bargaining authority and en- tional programs, and also work a hard- solutely" had been reaffirmed. There is forced forbearance of the individual to ship upon our youth. I will read from no place where that has been more evi- act on his own behalf relative to wages, those letters because I believe they pre dent than in the recent transit strike in hours, and conditions of employment? sent the matter eloquently. The first New York. This pending proposal would Obviously, it has increased the bargain- letter is dated June 1, 1965, and is ad- eliminate the last vestige of restraint ing strength and improved the bargain- dressed to the Secretary of Commerce, upon the establishment of labor monop- ing position of the union in bargaining Mr. John T. Connor: olies in a broad and national sense. The for its members. The labor unions rec- DEAR MR. SECRETARY: This morning's mail history and development of regulatory ognized this benefit, and it was upon brought ht your open ltt rsfdated boys control over public utility monopolies their insistence that the National Labor and 23 and urging through ea employment pof age during 21 should serve as a warning to all those Relations Act included the provision an sugirls 16 mmer months. I believe a few ring co- who mistakenly believe that the interests granting to the unions the power to act ments are in order. of organized labor will in the long run be as the exclusive bargaining agent for all in the nearly 20 years this firm and its best served through establishment of ab- employees within the bargaining unit- predecessor have operated in the Denver area, solute monopoly powers in the unions. both union members and nonunion mem- we have attempted to furnish summer em- FREE RIDERS bers. But this is not enough, according ployment for deserving young men. As tors we have not had nor do rat i What is a "free rider?" I suppose he can be characterized as one who receives benefits for which he has not paid, or to which he has not contributed, or for which he has not given up anything. - Let us examine the status of the non- member in a shop which has recognized a union as the employee's' bargaining , ng con to the proponents of this bill. Those build who have given up their contractual we expect to have openings for young ladies. rights by force of law must also pay for in view of the subject President's recent message the privilege of having their rights taken to the of com orment labor that eone a- away from them. The proponents of tion, Congress our it is se o problems worthy h y of come employment lies this measure do not demand that non- in the fact that, as members of the Associated members become members, they only de- Building Contractors of Colorado, we are mand that they contribute to the'support parties to contracts with building trade Approved For Release 2006/11/06: CIA-RDP67B00446R000400010003-3 Approved For Release 2006/11/06: CIA-RDP67B00446R000400010003-3 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD -SENATE rrgnt-to-work law, these contracts all re- quire union shop operation. Even though the job opportunities we provide for students are, temporary in nature, these men are re- quired by our contracts to become members of the appropriate union within 30 days of their employment, paying full initiation fee and full monthly dues. As you can imagine, these take a fairly substantial bite out of their paychecks. Further, since all skilled trades require any man to pass through an apprenticeship training program, these trades are closed to seasonal employment. Finally, when total volume of work in the area is be- low par, the common laborer's union can and often does refuse membership to seasonal employees. I omit some portions which are not Pertinent. The letter continues: T. assure you that we will do all we can to forward the youth opportunity campaign. (however, to a major degree our hands are tied. Sincerely yours, GERALD H. PI=IIPPS, President. The second letter is dated July 20, 1965, and is addressed to the senior Senator from Colorado: DEAR GORDON: In accordance with your let- ter of July 14, following is information re- garding initiation fee and dues payable to the local union of the laborers: initiation fee is $75. A payment of $1.50 is required l'or a Denver Building & Construction Trades Council card. The dues to the laborers' union are $4.50 per month. At the time of going to work, a payment of $40 is required, representing $34 toward the initiation fee, and building trades card and dues for 1 month. Within the next 2 weeks, the re- maining $41 of initiation fee must be paid. Dues must be kept current, an arrearage of 2 months calling for payment of $50 of the initiation fee plus back dues. A man wish- ing to remain in the union following the end of summer employment and looking toward employment in the following year must continue his monthly dues payments. Otherwise the full initiation fee must again be paid. I hope this furnishes the informa- tion you want. Sincerely, GERALD 1-1. PHIPPS, "resident, Reactionaries have been characterized as those who inhibit progress in order to preserve an established order. That, of course, is the purpose of union security clauses: To preserve the established or- der; to protect the security of the bar- gaining representative. In that sense, the proponents of this measure are reac- tionary. Secretary Wirtz, in support of this reactionary notion, said: There is no right of a minority to endanger the freedom of a majority of the employees to protect the security of the bargaining representative. What; he is saying, in effect, is that the union should not be required to sell its ?ervices, that it need not continue to prove its worth to the employee by per- formance. In other words, the union is entitled to a free ride at the expense of the employee who does not wish to join the union. it boils down to this question: Shall we make it a national policy that two private parties can enter into an agree- ment affecting the rights of a third party who has not participated in making that agreement? I think that it is im- portant to recognize that the right that is being bargained away is the right of the individual to freedom of association, a right which is protected by the first amendment to the Constitution. TIME IS AGAINST THEM The real motive behind this present drive to repeal 14(b) is that as time has passed, the people in more and more States have come to recognize the injus- tice of compulsory unionism and have taken steps to prevent it. Of the 19 States that now have right-to-wok stat- utes or constitutional amendments, 9 had enacted such provisions prior to the final vote on Taft-Hartley-June 23, 1947. During the remainder of 1947 two , more States were added to their ranks; namely, South Dakota and Texa_ the latter being the home of our PresidenIn 1948, North Dakota became a right'-. State. Things were fairly quiet on the right-to-work front; until 1952 when Nevada became a right-to-work State. By 1963 six more States had either enacted right-to-work statutes or had adopted constitutional amendments forbidding compulsory unionism: Ala- bama in 1953, Mississippi and South Carolina in 1954, Utah in 1955, Kansas in 1958, and Wyoming in 1963. Propo- nents of the bill can see the trend. I am sure that each year they ask them:3elves: I wonder which State will be next? Time is against them and they know it. That is the real reason they wish to re- peal all the right-to-work laws in one blanket measure through the Congress. Because such States as Nevada and Ari- zona have approved right to work on three separate occasions, the proponents of compulsory unionism have moved to the Congress in an effort to thwart the expressed will of the people in those States. Secretary Wirtz indicated in his state- ment before the committee that the pro- ponents of the repeal of 14(b) are unions "which have stood most strongly for in- dividual freedoms." The only explana- tion that I can find for those who have purportedly stood for individual freedoms .now pressing for the extinguishment of :Individual freedoms is best expressed by th e old adage: It all depends upon whose ox is gored. Or, I might paraphrase it this way: It all depends on whose free ride is in jeopardy. INDUSTRIAL PIRACY It has been charged that right-to-work States have been successfully pirating industry away from my State. Mr. Pres- ident, I must say that in talking with ray good friends, the members of unions, who came to my office in Colorado, this. was the point they expressed most often and pushed most vociferously. Certainly, such a matter as that of States success- fully pirating industry away from. my State would give any Member of Con- gress reason to pause, if such a charge were supportable. Colorado is in a rather unique position, because it is almost com- pletely surrounded by right-to-work States. Of the seven States bordering Colorado, five have right-to-work law's; namely, Arizona, Utah, Wyoming, Ne- braska, and Kansas. On several occa- sions, I have requested from those mak- ing this charge that data be furnished to me in support of this contention, but I January 2?, 19(Y ;, have yet to receive any such data. The only data 1: have received are tables showing that economic activity in nearly every area has increased more rapidly in right-to-work States generally than in non-right-to-work States. I have tables indicating that average weekly earnings of production workers in right-to-work States have increased more rapidly in the last 10 years, since 1955, than has the average earnings in non-right-to-work States. Right-to-work States experi- enced an increase in weekly earnings for production workers of 46.8 percent, while non-right-to-work States had only a 42.8 percent increase during that period. Mr. President, I ask unanimous con- sent to have certain tables from the De- partment of Labor, Bureau of Labor Statistics, showing the increase in wage rates, printed in the RECORD. The PRESIDING OFFICER (Mr. MORSE in the chair). Is there objection? There being no objection, the tables were ordered to be printed in the RECORD, as follows: Average weekly earnings of production workers-Rate of increase, 1955-65 January 1955 January Pettey f. 1965 ` iacrraae. Right-to-work States-- $.5. 61 $96.34 40. R Non-right-towork states ____----- 74.80 106.83 42.'4 National average- 71.16 102.68 44.:3 HE INDIVIDUAL RIGHT-TO-WORK STATES Alabama- -- Arizona =_-._._. Arkansas -_.---_- Florida _. Georgia ----- Indiana 2 ---------- Iowa - --- _ Kansas 2_ -. -------- .. Mississippi- ___-_-Nebraska.- - ----------- Nevada 2_ North Carolina -----_ - North Dakota South Carolina South Dakota__________ Tennessec__.._ 'rexas___.__. -------- U tali 2 Virginia ---- _____ $57.42 82. 19 51.73 57.95 51. Ill 80.35 74. 41 81.61 47. 88 .8. 61) 87.05 49. 78 65. 68 52. 10 73.37 59. 20 72.80 75. 81 87.02 $91.91 111.65 73. 67 90.'74 80.38 118. 98 1l It. 80 112. 95 72.98 165. 04 121.52 73.21 95. i4 77.38 106. 14 85.49 101. 68 112.87 80. 31 60. 1 3.5. 8 42.4 .51 i. 6 .5( 7 48.1 5)). 2. U. 4 52.4 51 - 1.9 39. ri 47.1 45. 8 48. 5 44.7 44.4 39. 7 48. 9 1.4 THE INDIVIDUAL NON-RIGHT-TO-WORTS STATES California -.- Colorado--- Connecticut. Delaware--- ---- Idaho-_ _- Illinois_____ __-_------ Kentucky__.._.._________ Louisiana--. _____ Maine__ __ ---- Maryland _ _ --_____--- Massachusetts__________ Michigan _-__-.._______- Minnesota _ _ __ __ __- Missouri-- ----------- Montana .---. New IIamnpshire___ New Jersey- __________- New Mexico. _ New York Ohio Oklahoma- _ ---------- Oregon--- Pennsylvania - .------ Rhode Island Vermont -- Washington ________.._ West Virginia ------ __ Wisconsin _______ _ _ Wyoming-.-..--._-- -- $83.47 75.17 75. 67 73. 36 80.10 70.10 67.30 66. 75 59.26 71.77 66. 80 93.76 76. 44 09.36 83.05 59.60 76.4. 85. 28 73. 52 83.40 72. 04 87.95 72. '21) 61. 29 59. 94 85.09 71.80 77.29 81.93 $121.71 113. 27 109. 98 115.23 102.91 115. OR 98. 98 NO. 43 83.84 106. 45 96. If. 144. 87 111. 41 104.59 110.55 82. 62 111.25 90. 57 104. 67 124. 93 100. 62 114.07 103. 74 85.81 89.25 IN. 82 108.154 113.94 109. 74 'IS, 8 50.7 45.3 2s. e 48.1 47.1 at 4 4L5 48.3 44.0 A.5 ,,.).7 710.8 33. 1 38. 6 45.5 6.2 42. 4 48. 7 :19. 7 29.7 4:3.7 .10. 0 48.9 37.3 51. 2 47.4 33. 9 r 13 of 29 non-right-to-work States have increases I s low the national average. 26 of the 15 States with the highest average weekly earnings for preductionworkers arc right-to-work States. Source of data: Department of Tabor, T3ureau of Labor Statistics "Employ]neat and Earnings," 1955 and M rc11 1965 volumes. -. Approved For Release 2006/11/06: CIA-RDP67B00446R000400010003-3 January 29, 1966 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD - SENATE Rate of increase of nonagricultural employees (1953-63) Rate of increase of average weekly earnings of production workers (1955-65) work stoppage due to strike action as in the right-to-work States. The following figures Percent Percent are from the Bureau of Labor Statistics: Right-to-work States---------------- 23.8 Right-to-work States1--------------- 46.8 Man days idle during work stoppages-1963 Non-right-to-work States ---_-------- 9.0 Non-right-to-work States------------ 42. 8 (As percent of working time) National average--------------------- 12.6 National average-------------------- 44.3 Percent (The top three States in the Nation in rate of new jobs created by industry are right-to- work States: (1) Nevada, (2) Arizona, (3) Florida.) Source of data: Department of Labor, Bu- reau of Labor Statistics. Rate of increase of new manufacturing jobs (1953-63) Percent. Right-to-work States---------------- 12.8 Non-right-to-work States------------ -7. 6 National average-------------------- -3. 3 Source of data: Department of Labor, Bu- reau of Labor Statistics. Rate of increase of production workers (1953-63) Percent Right-to-work States--------------- 3.9 Non-right-to-work States----------- -14. 1 National average------------------- -10. 2 Source of data: Department of Commerce, Bureau of the Census. Rate of increase of capital expenditures (1953-63) Percent Right-to-work States---------------- 37.1 Non-right-to-work States ------------ 27.2 National average-------------------- 29.8 Source of data: Department of Commerce, Bureau of the Census. - Rate of increase of per capita personal income (1953-63) Percent Right-to-work States---------------- 43.7 Non-right-to-work States ------------ 35.4 National average-------------------- 37.0 Source of data: Department of Commerce, Office of Business Economics. Rate of increase of personal income (1953-63) Percent Right-to-work States---------------- 70.3 Non-right-to-work States ------------ 60.2 National average-------------------- 62.7 Source of data: Department of Commerce, Office of Business Economics. Rate of increase of hourly earnings by manu- facturing workers (1953-63) Percent Right-to-work States---------------- 46.7 Non-right-to-work States ------------ 41.5 National average-------------------- 43.7 Source of data: Department of Labor, Bu- reau of Labor Statistics. Rate of increase of value added by manu- facturing (1953-62) Percent Right-to-work States---------------- 73:3 Non-right-to-work States ------------ 41.5 National average-------------------- 47.5 Source of data: Department of Commerce, Bureau of the Census. Rate of increase of population (1950-64) Percent Right-to-work States---------------- 27.4 Non-right-to-work States ------------ 26.2 National average-------------------- 26.6 Bureau of the Census. Source of data: Department of Commerce, 1 6 of the 15 States with the highest aver- age weekly earnings for production workers are right-to-work States. Source of data: Department of Labor, Bu- reau of Labor Statistics-"Employment and Earnings," 1955 and March 1965 volumes. Rate of increase of bank deposits (1953-64) Percent Right-to-work States---------------- 69.4 Non-right-to-work States------------ 63.5 National average-------------------- 64.8 Source of data: Department of the Treasury. Rate of increase of motor vehicle registra- tions (1953-63) Right-to-work States---------------- 53.0 Non-right-to-work States ------------ 44.3 National average-------------------- 47.0 Source of data: Department of Commerce, Bureau of Public Roads. Rate of increase of annual retail trade pay- roll (1954-58) Percent Right-to-work States---------------- 23.5 Non-right-to-work States------------ 17. 5 National average-------------------- 18.9 Source of data: Department of Commerce, Bureau of the Census. Rate of increase of retail trade sales (1954-58) Percent Right-to-work States---------------- 20.3 Non-right-to-work States ------------- 16.7 National average-------------------- 17.6 Source of data: Department of Commerce, Bureau of the Census. Rate of increase of retail trade establish- ments (1954-58) With pay- Total roll per- per- cent cent Right-to-work States------------- 6.9 9.9 Non-right-to-work States--------- 2.6 3.4 National average----------------- 3.7 5.1 Source of data: Department of Commerce, Bureau of the Census. Rate of incerase of value of life insurance in force (1953-63) Percent Right-to-work States---------------- 167.0 Non-right-to-work States ------------ 132.0 National average-------------------- 140.0 Source of data: Institute of Life Insur- ance, Life Insurance Fact Book. Rate of increase of number of life insurance policies in force (1953-63) Percent Right-to-work States----------------- 39.2 Non-right-to-work States------------- 26.8 National average--------------------- 30.5. Source of data: Institute of Life Insur- ance, Life Insurance Fact Book. TIME LOST THRouGH STRIKES In States without right-to-work laws, nearly twice as much time is lost through Right-to-work States----------------- 0.09 Non-right-to-work States------------- 0.14 Mr. ALLOTT. Mr. President, when these facts are pointed out, the pro- ponents of the repeal of 14(b) respond with this statement: "Yes, but most of the right-to-work States are Southern States where wages were lower to begin with and working conditions are sub- standard." It seems inconceivable to me that anyone truly interested in the wel- fare of the workingman would complain about a more rapid increase in wages in areas where wages were allegedly lower to begin with. Such an attitude is tantamount to advocating that the blessings of our modern economy should only be enjoyed by those States which are already highly developed industrially. I would not ascribe to them such selfish and reactionary motives. CLOSED SHOP During the debate on the Wagner Act, there was a great deal of discussion con- cerning the closed shop provisions. The opponents argued that the bill encour- aged the closed shop, which was later outlawed by the Taft-Hartley Act and held to be contrary to public policy be- cause it denied to the employee an op- portunity to obtain employment without first becoming a member of a labor or- ganization. Senator Wagner, in dis- cussing the closed shop provision, made the following statement: While outlawing the organization that is interfered with by the employer, this bill does not establish the closed shop, or even encourage it. But, compulsory unionism was not a matter of widespread concern since only a relatively small minority of employees were affected by contracts containing any compulsory features. However, dur- ing the war years, compulsory unionism developed rapidly to where over 75 per- cent of the labor contracts contained some form of compulsion by the time of the enactment of the Taft-Hartley Act. The abuses of compulsory membership became so numerous, and public feeling against such arrangements became so strong, that the Congress could no longer ignore the problem. The Senate com- mittee pointed out that in 12 States such agreements had been made either illegal by legislative act or constitutional amendment, and in 14 other States pro- posals for abolishing such contracts were then pending. Thus, while Con- gress, in the Taft-Hartley Act, clearly outlawed the closed shop because "it is clear that the closed shop, which re- quires pre-existing union membership as a condition of obtaining employment, creates too great a barrier to free employ- ment to be longer tolerated"; it left it up to the States to control the other forms of compulsory unionism. The argument that Congress was inconsistent in granting to the unions the right to have union shop agreements on the one hand, and on the other hand afforded the Approved For Release 2006/11/06: CIA-RDP67B00446R000400010003-3 Approved For Release 2006/11/06: CIA-RDP67B00446R000400010003-3 1 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD -SENATE January 29, zatates the power to take that right away, has no more validity than the argument that Congress was inconsistent in grant- ing to the individual the right not to ,join a union, as set forth in section 7, and then allows the unions to enter into it private compulsory union agreement with the employer taking that right In the first instance the so-called rl;'?ht that is taken away is taken away through the democratic processes of gov- .Wvnment, whereas in the second instance the individual's right is taken away through the private negotiations of two other parties. f?urther, the ic?:islative history of both ilia Wagner Act and the Taft-Hartley Act clearly indicates that it was never the intent of Congress to preempt the field. In his presentation to the Senate, Senator Wagner, in commenting on the ellects of the Wagner Act upon compul- sory unionism, said: It is legal in many States, and there is no reason why Congress should make it illegal in. those places where public policy now sustains it. in other words, the Wagner Act merely maintained the status quo with regard to compulsory unionism. This is supported by a statement in the conference report on 'Daft-Hartley: It was never the intention of the National Labor Relations Act, as is disclosed by the legislative history of that act, to preempt the field in this regard so as to deprive the States of their powers to prevent compulsory unionism. From this, it is at once apparent that the argument that Congress created a legal anomaly by granting to the unions the power to enforce compulsory union- ism in one section of the act, and then took it away in another section of the act is totally fallacious. Congress never intended to disturb State authority in this area, except that in the Taft-Hart- ley Act the closed shop was outlawed as a matter of national public policy. The status of the union shop was left un- changed. As Senator 'raft said in ref- erence to the inclusion of section 14(b) in the conference report: The Senate committee report; stated on its face that State laws would still remain in effect. All we have done is to write in ex- pressly what our committee report said. s'RESSJOM O.b' CONTRACT The freedom of contract that was be- ing denied at, that time, and which the Wagner Act was attempting to restore, was that freedom of contract which was being systematically denied to employees by their employers' requirement to sign nu agreement not to join a labor organi- zation. Such contracts were known as .yellow dog contracts. Such a contract would effectively deny an individual of his right to freely associate with others in organizing and supporting a labor union. Congress was then reacting to an abuse of power leading to the denial In this case the of individual rights . denial of the individual's right to asso- of the Government in these matters. 506,028 members-excluding Pennsyl- elate. At that time it was not deemed While it has been the consistent policy vania and Hawaii for which figures were necessary to grant legislative protection of Congress in enacting labor legislation not available. The loss for those three of the right not to associate. As I have to elevate labor organizations to the States exceeded the net national loss by pointed out, only a relatively small per- position of equality with management, nearly 44,000 during the same period centage of the Nation's work force was necessary for the protection of its lawful Of course, the national net loss figure affected by compulsory union contract rights and the furtherance of its legiti- takes into account both gains and losses. r?umew.M1al?P+Mm~hrt.Wr?~,~~wil..~d~WI4~MihP-pMeigl~IkA~M1.McMMx.*gf~D'm"X137?LTA"T"?'rC7'1""l"'t?!T'7fJ?'F"VC'7' i:7?'ulm+~pNn~wgWglW ar..F~: provision and, moreover, the Wagner Act left to State determination the matter of the legality of the closed shop and other forms of compulsory unionism. Inas- much as the States were free to protect the :right not to associate, there was no necessity for Congress to act in that area. Therefore, it cannot be said that the enactment of section 14(b) had any substantial effect on organized labor, if indeed it had any effect at all, because it did not change existing law; it mo:orely enunciated it. EQUALITY OF BARGAINING POWER While all of these arguments are per- suasive, the real issue centers around the determination of what our objective has been and should be in labor legislation. Perhaps a? quote from section 1 of the Wagner Act would be helpful in this regard: The inequality of bargaining powe toe- tween employees who do not posses, full freedom of association or actual liberty of contract, and employers who are organized in the corporate or other form of own: rship association, substantially burdens and sifects tiie flow of commerce, and tends to : ggra- vate the recurrent business depressiois, by depressing wage rates and the purchasing power of wage earners in industry and by preventing the stabilization of comp titive wage rates and working conditions Within and between industries. In the analysis of the bill (S. T.0,58) introduced by Senator Wagner, the Sen- ate report 573; 74th Congress, 1st slss:ion states the purposes of the Wagne.? Act more succintly in these words: This section states the dual objecti :yes of Congress to promote industrial peace and equality of bargaining power by encouraging the practice of collective bargaining ansi pro- tecting the rights upon which it is be'sed. From these statements it would seem that it was the purpose of Congress to enact legislation which would foster "the equality of position between the parties in which liberty of contract begins." The history of the labor movement is one of conflict, and at times bloody con- flict. Progress toward responsible labor- management relations has not come easy. The labor movement has come a long way from the days when attem,?.)ts at unionization were considered criminal conspiracies by the courts. But, as often occurs in such instances, the pendulum swings from one extreme to the other. Psychologists call this overcompen:ttiion. The period between the enactment of the Wagner Act and the enactment of the Taft-Hartley Act can be characterized as a period of overcompensation. The inequality of bargaining power had shifted from the side of management to the side of labor. But the advent of Taft-Hartley marked the beginning of the backswing of the pendul''un.-a period of adjustment toward a restora- tion of equality of bargaining lower; and I say that this should be the ;just mate interests, it was never the intenton of Congress to elevate labor to a position of dominance over management. To do so would have been to destroy the bal- ance Congress was attempting to achieve, and would have amounted to a betrayal of free collective bargaining, since free col- lective bargaining cannot proceed under conditions where one party is dominant over the other. It is evident, by the recent experience in the New York transit strike, that labor unions are not lacking in power to en- force their demands. But further, there is a tacit admission of organized labor's favorable power position in the Presi- dent's state of the Union message wherein he stated: I also intend to ask the Congress to con- sider measures which, without improperly invading State and local authority, will en- able us effectively to deal with strikes which threaten irreparable damage to the national interest. Since the President will ask Congress to consider measures which will have the effect of controlling, and thereby dimin- ishing the power of unions in the na- tional interest, the labor unions evi- dently must not be lacking in bargaining power. If there had been a showing that sec- tion 14(b) represented a clear and pres- ent danger to the continued existence of labor organizations and its repeal would salvage their strength, the public policy considerations might then lean toward that expediency; and, I might say that if that were the case, I would support it. However, compulsory unionism can only be considered an expediency. But the continued existence of labor unions is not threatened, and it is cer- tainly not threatened by section 14(b), and the figures I have previously in erted in the RECORD show this. If anything, the level of their influence is at an all- time high. The fact that the measure we are considering here today has al- ready passed the House of Representa- tives is mute evidence of that fact. LOSS OF MEMBERS Statistics have been adduced. to ,show that there has been a loss of union mem- bership in right-to-work States. how- ever, on closer examination it becomes apparent that other forces are primarily accountable. For example, three highly industrialized and unionized non-right- to-work States had a 16.4 percent: de- crease in AFL-CIO membership during the period 1953 to 1962. These States- California, Ohio, and Missouri-had a total union membership of 3,350,000 in 1958. But by :1962 that membership had dropped to 2,800,000-a net lost; of 550,000 members. Before making a comparison, let me emphasize that these three States of California, Ohio, and Missouri are non- right-to-work States. Now, let us compare this loss of mem- bership with the net national loss of Approved For Release 2006/11/06: CIA-RDP67B00446R000400010003-3 January 29, 1966 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD - SENATE 1469 But this is not the whole story. During this same period there was an increase in nonagricultural employment in those same States of 867,100-from 8,802,600 in 1958to 9,669,700 in 1962. So there was a considerable potential for increased union membership in the States of Cali- forma, Ohio, and Missouri, but instead of showing an increase, these States re- corded a substantial loss during this period. Obviously, there are other for- ces at work creating this situation, and to misplace the blame on right-to-work laws is not only erroneous and unfair, but it does a disservice to the labor movement by clouding the issue. The unions need to do some soul- searching, their policies may need a com- plete reevaluation, and their objec- tives may need to be reappraised and re- alined in keeping with the changed con- ditions inherent in our modern, space- age society. To blame right-to-work laws for their own failure is indulging in scapegoatism and serves no useful purpose. CONCLUSION -Mr. President, in approaching the mat- ter of the repeal of section 14(b) of the Taft-Hartley Act, I felt it was my duty to the people of Colorado to put aside any feelings I had, either pro or con, be- fore launching the exhaustive and inten- sive review of the legislative histories of labor legislation of major importance. This I have done. Then, while main- taining an open mind, I attempted to de- termine the true legislative intent be- hind our major labor legislation. After having done this, I evaluated existing labor legislation in terms of its present application to the current labor-man- agement picture, keeping in mind the legislative intent and the objectives Congress sought to achieve. Obviously, the first and foremost ob- jective was to provide for the public safety, since this is the primary respon- sibility of government. The second ob- jective was to protect the public's wel- fare. The third objective was to protect the constitutional rights of the individ- ual. And the fourth objective was to establish machinery whereby disputes which threatened any of the three objec- tives just enumerated could be resolved peacefully and lawfully. These four ma- jor objectives have largely been achieved by the labor legislation enacted by Con- gress. From my review of the legisla- tive histories of labor legislation of major importance, my evaluation of its appli- cation to the current labor-management situation, and after carefully weighing the various arguments, both pro and con, I have become convinced that the reten- tion of section 14 (b) of the Taft-Hartley Act is in keeping with the objectives Con- gress sought to achieve. The repeal of section 14(b) of the Taft- Hartley Act is at cross-purposes with those objectives because it would tend to endanger the public's welfare by encour- aging monopolistic practices, and it would deny the individual his con- stitutional right not to associate. Con- sequently, Senate passage of H.R. 77, which would repeal section 14(b) of the Taft-Hartley Act, is not in the national interest, and, in my opinion, it is not in the long-range interests of the labor movement. Therefore, because of this and the many public policy considerations I have discussed here today, and because I consider my- self to be a friend of the individual work- ingman, I must oppose H.R. 77. RECESS UNTIL 10 A.M. MONDAY Mr. ALLOTT. Mr. President, I ask unanimous consent that the Senate may stand in recess under the order previously entered. The PRESIDING OFFICER (Mr. MORSE in the chair) . Is there objec- tion? There being no objection (at 2 o'clock and 34 minutes p.m.), the Senate took a recess until Monday, January 31, 1966, at 10 o'clock a.m. CONFIRMATIONS Executive nominations confirmed by the Senate January 29 (legislative day of January 26), 1966: NATIONAL AERONAUTICS AND SPACE ADMINISTRATION Robert C. Seamans, Jr., of Massachusetts, to be Deputy Administrator of the National Aeronautics and Space Administration, to which office he was appointed during the last recess of the Senate. DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH, EDUCATION, AND WELFARE Harold Howe II, of North Carolina, to be Commissioner of Education, to which office he was appointed during the last recess of the Senate. OFFICE OF ECONOMIC OPPORTUNITY Franklyn A. Johnson, of California, to be an Assistant Director of the Office of Eco- nomic Opportunity. NATIONAL LIBRARY OF MEDICINE, PUBLIC HEALTH SERVICE Dr. William B. Bean, of Iowa, to be a mem- ber of the Board of Regents, National Library of Medicine, Public Health Service, for a term expiring August 3, 1969, to which office he was appointed during the last recess of the Senate. Dr. Stewart 0. Wolf, Jr., of Oklahoma, to be a member of the Board of Regents, Na- tional Library of Medicine, Public Health Service, for a term expiring August 3, 1969, to which office he was appointed during the last recess of the Senate. Approved For Release 2006/11/06: CIA-RDP67B00446R000400010003-3 Approved For Release 2006/11/06: CIA-RDP67B00446R000400010003-3 REPRESENTATIVES WITH RESIDENCES IN WASHINGTON OFFICE Aveasss: House Office Building, Washington, D.C. [Streets northwest unless otherwise stated] Speaker: John W. McCormack Abbitt, Watkins M., Va____ Abernethy., Thomas G., 6278 29th St. Miss. Adair, it. Ross, Ind________ 4000 Mass. Ave. Adams, Brock. Wash______ Addabbo, Joseph P., N.Y. __Albert, Carl, Okla --------- 4614 Reno Rd. Anderson, John B., Ill_____ Anderson, William it., 3006 P St. Tenn. Andrews, George W., Ala__-3108 Cathedral Ave. Andrews, Glenn, Ala______ Andrews, Mark, N. Dak____ Annunzio, Frank, Ill___-__ Arends, Leslie C., Ill------- 4815 Dexter St. Ashbrook, John M., Ohio --- Ashley, Thomas L., Ohio.._.. Ashmore,, Robert T., S.C___ Aspinall, Wayne N., Coto ___The Towers Apts., 4201 Cathedral Ave. Ayres, William H., Ohio____ Baldwin, John F., Calif...._ Bandstra, Bert. iowa______ Baring, Walter S., Nev-____ Barrett, William A., Pa____ Bates, William H., Mass____ Battin, James F., Mont____ Beckworth, Lindley, Tex --- Belcher, Page, Okla_______ Bell, Alphonzo, Calif...... Bennett, Charles it., Fla____.3421 Rustlcway Lane, Falls Church, Va. Berry, it. Y., S. Dak-------- 118 Schotts Court NE. Bette, Jackson it., Ohio____ Bingham, Jonathan B., N.Y. Blatnik, John A., Minn..,.... Boggs, Hale, La________.___ Boland, Edward P., Mass___ Bolling, Richard, Mo ------ 307 Warrenton Dr., Silver Spring, Md. Bolton, Frances P. (Mrs.), 2301 Wyo. Ave. Ohio. Bow. Frank T., Ohio ------- 4301 Mass. Ave. Brademas, John, Ind______ Bray, William G., Ind______ Brock, W. E. (Bill), Tenn__ Brooks, Jack, Tex_________ Broomfield, William S., Mich, Brown, Clarence J., Jr., Ohio. Brown, George E., Jr., Calif.. Broyhill, James T., N.C__.__ Broyhill, Joel T., Va_______ Buchanan, John, Ala______ Burke, James A., Mass_____ Burleson, Omar, Tex ------ 2601 Woodley Pl. Burton, Laurence J., Utah_ Burton, Phillip, Calif ------ Byrne, James A., Pa____-__ Byrnes, John W., Wis------ 1215 25th St. S., Arlington, Va. Cahell, Earle, Tex.-__-__-_ Cahill, William T., N.J___.._ Callan, Clair, Nebr-------- 1200 S. Court- house Rd, Arlington, Va. Callaway, Howard H., Ga__ Cameron, Ronald Brooks, Calif. Carey, Hugh L., N.Y---____ Carter, Tim Lee, Ky______ Casey, Bob, Tex_-- _____ Cederberg, Elford A., Mich_ Celler, Emanuel, N.Y------ The Mayflower Chamberlain, Charles it., Mich. Chelf, Frank, Ku _._..______- Clancy, Donald D., Ohio___ Clark, Frank M.. Pa------- 220 C St. SE. Clausen, Don H., Calif..... Clawson, Del, Calif........ Cleveland, James C., N.H-__ Clevenger, Raymond F., Mich. CONGRESSIONAL RF CORD Cohelan. Jeffery, Calif ----- :1028 New House Office Building Collier, Harold R., Ill______ Colmer, William M., Miss__ Conable, Barber B., Jr., N.Y. Conte, Silvio 0., Mass ------ 5619 Lamar Rd., Washington 16, D.C. Conyers, John, Jr., Mich__ Cooley, Harold D., N.C----- 2601 Woodley Pl. Corbett, Robert J., Pa__..__ Corman, James C., Calif___ Craley, N. Neiman, Jr., Pa__ Cramer, William C., Fla---- 6215 Beachway Dr., Falls Church, Va. Culver, John C., Iowa______ Cunningham, Glenn, Nebr_4920 Yorktown Blvd., Arlington, Va. Curtin, Willard S., Pa-__-_ Curtis, Thomas B., Mo-__-_ Daddario, Emilio Q., Conn_ Dague, Paul B., Pa________ Daniels, Dominick V., NJ-- Davis, Glenn R., Wis---_-_ Davis, John W., Ga__-_____ Dawson, William L., Ill____ de la Garza, Eligio, Tex___ Delaney, James J.. N.Y__.._ Dent, John H., Pa_________ Denton, Winfield K., Ind_-_ Derwinski, Edward J., Ill___ Devine, Samuel L., Ohio___ Dickinson, William L., Ala- I)iggs, Charles C., Jr., Mich_ Dingell, John D., Mich_____ Dole, Robert, Mans-------- 6136 Beachway Dr., Falls Church, V a. Donohue, Harold D., Mass__ Dorn, W. J. Bryan, S.C--___2030 Laburnum St., McLean, Va. Dow, John G., N.Y______-- Dowdy, John, Tex_________ Downing, Thomas N., Va-__ Dulski, Thaddeus J, N.Y__1705Longworth House Office Building Duncan, John J., Tenn____ Duncan, Robert B., Oreg__-914 Lakeview Dr., Falls Church, Va. Dwyer, Florence P. (Mrs.). N.J. Dyal, Ken W., Calif....... Edmondson, Ed, Okla ------ Edwards, Don, Calif ------- 9201 Fox Meadow La., Potomac? Md. Edwards, Edwin W., La____ Edwards, Jack, Ala________ Ellsworth, Robert F., Kans_ Erlenborn, John N., Itl____ Evans, Frank it., Colo_____ Everett, Robert A., Tenn -__ Evins, Joe L., Tenn -------- 5044 Klingle St. Fallon, George H., Md_-___ Farbstein, Leonard, N.Y-__ Farnsley, Charles P., Ky__ Farnum, Billie S., Mich___ Fascell, Dante B., Fla___-__ Feighan, Michael A., Ohio_ Findley, Paul, Ill__-._______ Fino, Paul A., N.Y.......... .Fisher, O. C., Tex ----------- Calvert-Woi)dley Flood, Daniel J., Pa-------The Congressional :Flynt, John J., Jr., Ga_____ :Fogarty, John it., 11.1------ 1235 New House Office Building, Foley, Thomas S., Wash --- Ford, Gerald it., Mich ----- 514 Crown View Dr., Alexandria, Va. Ford, William D., Mich____ Fountain, L. H., N.C------- The Westchester Fraser, Donald M., Minn_.,.. Frelinghuysen, Peter H. B., 3014 N St. N.J. Friedel, Samuel N., Md____ Fulton, James G., Pa______ Fulton, Richard, Tenn _-__ Fuqua, Don, Fla__________ Gallagher, Cornelius it., N.J. Garmatz, Edward A., Md__ Gathings, E. C., Ark--_____ Gettys, Tom S., S.C______- Giaimo, Robert N., Conn___ Gibbons, Sam, Gilbert, Jacob H., N.Y..... Gilligan, John J., Ohio____ Gonzalez, Henry B., Tex___200 C St. SE. Goodell, Charles E., N.Y_-_3842 Macomb St. Grabowski, Bernard F., Conn. Gray, Kenneth J., Ill______ Green, Edith (Mrs.), Oreg_ Green, William J., Pa_____ Greigg, Stanley L., Iowa___301 G St. SW. Grader, George W., Tenn--1197th St. SE. Griffin, Robert P., Mich____ Griffiths, Martha W. (Mrs.), Mich. Gross, H. R., Iowa ___--____ Grover, James it., Jr., N.Y.... Gubser, Charles S., Calif...... Gurney, Edward J., Fla____ Hagan, G. Elliott, Ga______ Hagen, Harlan, Calif...... Haley, James A., Fla_______ Hall, Durward G., Mo______ Halleck, Charles A., Ind___4926 Upton St.. Halpern, Seymour, N.Y........ Hamilton, Lee H., Ind____ Hanley, James M., N.Y........ Hanna. Richard T., Calif...... Hansen, George, Idaho____ Hansen, John it., Iowa ---- 800 4th St. SW., Apt. S-701 Hansen, Julia Butler (Mrs.), Wash. Hardy, Porter, Jr., Va-_-___ Harris, Oren, Ark--------- 1627 Myrtle St. Harsha, William H., Ohio-- Harvey. James, Mich______ Harvey, Ralph, Ind____-___ Hathaway, William D., Maine. Hawkins, Augustus F., Calif. Hays, Wayne L., Ohio ------ 3424 Barger Dr.. Falls Church, Va. Hebert, F. Edward, La----- 26 Cockrell St., Alexandria, Va. Hechler, Ken, W. Va_______ Helstoski, Henry, N.J-_-___ Henderson, David N., N.C__ Herlong, A. S., Jr., Fla_____ Hicks, Floyd V., Wash_____ Holifield, Chet, Calif...... Holland, Elmer J., Pa______ Horton, Frank J., N.Y..... Hosmer, Craig, Calif....... Howard, James J., N.J____ Hull, W. R., Jr., No________ Hungate, William L., Mo___ Huot, J. Oliva? N.H_-___-_ Hutchinson, Edward, Mich_ Ichord, Richard (Dick), No. Irwin, Donald J., Conn---- Jacobs, Andrew, Jr., Ind--- Jarman, John, Okla_______ Jennings, W. Pat, Va_____- Joelson, Charles S., N.J____ Johnson, Albert W., Pa____ Johnson, Harold T., Calif.... Johnson, Jed, Jr., Okla____ Jonas, Charles Raper, N.C__ Jones, Paul C., Mo-------- 1111 Army-Navy Dr., Arlington, Va. Jones, Robert it., Ala__-___ Karsten, Frank Iva., Mo____- Karth, Joseph it., Minn........ Kastenmeier, Robert W., Wis. Kee, James, W. Va-------- 5441 16th Ave., Hyattsville, Md. Keith, Hastings, Mass----- 4617Wetheriil Dr., Westmoreland Hills, Md. Kelly, Edna F. (Mrs.), N.Y.. Keogh, Eugene J., N.Y----- The Mayflower King, Carleton J., N.Y..... King, Cecil R., Calif....... King, David S., Utah______ Kirwan. Michael J., Ohio__ Kluczynski, John C., Ill-___ Kornegay, Horace R., N.C__ Krebs, Paul J., N.J________ Kunkel, John C., Pa_______ Laird, Melvin R., Wis______ Landrum, Phil M., Ga_____ Langen, Odin, Minn_______ Latta, Delbert L., Ohio_____ Leggett, Robert L., Calif...... Lennon, Alton, N.C________ 67 B00446 8000400010003-3 App oved For Release 2006/11/06: CIA-RDP Approved For Release 2006/11/06: CIA-RDP67B00446R000400010003-3 January 29, 1966 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD - SENATE Mr. MANSFIELD. When would that recess go into operation? The PRESIDING OFFICER. The re- cess would go into operation immediately after the motion was agreed to. Mr. MANSFIELD. I wish to change my request. I ask unanimous consent that when the Senate completes its business today, it stand in adjournment until 10 o'clock on Monday morning next. The PRESIDING OFFICER. Is there objection? Mr. MORSE. Mr. President, a parlia- mentary inquiry. The PRESIDING OFFICER. . The Senate was in a quorum call. Unani- mous consent was accorded the majority leader to make a parliamentary inquiry. The parliamentary inquiry has been an- swered. . Mr. MANSFIELD. Mr. President, I renew my unanimous-consent request that the Senate stand in adjournment until 10 o'clock on Monday morning next. Mr. MORSE. Mr. President, will the Senator yield? The PRESIDING OFFICER. The request is not debatable. Mr. MANSFIELD. Mr. President, I withhold my request. The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from Montana has already moved to recess. The yeas and nays have been ordered. The unanimous-con- sent request of the Senator from Mon- tana if agreed to would vitiate the mo- tion to recess. Mr. MANSFIELD. Mr. President, I ask unanimous consent that the yeas and nays on my motion to recess until 10 a.m. Monday be rescinded. I thought it had already been granted. The PRESIDING OFFICER. is there objection to rescinding the yeas and nays on the motion to recess? Mr. MORSE. Mr. President, I am- seeking to ask a question of the majority leader, if there is no objection. I do not understand what the Senator from Montana asked for. Was it the request of the Senator from Montana that we adjourn now, this morning, until Monday morning at 10 o'clock? Mr. MANSFIELD. The Senator is correct. The reason for it is that the Senator from Montana endeavored to obtain the consent of the Senate that upon the completion of business today that it stand in recess until 10 o'clock Monday morning next. The request was objected to. It is my understanding that the rea- son for the objection was based on the fact that certain Members of this body thought that 10 o'clock was too early. Personally, I do not think it is early enough. I think it is a reasonable time. Mr. MORSE. I relied on the an- nouncement that there would be a ses- sion today. I know that two or three speeches were planned to be given. On the basis of that reliance I sent to the Press Gallery last night a speech for delivery today. Those of us who planned to make speeches today could be accommodated when the business of the day is com- pleted rather than having perpetrated upon us this early adjournment without an announcement for what the program is going to be today. I hope that the majority leader will see fit to permit those of us who- The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senate will be in order. Mr. MORSE. I would hope that the majority leader would see fit to let us take today for the period of time neces- sary for us to complete the scheduled speeches we have sent to the Press Gal- lery, relying on our understanding we were going to be able to make speeches today. Mr. MANSFIELD. Mr. President, for the time being I withdraw my unani- mous-consent request. Mr. MORSE. That is very fair. The PRESIDING OFFICER. Is there objection to withdrawing the unanimous- consent request? Without objection, it is so ordered. Is there objection to the request of the majority leader to withdraw the yeas Does the majority leader wit motion to recess? Mr. MANSFIELD. Yes. Mr. ALLOTT. There is no motion, believe, to recess. There is a motion t adjourn. The PRESIDING OFFICER. The proposed motion to adjourn was not in order at that time, and, therefore, not en- tertained. The quorum call had been withheld for a parliamentary inquiry and a motion to adjourn was not in order. Mr. ERVIN. Mr. President, a parlia- mentary inquiry. The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator will state it. Mr. ERVIN. Does not a motion to ad- journ take precedence over a motion to recess? The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator is correct. Mr. ERVIN. Did not the motion to adjourn supplant the motion to recess, as a matter of parliamentary practice? The PRESIDING OFFICER. At that time there was a unanimous-consent re- quest in operation. That is why the mo- tion to adourn did not take precedence. Mr. ERVIN. I understand that the majority leader asked unanimous co tion tp recess. There has been no objec- tion. The PRESIDING OFFICE Senator from North Carolina is Does the Senator from Montana new his request for a quorum call? ORDER OF BUSINESS Mr. MANSFIELD. Mr. President, I ask unanimous consent, in view of the situation which has developed, that there be a morning hour today and that there be a time limitation of 3 minutes in con- nection with short speeches, statements, and the like. Mr. ERVIN. Mr. President, reserving the right to object, I would like to pro- pound an inquiry to the majority leader to ask him if he would be willing to make it clear by his unanimous-consent re- 1399 quest on this point that the provision of the rule allowing motions to bring up bills for consideration will not be in- cluded in the unanimous-consent request. Mr. MANSFIELD. Yes, indeed. Mr. ERVIN. With that assurance, I do not object. The PRESIDING OFFICER. Without objection, it is so ordered. BILL INTRODUCED bill was Introduced, read the first By Mr. DIRKSEN: S. 2853. A bill for the relief of Abraham esser; to the Committee on the Judiciary. CONCURRENT RESOLUTIONS ZJSO UPON THE OCCASION OF ITS 25TH ANNIVERSARY OLPH submitted the foi- e on Armed Services: needs of members of the Armed Forces of the United States; and Whereas the USO has made an invaluable contribution to the morale and welfare of the men and women of our Armed Forces since the time of World War II by provid- ing its welcome services throughout that time and during the Korean action and the cold war confrontations and by continuing its operations today in southeast Asia, Viet- nam, and several other areas of the world; and Whereas February 4, 1966, marks the twenty-fifth anniversary of the establish- ment of the USO: Now, therefore, be it Resolved by the Senate (the House of Representatives concurring), That the Con- gress of the United States hereby extends to the USO its most cordial greetings and felicitations upon the occasion of the twenty-fifth anniversary of the establish- ment of the USO, and expresses its highest commendations for the invaluable contri- butions which the USO has made to the morale and welfare of our men and women in the Armed Forces throughout the world. THE SO-CALLED SOUTHEAST Ati t/'4 SOLUTION ph#ted in full when submitted by Mr. MORSE, which appears under a separate heading.) PRINTING OF ADDITIONAL COPIES OF A REPORT BY SENATOR MANS- FIELD ENTITLED THE VIETNAM CONFLICT: THE SUBSTANCE AND THE SHADOW" Mr. MANSFIELD (for himself and Mr. ArxsN) submitted a resolution (S. Res. Approved For Release 2006/11/06: CIA-RDP67B00446R000400010003-3 Approved For Release 2006/11/06: CIA-RDP67B00446R000400010003-3 216) ~o print additional copies of a re- portlSy Senator MANSFIELD entitled "The V' nam Conflict: The Substance and the hadow," which was was considered and %?;rced to. (See the above resolution printed in full when submitted by Mr. MANSFIELD, which appears under a separate head- ing,) INVESTIGATION BY COMMITTEE ON 1.4'OREJGN RELATIONS OF ALL Al".- PECTS OF U.S. POLICIES IN Mr. MORSE submitted a n .olution (S. Res. 217) authorizing and directing the lic7y investigate all aspects of U.S. poli cics in Vietnam, which was referred to the Committee en Foreign Relations. (;ee the above resolution printed in full when submitted by Mr. MoRsr, which appears under a separate head- ing.) 'T'IME FOR BILLS TO LIE ON THE DESK FOR ADDITIONAL CO- :3I ONSORS Mr. CLARK. Mr. President:, on behalf of the Senator from New York [Mr. JAvrrsi, I ask unanimous consent that Senate bills 2845 and 2846, relating to civil rights, introduced by the Senator from New York and other Senators on yesterday, be held at the desk until Fri- day, February 4, for additional co- sponsors. 't'he PRESIDIrNG OFFICER. Without objection, it is so ordered. ADDI'T'IONAL COSPONSORS OF BILL Under authority of the order of the Senate of January 24, 1966. the names of Mr. CASE, Mr. CLARK, Mr. SCOTT, and Mr. WILLIAMS of New .Jersey were added as additional cosponsors of the bill (S. 2814) for the incorporation of the Fair Cam- paign Practices Committee, introduced by Mr. Kucuri, on January 24, 1966. WISCONSIN DEPARTMENT OF PUB- LIC INSTRUCTION CRITICIZES SCHOOL MILK CUTBACK, ilAr. PROXMIRE,, Mir. President, let- ters continue to pour in criticizing the hurcau of the. Budget's decision to with- hold $3 million in appropriated funds from the special milk program for school- children. As I have pointed out previ- ously this so-called economy move will not save one cent. Yet to school ad- ministrators around the country :it poses ti, great problem. To the schoolchildren flan, clues it means less milk, especially for the poorer children. Today I will read to my colleagues a otter- from Mr. Gordon Gunderson, of s.iie Wisconsin Department of Public In- .-ruction. Mr. Gunderson is heading up tiie American School Food Service Asso- ciation's legislative committee so I know his comments will be of real interest to other Senators. Before I read the letter I would like to comment on the last paragraph which asks if anything can be done to override the Bureau of the Budget's action. Cer- tailily something can be done. I am at- tempting by my daily floor speeches to focus the searchlight of public opinion on the Bureau's unwise action. I will work as a member of the Agriculture Subcommittee of the Senate Appropria- tions Committee to reverse this action with the help of our able chairman, Sena- tor IICI.I.AND, who has expressed his op- posithon to the budget cut. Above all I will work to reverse the administration's announced intention to cut the program to $21 million in fiscal 1987- a move that would come very close to killi i t the program. Mr. President, I read the letter from Mr. Gunderson: Tin: STATE OF WiscoasLa, DErSRTMENT OF PURi.IC IN iTn?. CTIOT., Madison, Wis., December 28, 1)65. Hon. WILLeAai PROxnnsRE, Madison, Wis. DEAR MR. PFnxMIRE: ikon toy returi to the oifice this morning, I 'Ind a telegram from [lib area oiflee of the U.S. Department of Agriculture informing me that it will be necessary to reduce reimbursement to schools for special milk served by 10 percent beginning with claims submitted i>s? the month of February. This action is based upon instructions from the Bureau of the Budget to hold expenditures under tl:e spe- cial. milk program to $100 million. 'ifils is in the face Of a final appropriation i f $103 million Which came about through your spe- cial efforts. It is surprising to me the,' the Dur-tiu of the Budget has the authority to withhold funds which have been appropriated is.y the Congress for a special purpose. Naturally, this is : very definite blow to school cistrict 5nn,nces sit this time of year when budgets ogre well established, charges to ehildrrn are all set, and the rates of reimbursement, have been made a part of our contract with each district. I am wondering if anything can be done to override the action of the Bureau of the Budget and release the total appropriation of $103 million. Anything you can do will certainly be appreciated by the school dis- tricts of Wisconsin. Siuccrely, G rmeoN W. On VT)EJISON, Program ArlsnisaistraOar. BYRON JOHNSON SPELLS OUT I]SV- Aai'IATING EFFECTS OIL INTEIE`EST itATE HIKES Mr. PROXMIRE. Mr. President. one of the ablest men to serve in the ('on- g.ress in recent years was Byron John- son, of Colorado. Mr. Johnson is now a full professor of economics at the I.hii- versity of Colorado. Many Government and non-Government economists have told me that they regard Professor Jcohn- scn as a topflight as well as outspoken expert on monetary policy. Recently I read a letter all the Senate floor from Professor Johnson to the Washington Post dealing concisely but generally with the recent action of the Federal Reserve Board in raising inte rest rates.. Professor Johnson has now written me his detailed views on this vital aspect of our economic policy. I ask unanimous consent that the letter be printed in the RECORD. p"proved uror"'release"" January 29, There being no objection, the letter was ordered to be printed in the Rl corn, as follows: DENVER, COLO., January 25, 1966. Ro your letter of January 14. Hon. WILLIAM .PROxesRE, U.S. Senate, Committee on Banking and Currency, Washington, D.C. DEAR BILL: I am not surprised and very pleased that you share my concern about the higher discount rates which have touched off similar increases in the whole interest rates structure. I am attaching a few item;; I have previously written expressing my fec.- ings on the topic. However, lot me sum- marize my view of the key elements: 1. Was there a need for monetary re- straint? Interest rates had been rising, the money supply had been rising at a fairly healthy rate. While unemployment had been falling, a rate approximately 4 percent is hardly cause for inflationary alarms. The Federal Reserve chose the worst possible time for the worst possible action. If the puce offensive succeeds and military spend- ing can decline, we will face the much more. complicated problem of climbing down the high interest ladder. 2. Was the action chosen by the Federal Reserve a contribution to an anti-inflation campaign, assuming such a campaign was needed? In my view the answer is negative. It touched off a new wave of borrowing. The Federal Reserve action will add $5 billion to the annual cost of borrowed money, roughly a 1-percent increase in the cost of living. It provided a justification for other price increases, including those which break the guidelines. It triggered inflation rather than resisted it. 3. Is the supply of loanable funds interest- elastic? Do higher interest rates signifi- cantly increase to the supply of loanable funds? If they would, this action would be a clear contribution. Again my answer is essentially negative. The bulk of the supply arises out of the de- preciation allowances, retained earnings, re- serves built under retirement and other in- surance contracts, and repayment; of out- standing mortgages or other debts, none of which sources are interest-rate sensitive, High interest rates on savings are conipeti- Give devices for encouraging the small volume of consumer savings to prefer one kind of bank or credit union over another. Keynes' analysis of the reasons for savings are still essentially valid. 4. Do higher interest rates encourage more productive u es of credit? Classical theory would reply that the most profitable uses of money will bid higher for it. In the marketplace, however, the higher rates are pad for short-term consumer credit where the size of the monthly payment is far more important than the interest rate. tied this depends on the length of the contract. Yet the most productive use of credit is in the building of housing and social capital, who'e the rate of interest is very important. beca;c c the loans are long-term loans. High inter:; rates divert money from these more prod :c- tive uses, especially housing. Today he ni ;:a inflationary demand function is new con.,;im - er credit. Given the fact that the war ,i ^d postwar babies are now marrying and eii i.r-r- ing the how;ing market, we must prepare i s .-r i the next 3 years for at least 20-percent, crease in annual housing production. the Wall Street Journal reports that. i':^ Federal Reserve action is now expected to shrink the 1966 housing market by at 1, :i t 5 percent. This is a tragic commentary ai the indifference of the Federal Reserve to Lie; Impact of its actions on the uses of loanable funds. 5. Are there better alternatives? Assum- ing that the time for restraint was arriving, abDP67B00446R000400010003-3