And, honestly, I don't think we're anywhere near that point yet.Torco wrote: ↑Thu Dec 08, 2022 6:35 am I understand the rationale of lesser evil voting, i've been doing it for years... but eventually, sometimes, a lesser evil is evil enough that it's not very meaningfully different from a greater evil, except in like controversial-but-not-very-transcendent issues.
Biden's heel turn on the railways strike is disappointing to say the least, but it's willful blindness to focus on that and ignore everything else his administration has done to support labour. The NLRB under Trump was terrible. At the end of his term, it had no Democrats at all and released a string of anti-labour decisions. No sooner has Biden been sworn in, however, but the General Counsel--who was actually involved in breaking the air traffic controllers' strike--was fired and replaced. In the past year, more illegally-terminated workers have been reinstated than during Trump's entire term of office. According to the legal team for our local, a big reason why the University didn't put up more of a fight against our unionisation effort last fall is that they knew the NRLB was looking over their shoulders and wasn't going to indulge their shenanigans. It's overturned some of the anti-labour rulings of the past several years and is actively reexamining the question of who is and who isn't an independent contractor, with an eye to expanding the definition of who is an "employee" (and, therefore, eligible to unionise). Needless to say, that would be a huge gain for some of the most exploited workers in the country.
So, yeah, I'm still generally not happy with Democratic politicians' mimsy approach to making people's lives better, but I'm not going to write their efforts off as nugatory anytime soon.