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Facts & Stories

Look For The Union Libel

George De Stefano (February 15, 2009)
"Sopranos" star Vince Curatola now represents another mob

The GOP and Big Business Smear Organized Labor

Italian American conservatives often claim that liberals and leftists are anti-Italian “elitists” who have contempt for our “family values” and ethos of “hard work.” As this tiresome ditty goes, liberals are always ready to make excuses for misbehavior by members of racial minorities while having no qualms about defaming Italian Americans.


It’s a fatuous claim, and, one that overlooks the fact that there are many Italian Americans who hold liberal and left-wing views. Big surprise: I’m one of them.


 

I’d be lying if I said that there have never been instances of anti-Italian bias by liberals. Bill Clinton’s infamous description of Mario Cuomo as looking like a character from “The Godfather” comes to mind.

But Clinton’s slur pales next to the stunt pulled by Brad Dayspring, the spokesman for right-wing Republican Congressman Eric Cantor. The fourth-term Virginia representative was one of the targets of an advertisement by the public workers union AFSCME that criticized the Hooverite GOPers who have opposed President Obama’s economic recovery plan. Cantor has coined the phrase, “Just say ‘no’ to the stimulus.”

 

Cantor’s flack Dayspring, infuriated by the AFSCME ad, sent out an e-mail containing a video clip that depicted union members as foul-mouthed Mafia goons. The video is of a genuine AFSCME ad from the 1970s to which a voice-over has been added. The voice is unmistakably meant to be that of an Italian American, but a specific type – a “Paulie Walnuts voice,” as MSNBC commentator Keith Olbermann noted.

(For the uninitiated, Paul “Paulie Walnuts” Gualtieri was the mobster with the silver-streaked hair played by Tony Sirico on “The Sopranos.”)

 

As actual footage of union members at work appears, the “gavone” voice says [warning: bad language coming]: “On your way to work tomorrow, instead of sitting around with your finger up your ass, look around. There's a union out there called AFSCME and they're busting their balls doing a lot of shit work you take for granted. For example, we pick up your fucking garbage.”

 

“We don't take shit from nobody," the voiceover concludes. “You got that, asshole? AFSCME -- the fucking union that works for you.”

 

The video actually has been circulating on the Internet for two years; it wasn’t created by Eric Cantor’s office. But the fact that Cantor’s spokesman would distribute it, to the journalism website Politico, calling it “my response” to the anti-GOP AFSCME ad, speaks volumes about Republican contempt for working class people.

 

Dayspring has since apologized for the video, which he called “inappropriate.” His mea culpa included some disingenuous boilerplate about the Republicans being aware that “people are hurting in these trying times.” Yes, and you can be sure that the GOP will do its best to block the pain relief, as they tend to the interests of  “the haves and have-mores,” as the recently departed Dubya liked to say.

 

Let’s look at another bunch of conservatives peddling the “organized labor = Mafia” slander. An outfit called the Coalition for a Democratic Workplace has been running TV and Internet ads against the Employee Free Choice Act, a labor- and Democrat-backed bill that would make it easier for unions to win recognition in workplaces. The ads feature Vince Curatola, the actor who played the gangster John “Johnny Sack” Sacrimone on “The Sopranos.” Trading on his mob persona, Curatola likens the Employee Free Choice Act to Cosa Nostra-like intimidation.

 

Curatola should be ashamed of himself, but evidently he’s beyond shame. The so-called Coalition for a Democratic Workplace is nothing but a front for business and industry lobbying groups and right-wing organizations like Grover Norquist’s Americans for Tax Reform, the Council for Citizens Against Government Waste, and Americans for Limited Government. It includes the Retail Industry Leaders Association, whose most prominent member is the notoriously anti-union Wal-Mart chain.

 

In the ads, Curatola parrots the Coalition’s line that the Employee Free Choice Act would eliminate secret ballots in workplace votes on unionization. What the Act actually would do is bring fairness to the current system, which is skewed against workers. The bill, which has been endorsed by President Obama, would allow workers to choose their own union formation approach, whether through majority sign-up or through a National Labor Relations Board election.

 

Currently, union campaigns that precede elections can drag on for months, as management often fires union supporters while propagandizing against unions, in sessions with individual workers and in large meetings. Labor organizers are barred from the workplace while management does its utmost to persuade workers than unions are bad for them. If the Employee Free Choice Act is passed, organizers will try to get a majority of workers to sign union cards before corporations can begin their anti-union campaigns.   

 

It’s ironic, no outrageous, that Republicans and their corporate allies would liken organized labor to La Cosa Nostra. If anyone has engaged in organized thuggery against the interests of working class people, it’s that crowd. But there is, of course, a history of gangsters being entangled with unions, both here and in Italy – as corrupters of them. Mobbed-up union bosses and their associates have served their own interests, and those of management, at the expense of workers, destroying union democracy and even murdering honest, progressive unionists, like Pete Panto, a New York longshoreman, and Placido Rizzotto, a Sicilian organizer of agricultural laborers.

 

The Republican Party and big business have been waging class war against working people for decades now. With the election of Barack Obama and his appointment of a progressive, Hilda Solis, as Secretary of Labor, they’re terrified that they, at long last, will start losing battles. Hence their escalating propaganda war against unions and their members. Given the mounting public outrage against them and the disasters they’ve created, they’ve certainly got good reason to be scared.

 

 

Liberals

Hi,

Most Italian-Americans know almost nothing about contemporary Italy or even its recent past history. If they did, they would know that the Union movement there is extremely strong (sindicati). Without this movement, the Italian dream would never have become reality. People in what we call the needle trades earn living wages, even if they work in small family-run factories, because they all have labor contracts. This is true in practically all industries, although now there are problems with "lavora precaria." It is true in America that unfortunately organized labor has been associated with the Mafia, and this association has worked to limit the wages of Union workers, especially the needle trades. I bring this particular Union to light, because I know about it first hand through my parents who were members for 60 years who retired with paltry pensions.

Getting back to the Mafia association, even in Italy before and during the time of Mussolini, any organized labor effort was criticized and was thought to be a threat to order. This line of thinking, unfortunately, had been enforced also by the RC Church. Even though many people in Italy now think that the sindicati have become too powerful and and hampering Italy's economic power, without a living wage, there would be no "Made in Italy." In this regard, let's hope that this crazy race to find the cheapest means of production, and that includes human labor, diminishes, and that free trade takes into account labor conditions as well as cost.

destefano's picture

D'accordo!

D'accordo! (whoever you are!) And thanks for commenting.

What you say is quite true about the Italian unions. Some may say that "i sindicati" have too much power, but organized labor is one of the few forces standing between the Italian people and a resurgent fascism. There also are the magistrates, whom Berlusconi & the right keep attacking, as well as some grassroots Catholics and the civil society associations. But, as is the case here in the US, organized labor is the single largest and strongest force for progressive change, with the greatest resources -- money, people, organization, moral suasion. After too many years of setbacks in a hostile political environment, American labor's prospects are looking up. Passage of the Free Choice Act, which the right is lobbying against, will be a big boost for labor's organizing efforts and a major setback for the GOP and big business. Evviva la classe operaia -- qui (US) e la' (Italia)!

i sindicati

Dear George,

Thanks for your new thoughts on the matter. Actually, I am Patricia Rubino Sandler, and I am a member of our Community. For some strange reason, Community members cannot comment on the main page, only on Community. Grazie, di nuovo per avermi mandato la sua risposta. Che i sindicati ci riescano!

Surfer's picture

Posting on the i-Italy magazine

Dear Patricia, there must be a misunderstanding about how i-Italy actually works. Everybody should be able to post even long texts as comments to our magazine artcles. In fact, you were finally able to reply to George, right? As the project coordinator I am availble to all users to clarify these matters. Should you stll encounter difficulties in the future please write to: editors [at] i-italy.org.

Dear Ottorino, What I mean

Dear Ottorino,

What I mean is that if I fill in my name, Patricia Rubino Sandler, and my e-mail for I-Italy, which is Vanapolipat@gmail.com., I get a response that I am already registered. I like the idea of communicating personally with all of the groups. This last time, I didn't fill in my name, and I used my other e-mail account, patricia.fineproperties@gmail.com to be posted. Also, I wrote my name in the "Comment" column, not under "Your name". Thanks for your help. Pat

sciorra's picture

no links to the videos?

great piece, as usual. why no links to the videos?