Government oversight, union democracy, and labor racketeering: Lessons
from the Teamsters experience
Journal of Labor Research
Fairfax
Summer 1999
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Authors: Michael H Belzer
Authors: Richard Hurd
Volume: 20
Issue: 3
Pagination: 343-365
ISSN: 01953613
Subject Terms: Labor unions
Racketeering
Corruption
Case studies
RICO 1970-US
Union leadership
ElectionsLabor unions
Racketeering
Corruption
Case studies
RICO 1970-US
Union leadership
Elections
Classification Codes: 9190: US
6300: Labor relations
4320: Legislation
9110: Company specific/case studies
Geographic Names: US
Companies:
Company Name: Teamsters Union
Company Name: Teamsters Union
Abstract:
The paper examines the federal courts' effort to clean up the Teamsters
using legislation originally enacted to fight organized crime. Specifically,
the paper looks at the role of electoral democracy in this initiative and
traces the experience through the 1991, 1996, and 1998 elections for Teamsters
president. Once the story is told, the paper analyzes the experience in
the context of union democracy and also considers the relationship between
democracy and labor movement transformation.
Copyright George Mason University, Department of Economics Summer 1999
Full Text:
I. Introduction
In his classic 1943 article on union democracy, Herberg argues that unions
as institutions are "in the grip of a very real contradiction." On the
one hand a union is "a businesslike service organization," while on the
other hand it is a "vehicle for . . . democratic self-determination." Although
being pulled in two directions, there is a natural tendency for power to
concentrate at the top with a concomitant "narrowing of democracy within
the organization." This occurs gradually as elected leaders and staff insulate
themselves from political challenge with the implicit approval of the members
who "as long as things go well don't want self government . . . [but] protection
and service" (Herberg, 1943, pp. 406, 410, 412).
In this context, corruption and racketeering are sensational developments
which are not central to the issue of union democracy but merely "secondary
aggravating factors" (ibid., p. 13). Although Herberg's analysis has withstood
the test of time and applies as readily to unions today as it did half
a century ago, his point about corruption has been lost. With the McClellan
Committee's exposure of labor racketeering and the subsequent Landrum-Griffin
Act's melding of anti-corruption and pro-democracy provisions, the two
subjects seem to be permanently fused both legally and in the perspectives
of labor relations scholars: "From the McClellan committee hearings there
emerged a vivid picture in which corruption and undemocratic practices
went hand-inhand. Congress there upon acted to establish democracy in labor
unions . . ." (Gregory and Katz, 1979, p. 538).
This view persists, for example, in the writing of William Gould who decries
"the undemocratic and corrupt conduct of some union officials" (Gould,
1993, p. 31). As a consequence, electoral democracy has taken on an elevated
stature as the answer to labor's ills. For lawyer Thomas Geoghegan, who
has represented insurgent groups in several different unions, "Congress
could fix . . . the problems of American labor" by reforming the electoral
process including: "rank-and-file vote for all officers, . . . funding
from the union treasury for all candidates," and election oversight by
an "outside neutral agency" (Geoghegan, 1991, p. 198).
No wonder that when the federal courts interceded in the Teamsters and
ordered direct election of national officers most of the industrial relations
community applauded: "The direct election of new leadership in the International
Brotherhood of Teamsters in 1991 is a welcome development for labor" (Gould,
1993, p. 263). Why? Because of the wide acceptance of the following premise:
"The democratic secret ballot-box election of new leadership . . . can
purge corrupt and criminal elements from the ranks of organized labor's
leadership" (Gould, 1993, p. 6). Unfortunately, democratic form has not
proved to be a sufficient remedy in the Teamsters, at least in part because
of the contradiction identified by Herberg.
Little more than seven years after the first direct election of a national
president of the Teamsters we must evaluate what went right and what went
wrong. Ron Carey, associated with progressive change and labor union transformation,
has been banished for violating the very electoral process that was supposed
to save unions from themselves. Jim Hoffa, who carries with him ghosts
of Teamsters' past, has been elected to succeed Carey. The Teamsters experience
under government oversight demonstrates that democracy alone cannot assure
union renewal and that judicial control cannot eliminate all wrongdoing.
In fact the challenges are much more complex.
In this paper we examine the federal courts' effort to clean up the Teamsters
using legislation originally enacted to fight organized crime. Specifically,
we look at the role of electoral democracy in this initiative and trace
the experience through the 1991, 1996, and 1998 elections for Teamsters
president. Once the story is told, we analyze the experience in the context
of union democracy and also consider the relationship between democracy
and labor movement transformation.
II. Background
The Teamsters and Corruption. The International Brotherhood of Teamsters
has been troubled by corruption at the local level since it was founded
in Chicago 100 years ago. In Chicago, local leaders conspired with certain
business leaders to restrict competition, accept bribes, and stage strikes
to benefit some employers at the expense of others. This scheme benefited
members as well as hours of work dropped and workers won overtime rates
for night work (Leiter, 1957). This duality that characterized the union
at the outset has remained, complicating efforts to clean up the union
and its image.
At the national level the union was free of overt corruption during the
45-year presidency of Daniel Tobin. This began to unravel when Dave Beck
succeeded Tobin in 1952. Beck introduced a new organizational structure
by establishing regional Conferences to coordinate bargaining (Gamel, 1972).
Arguably the Conferences also facilitated the spread of corruption upward
from mob-controlled locals. Within five years Beck was in trouble with
the McClellan committee investigating union racketeering. Ultimately he
was removed from the AFL-CIO Executive Board and replaced as president
by Jimmy Hoffa.
Hoffa soon became the target of the McClellan committee as well, and his
questionable practices eventually led to the Teamsters expulsion from the
AFL-CIO (Romer, 1962). A Board of Monitors was established by a federal
court in 1958, but this proved ineffective due to Hoffa's successful manipulation
of the process (Goldberg, 1989a; James and James, 1965; Belzer, 1993).
Hoffa was indicted in 1962 for violating the Taft-Hartley Act by accepting
payments from employers, and he was convicted and imprisoned in 1967 for
jury tampering (Sloane, 1991).
Hoffa appointed Frank Fitzsimmons to succeed him because he thought he
could control Fitzsimmons from prison. This proved more difficult than
Hoffa had anticipated, and the result was internal conflict over power
and an era of ineffective national leadership. Ironically, the replacement
of Hoffa by Fitzsimmons actually increased the influence of organized crime.
Later investigations revealed extensive Cosa Nostra control of the Teamsters
during the Fitzsimmons administration which continued throughout the terms
of his successors, Roy Williams and Jackie Presser (Neff,1989; Friedman
and Schwarz, 1989; President's Commission on Organized Crime, 1985).
During this period there was a dramatic shift in the trucking industry
with reduced government regulation and increased competition, most notably
following the passage of the Motor Carrier Act of 1980. This shift presented
the Teamsters' leadership with a serious challenge. The absence of any
effective strategy to deal with economic and institutional change strengthened
the argument of dissidents within the Teamsters that the union was corrupt
and incompetent, a potent combination (Belzer, 1994).
Jackie Presser, though ineffective at meeting the external challenges faced
by the Teamsters, was adept at enforcing his rule with the help of political
operatives and muscle. He served as a double agent for the Federal Bureau
of Investigation and organized crime. Presser gained power by informing
on his predecessor Williams, and kept it by deftly balancing his corrupt
rule against his role as informant (Crowe, 1993; Methvin, 1992). His careful
juggling act kept authorities off balance, until the Justice Department
stepped into this crisis of policy and clash of goals with a new approach.
The Rationale for RICO. In 1986 prosecutors successfully used the Racketeer
Influenced and Corrupt Organizations (RICO) provisions of the 1970 Organized
Crime Control Act to take over one of the most corrupt local unions in
the U.S. The Provenzano family, central figures in the New Jersey organized
crime scene, had dominated local 560 of the Teamsters. Anthony "Tony Pro"
Provenzano, the titular head of the family and reputedly a captain in the
Genovese organized-crime family, was very close to Jimmy Hoffa throughout
his career as a Teamsters leader. Provenzano had been convicted of extortion,
labor racketeering, and murder (Sloane, 1991, pp. 167, 343, 36465, 397).
Other organized crime members, namely Michael Sciarra and associates, ruled
the local in his absence.
Teamsters Local 560 proved resistant to reform, even by trusteeship. The
courtappointed trustee found it extremely difficult to root out corruption
that was thoroughly embedded in the social and economic structure within
which the union functioned. Individuals like Sciarra were banned but substitutes
took over. The first election conducted under court control led to the
selection of individuals representing the same organized crime network,
so the judge voided the election and re-imposed the trusteeship. After
twelve years it appears that the court's direct involvement finally has
achieved its objective with the election of anti-corruption candidate Pete
Brown as local president on December 18, 1998 (Greenhouse, 1998a).
The government finally had found a tool that could effectively give it
control over union affairs in cases of rampant corruption. The theory is
elegant. Convictions of individual Teamsters for individual crimes would
not change the nature of the organization as a criminal enterprise, because
those removed would be replaced by other corrupt Teamsters. Under RICO,
three predicate acts committed by members of an organization acting in
concert can be taken as evidence of a criminal enterprise. Once prosecutors
surmount the hurdle of proof required to establish the existence of a criminal
enterprise, they can request that the court put the enterprise in trusteeship.
If the enterprise is a business, they can seize the assets; if it is a
union, they can take control of its operations and expel members shown
to be associates of organized crime, or expel members who have committed
or continue to commit illegal acts in furtherance of that enterprise.
During 1986 and 1987 federal prosecutors began to develop a case against
the Teamsters international. The Justice Department filed civil RICO charges
in U.S. District Court in Manhattan on June 28, 1988. The case was developed
by a young Assistant U.S. Attorney, Randy Mastro, and filed by Rudolph
Giuliani, then U.S. Attorney for the Southern District of New York.
The leadership of the Teamsters soon began to fall apart. Jackie Presser
developed brain cancer and became less effective just as the FBI released
records showing Presser's double agent status. In May of 1988 Presser took
a leave of absence for health reasons and died two months later. He was
replaced by individuals who did not have the support of the Mafia. Weldon
Mathis, the General Secretary-Treasurer, took over temporarily but was
beaten by William McCarthy of Boston in a split vote of the Executive Board
that took place a week after Presser's death. All of these events - Presser's
leave of absence, the filing of the RICO suit, and McCarthy's ascendancy
to the presidency - occurred during a period of little more than two months
(Crowe, 1993).
The readmission of the Teamsters into the AFL-CIO signaled an intensive
effort to attack the RICO suit politically. The Teamsters, playing the
role of "defender of democracy," identified themselves with the Polish
Union "Solidarity" in an effort to present government's actions as tyrannical.
Both politicians and AFL-CIO leaders came to their defense, arguing that
the veritable seizure of the union was illegal. Even Teamsters for a Democratic
Union (TDU), the reform group, had serious misgivings about the use of
RICO because it threatened to become a slippery slope toward government
control of labor unions (Bureau of National Affairs, 1989; Geoghegan, 1988;
Goldberg, 1989b; Paff, 1987). Due both to arguments made by Justice Department
attorney Mike Moroney and to those made by TDU and the Association for
Union Democracy, the government eventually decided to emphasize the use
of democracy rather than the use of seizure or trusteeship to cure the
Teamsters.
Just as the RICO suit approached trial, General Executive Board (GEB) members
began signing individual plea bargains with prosecutors. By March 14, 1989
the remaining members of the GEB signed the consent order (United States,
1989), laying the foundation for a near-takeover of the Teamsters by the
government. While several prominent local Teamster leaders challenged the
settlement in court, the appeal failed and Judge David Edelstein consolidated
the case under his control.
III. Court Oversight of the Teamsters
RICO Applied. The RICO consent order was an historic event, the first time
a national union had ever been taken over by the government for any reason.
The use of RICO itself was controversial because the act had been passed
to attack overtly criminal operations and was not intended for a quasi-public
institution like a union. As a judicial action the consent order jumped
over many constitutional and civil rights arguments, putting the interests
of the State (also representing interests of individual members) over union
representatives selected by a "legitimate" and legal process. The drastic
nature of the solution was possible only because of the extent of criminal
activity at the highest levels of the union. The Department of Labor, the
Justice Department, and local law enforcement had never successfully taken
definitive action against labor racketeering before, nor had they been
particularly effective even at incremental enforcement.
The consent order also was significant in that it explicitly imposed democracy
on the union. This option might not have been used if the Teamsters' reform
movement had not existed already, giving democracy a definite constituency.
The Justice Department forced the Teamsters to agree to secret-ballot elections
for International officers, a longstanding plank on the TDU's Bill of Rights.
TDU had argued that the right to free and fair election of union officials
would be the best antidote to racketeering, corruption, and autocracy.
The consent order allowed the court to appoint three officers of the court:
an administrator, an investigations officer, and an election officer, and
Edelstein appointed them on May 31, 1989. Independent administrator Frederick
Lacey had authority similar to that of a trustee in overseeing the non-collective
bargaining day-to-day operations of the union. Investigations Officer Charles
Carberry was to conduct investigations into the activities and personal
associations of individual Teamsters and Teamster leaders. Election Officer
Michael Holland was to set the guidelines governing the 1991 election,
including election rules, supervision, ballot counting, and certification.
In the next three tumultuous years the enforcement of the consent order
wrought enormous change on the Teamsters, forcing out many of the infamous
characters for which the union had been known. In the Investigation Officer's
report to the union and the court at the end of the first four years of
reform, Carberry reported that charges had been filed against 214 individuals
and three local unions. The results included 51 individuals permanently
barred, 64 resignations with signed agreements that the individuals would
never be involved again in Teamster affairs, 53 temporary suspensions,
and 30 other signed agreements, including those signed by the locals (Carberry,
1993).
The consent order also required the Teamsters to submit to continued supervision
following the democratic election of international officers. The post-election
supervision, an entire second phase of oversight, began after new officers
took over in 1992. Post-election supervision eventually consisted of an
Independent Review Board (IRB) and a Chief Investigator. Retired judge
Frederick B. Lacey and former FBI director William H. Webster were original
appointees to the IRB. The third member, selected by the union, originally
was Harold E. Burke, but eventually he was replaced by labor lawyer Grant
Crandall. The IRB had the authority to investigate any suspicious activity
by Teamster officials and be both proactive and reactive to perceived impropriety.
By signing the consent order under RICO, the Teamsters Union gave up a
great deal. By agreeing with the government's charge that they were a "racketeer
influenced and corrupt organization," the Teamsters in effect had pled
guilty to mob domination. Furthermore, the civil rights of leaders and
members were compromised. While citizens enjoy a constitutional right to
freedom of association, a "convict" gives up some of those rights, and
the Teamsters became "convicts" when they signed the order. For this reason,
the IRB only has to prove that an individual Teamster has associated with
a member of organized crime or with a banned former Teamster to have committed
a serious offense punishable by expulsion. Failure to cooperate with the
IRB extends beyond making false statements as well, as charged members
may not take the Fifth Amendment. The IRB can act under the union's constitutional
authority to take action against those who bring "disrepute" on the union,
and during the first five years of its existence the IRB expelled or suspended
nearly everyone who failed to cooperate fully (Independent Review Board,
1997).
The 1991 Election. The most visible effect of court oversight was the new
process to elect national officers by direct vote of the members. Potential
candidates were faced with a significant political challenge: With no relevant
experience above the local level to draw on, they needed to establish a
national campaign organization with field operations. National leaders
in the Teamsters were used to operating inside the halls of power. They
knew how to log roll to get things done, but now they had to campaign for
office with no opportunity to develop the requisite political skills. The
election process required them to collect nominating signatures, win elections
for delegates to the convention, and get enough votes at the convention
to qualify for a spot on the ballot. Candidates also had to file elaborate
campaign finance reports, subject to the scrutiny of other candidates and
court representatives.
The incumbent General Executive Board was divided going into the 1991 election.
Having never experienced a wide-open election, and arguably in the absence
of the controlling influence of the Mafia, board members split into two
camps, one backing R.V. Durham and one backing Walter Shea. Durham had
been the Teamsters' safety and health director and was considered "clean,"
with a personal power base in the Southeast. Shea, originally brought into
the International as an administrative assistant to Jimmy Hoffa, for all
practical purposes had run the union during much of the Fitzsimmons administration
and felt that he was ready to assume the presidency. Looking at the Durham
and Shea slates one can see the outline of the entire Teamster hierarchy
at the end of an era, only a handful of whom remain active today.
Ron Carey, the rebellious leader of UPS Teamsters' Local 804 in New York,
sensed an opportunity to take advantage of the incumbents' disarray and
announced his candidacy for president in September 1989. Carey gained the
support of TDU, the rank-andfile organization of Teamsters opposed to the
union's storied corruption and undemocratic practices, and critical of
its lack of leadership in the fight to maintain wages and conditions in
the face of deregulation. TDU had led an extended fight throughout the
1980s in favor of both bottom-up organizing and democratic processes and
possessed the organizational framework to get Carey's reform message to
the membership.
Conducting a grass-roots campaign and supported by TDU's extensive network
of activists, Carey crisscrossed the nation by car, meeting with Teamsters
in large units and small, impressing on them that this was their opportunity
to make a change. In an historic upset, the rank-and-file slate led by
Carey won the election with slightly less than 50 percent of the votes
cast. While the election appeared to outsiders to be a "Carey" election,
it actually was won by a combination of forces: the Carey "name" and the
TDU organization. Neither of them could have won alone, but both together
could form an organization capable of delivering the votes (Crowe, 1993;
Belzer, 1995).
Oversight during Carey's First Term. Carey's election signaled a new era
for the Teamsters. He put his stamp on the organization by setting an aggressive
tone with employers and anti-union politicians. He began to beef up certain
functions within the international, including organizing and research.
In the organizing area he retained Vicki Saporta, the union's head of organizing
who had run on the Shea slate during the election, and he allocated a significant
increase in funds with which she could hire organizers. In the political
arena he hired a professional staff which created a more assertive position
within the Washington political environment, and he soon became a leading
union voice opposing the North American Free Trade Agreement.
As Carey emphasized organizing and outreach, he brought in and began to
energize a new group of staff members well known for their creative and
mass-based approach to addressing the crisis of membership decline experienced
throughout the labor movement during the 1980s. New staff members in the
communications department began to carve out public awareness of the New
Teamsters fighting for the "American Dream." Soon after the 1994 Congressional
elections Carey and the Teamsters began to put their considerable clout
behind the need for change in AFL-CIO leadership and helped lead a revolution
that ousted Lane Kirkland and replaced him with John Sweeney as AFL-CIO
President. The mood within the "Marble Palace" began to lift as Carey assumed
a leading role in redefining unions as member-driven organizations. This
change in emphasis also led to a dramatic improvement in the union's public
image. Seen as a pariah just a few years earlier, pundits now considered
the Teamsters to be a leading force for union reform.
Serious problems, however, continued to undermine his leadership, and 1994
was a pivotal year. The "Old Guard" union leadership, suddenly frozen out
of power, continued to resist Carey's new direction (McClure, 1993; Schulz,
1995). During his second year in office Carey had to negotiate a contract
with United Parcel Service (UPS). The contract made only minimal improvements
over past contracts, retaining the twotier wage structure for part timers.
The ink on that contract was barely dry when UPS, early in 1994, announced
a doubling of package size (from 70 to 150 pounds) without bargaining with
the union. This affront infuriated Carey, who soon called a national strike
against UPS. Whether the strike was legal was debatable (lawsuits were
filed on all sides, but all were dismissed eventually), but politically
it prompted his opponents to challenge his authority and about half of
all local leaders refused to back the strike. About this time Jim Hoffa
began to emerge as a potential challenger.
During the same period it was becoming clear that the International union
needed more funds. The per capita tax levied by the international on the
locals had been set for a decade at $3.90 per month, a pitifully low rate
frozen in the union's constitution. Immediately after the aborted UPS strike,
Carey tried to raise dues. He attempted to get political support for the
dues increase by writing the initiative such that the international would
share dues with local unions. The "Old Guard" forces mobilized for this
membership vote, and Carey's dues increase failed by a two-to-one margin.
Carey's opposition was beginning to find its stride.
Negotiations had begun over the National Master Freight Agreement (NMFA)
during this period. The fracas over the UPS package weight limits and the
dues increase referendum had distracted key staff members and as a result
the union bargaining team was not well prepared. Discussions had begun
later than usual in part because of this lack of preparation. Also, Carey
by now had become untrusting of other leaders, many of whom indeed were
out to get him. The internal problems contributed to failed negotiations,
and the result was a lengthy NMFA strike in April 1994 that severely damaged
the carriers and the union; both still feel the negative effects. This
strike drained the treasury to the breaking point and the union had to
turn to the AFL-CIO for a bailout, but it also allowed the International
to invoke a constitutional provision allowing it to assess the locals one
dollar per member per month until such time as the International's finances
crossed a specific threshold. The funding situation has remained dire since
that time and the one dollar special assessment remains in effect as of
this writing.
The final act during the spring of 1994, immediately after the strike,
was a GEB decision to close down the Conferences. The Conferences - Eastern,
Southern, Central, Western, and Canadian - were intermediate bodies in
the union's structure designed to bring together local and regional leaders
within each conference area to work cooperatively to support organizing
and bargaining. In recent years, however, critics had charged that the
conferences had become a level of wasteful bureaucracy and a haven for
double-dippers. Some insiders have argued that Carey actually backed into
this action and that if he had intended to use this as a serious strategic
power grab he should have transferred the power of the Conferences to existing
industry divisions (freight, warehouse, UPS, carhaul, public sector, and
others) in an effort to replace the productive organizational function
of the Conferences, strengthening the union. In fact, he appeared to retreat
after closing down the Conferences, taking no follow-up action.
Although the union continued its aggressive course after the spring of
1994, it seems as if Carey was less "in charge" of events and more reactive.
He continued his public role, but some insiders suggested he was more isolated
than ever. As the next general election cycle began, with delegate elections
in 1995, many activists urged him to be aggressive and confrontational
with fence-sitting local officials. Carey held them back, preferring to
collect statements of support from those leaders in the period leading
up to the 1996 convention. His apparent caution may have doomed the reform
process within the union to the successive defeats it was soon to suffer.
Government oversight during this period was uneven, and Carey's opponents
charged that the IRB and other court officials had handled Carey with kid
gloves. Carey actually was under steady pressure to seek out and remove
officials who had run afoul of ethics rules. He trusteed more than 60 locals
during his first term, 20 of them on the direct recommendation of the IRB
and many others under indirect pressure. Many times Carey and the GEB recommended
punishments of officials, both friend and foe, that were rejected as insufficient
by the IRB.
The 1996 Election. The 1996 election in the Teamsters was hotly contested
and Carey's margin proved surprisingly thin at the end. The process began
in the fall of 1995 with delegate elections and reached a fever pitch at
a raucous 1996 convention that accomplished little of substance, but rather
was deadlocked in what looked like a weeklong struggle to the death between
Carey and his challenger Jim Hoffa.
Carey's strategy on handling the delegate elections proved to be a critical
error. From accounts of participants we have learned that Carey decided
not to confront local leaders who promised to support his re-election.
Some of those officers were opposed at the local level by rank-and-file
activists, often TDU groups, who believed they were not really "reform"
oriented. In many cases, Carey stymied those rank-and-file efforts to push
reform issues by insisting on a strategic alliance between reform forces
and local leaders who had voiced support for Carey, against the allegedly
more dangerous threat posed by Hoffa's candidacy.
Coming into the convention in July, Carey announced that he had the support
of a majority of local union officials, but early in the convention this
support proved to be diaphanous. Carey lost an early test of strength during
the first day, and the rest of the convention degenerated into a test of
wits and parliamentary skills between Hoffa forces and TDU activists working
with other Carey supporters. To a significant extent, Carey lost the credibility
he once had as a reformer and a democrat by resorting to political manipulation
to control the convention. Granted the situation was graphically confrontational
and chaotic, but the extent of Carey's manipulation of the convention was
surprising given his image as a reformer. Most important, the convention
displayed the extent to which Carey would be vulnerable in the ensuing
election.
The electoral process, as promulgated by 1996 Election Officer Barbara
Zack Quindel and approved by the court, proved to be full of loopholes.
On the one hand the process was quite rigid regarding convention conduct,
specifying the days and times each category of officer would be nominated,
restricting demonstrations and similar campaign activity, and requiring
local unions to pay for delegates' travel (even detailing the per diem
rate). On the other hand, election rules allowed members and nonmembers
(those who were not employers) to contribute very large sums of money to
election campaigns. Critically, rules for record-keeping were like Swiss
cheese, as candidates did not have to record or report contributions of
less than $100. Both campaigns received hundreds of thousands of dollars,
much of which was untraceable.
Hoffa's campaign was decentralized, with field operations controlled by
a coalition of local union presidents. While the central Hoffa campaign
organization had limited funds, widespread fund raising occurred at the
local level based on the political machines of local leaders loyal to Hoffa.
These same local machines were able to get out the vote in significant
numbers, demonstrating a far more sophisticated political effort than in
the 1991 election by either the Durham or Shea slates.
In contrast to 1991 when his campaign was driven by rank-and-file activists,
Carey had turned the operation over to political consultants with a reputation
for effective promotion of "progressive" candidates for public office.
They saw the election not as retail union politics but as a wholesale broad-brush
political operation based on a big budget and mass mailings. Alarmed after
nearly losing control of the convention, Carey's campaign seemed to sputter
as his political operatives ran scared. Hoffa had significantly more money
than Carey did and was able to mount a more aggressive public relations
effort.
As late as October 1996, the Carey campaign organization still had not
roused itself nor mobilized adequately, as even phone banks were not yet
operational. Carey's professional political campaigners had little or no
connection to the Teamster membership, and bypassed key rank-and-file leaders
who had organizing skills and a political base. To the extent that Carey
had a field operation it was based in TDU's organizational network. Critically,
however, it seemed as if TDU was hobbled throughout the campaign as it
struggled to juggle support for Carey as incumbent (having to defend many
unpopular decisions) with their support for Carey as standard-bearer for
democratic rank-and-file unionism.
In spite of these difficulties, Carey's slate ultimately won the 1996 election
by 26,000 votes, or less than a 52 percent to 48 percent split. Vote margins
in many areas were razor thin, and the slate lost in the Central region,
reflecting Hoffa's strength in that traditional core bastion of Teamster
influence.
The 1996 Election: Aftermath. Applying fund-raising rules like those used
in public elections, candidates were not required to report the origins
of contributions less than $100. The rules allowed contributions by individuals
outside the union, and the rules did not limit the size of organizational
contributions. This procedure ultimately resulted in widespread wrongdoing
on the part of both candidates, though only one of them paid the ultimate
price. No sooner had the election been certified than credible charges
began to circulate suggesting that Carey campaign operatives had traded
funding with political organizations that supported the Democratic party.
During the course of the election, both sides charged hundreds of violations.
The Elections Officer investigated these charges and most of them were
dismissed. A few charges held up and both sides were adjudged in violation
of the rules. These violations include retaliation by the Teamsters Director
of Organizing and others against staff members who were not viewed as supporting
the Carey agenda (they interpreted a lack of active support for his re-election
as lack of support for the Carey agenda), and contributions on behalf of
the Hoffa campaign by the Real Teamsters Caucus that actually were contributions
of union funds.
The most important charges came after the election was over and certified.
Investigation of union records and candidates' campaign finance records
suggested that a large sum of money may have been transferred from the
Teamsters to certain individuals and consulting firms at times that coincided
with the 1996 general election. Indeed, about the time of Carey's inauguration
his lawyers became aware of certain potential legal problems. Carey was
informed about these charges and he authorized attorneys to investigate
the situation and soon informed all involved that they should cooperate
fully with government investigators, though it took some months for the
specific charges to surface.
Eventually investigators determined that certain individuals on Carey's
staff, namely professional political operatives Martin Davis, Jere Nash
(Carey's campaign manager), and William Hamilton (Teamsters chief lobbyist),
were joined by consultant Michael Ansara in a scheme by which they used
Teamster funds to leverage contributions to Carey's campaign from political
organizations engaged in campaigning for Democratic candidates in the 1996
Congressional elections. This "laundering" of funds, or "swap-scheme,"
involved the use of $855,000 from the Teamsters treasury in trade for funding
sufficient to pay for a general mailing of campaign literature to members.
The National Council for Senior Citizens, Project Vote, and Citizen Action
all accepted contributions from the Teamsters for their get-out-the-vote
activities and agreed in return to make contributions to Carey's election
fund. The AFL-CIO was implicated for serving as an intermediary. Although
the entire illegal effort took place with the agreement of these few non-Teamsters,
it ultimately brought down decades of reform efforts by members of TDU
and other supporters of union democracy. Ironically, the mass mailing funded
by the scheme, performed by Ansara's telemarketing firm, did not go out
until more than week after ballots were mailed, probably too late to affect
the result.
Judge Kenneth Conboy, acting as "Special Master" in view of the Elections
Officer's resignation in September of 1997, ruled that not only should
the election be rerun but that Carey should be disqualified (Quindel,1997;
Conboy,1997). Davis, Nash, and Ansara pled guilty to federal charges, and
Hamilton awaits trial. In the summer of 1998 the curtain dropped on Ron
Carey, as the IRB banned him from all Teamsters positions for life.
Conboy also ordered the new Elections Officer, Michael Cherkasky, to investigate
charges made by Carey's campaign against Hoffa's election fund raising.
Carey's camp argued that Hoffa had raised an extremely large sum of money
and that he had received funding from mob sources and employers. Cherkasky
ruled on April 27, 1997 that although Hoffa and his campaign had violated
election rules and the law, the violations were not severe enough to warrant
disqualification. Some of the charges against Hoffa were serious. Cherkasky
charged Hoffa with accepting $167,675 from an employer, Richard Leebove
and RL Communications (a Landrum-Griffin violation). Hoffa also was charged
with being untruthful about Leebove's role, "testifying under oath" that
he was only marginally involved in the campaign. On the contrary, Leebove,
a former operative for Lyndon LaRouche, was known to the media and to key
individuals within the Hoffa campaign organization as "the brains of the
campaign." Cherkasky found that Leebove actually performed work for Hoffa
while being paid for doing business for Teamster local-union clients, thus
constituting a transfer of union funds to pay for Hoffa's campaign. He
also found that the campaign employed convicted felon Kevin Currie through
payments to Currie's wife. In spite of these findings Cherkasky ruled that
the violations were not severe enough to cause Hoffa to be disqualified
from running for Teamsters' President (Cherkasky, 1998).
Carey's disqualification hit the Carey camp and TDU hard. For months "reform"
forces were in disarray, sure that these charges would be proven false
and Carey would return to office. Eventually, however, it became clear
that whether Carey had known of the swap scheme or not, he would be held
responsible as the fiduciary - it happened on his watch.
Carey apparently wanted to name a successor, and his support went to Ken
Hall, his partner in bargaining the 1997 UPS contract. Hall, however, was
unable to mount a campaign and the "reform" forces' efforts languished.
In May it became clear that Hall would not be able mount a campaign and
Tom Leedham, Western Regional Vice President and director of the union's
Warehouse Division, stepped into the breach. Leedham was unable to attract
support from traditional Teamster leaders aligned with Carey (such as John
Morris of Philadelphia, an "old school" machine politician), so his slate
was more narrowly based among those who advocated "rank-and-file-power"
unionism than was Carey's. Leedham indeed articulated a very clear vision
of where the Teamsters needed to go and showed that he could campaign tirelessly
to demonstrate his leadership.
The 1998 Rerun Election. In 1998 the Teamsters re-ran their 1996 election,
but the cast of characters had changed somewhat. Jim Hoffa was the early
front-runner as he had years of exposure and solid funding. Tom Leedham
led the former Carey forces with a campaign that literally started at the
very last minute and plugged into the TDU's grass-roots organization. John
Metz of St. Louis, director of the union's public-sector division, headed
a spoiler slate and did not campaign.
Hoffa began the 1998 rerun election with a strong war chest and solid name
recognition. The media immediately announced that he was the favorite,
a "shoo-in" for election as Teamster president. Though Hoffa's early campaigning
was rather limited, his pace picked up during the fall, apparently because
a poll commissioned by his campaign showed the race much tighter than originally
expected. Hoffa's campaign drew support from leaders and members who either
had never accepted the "reform" concepts advocated by Carey and TDU or
who had come to the conclusion that Hoffa alone had the personal credibility
to end the conflict within the union and bring unity to the Teamsters.
During the 1998 campaign Leedham campaigned six or seven days per week,
frequently 18 hours per day. He estimated that during his campaign he shook
nearly 100,000 hands and visited Teamster workplaces throughout the nation.
He campaigned on a shoe string, sleeping in members' homes to save funds,
but ultimately Leedham was unable to overcome the name recognition disadvantage.
John Metz, the leader of a third slate made up primarily of Carey's more
traditional supporters (key among them John Morris), hardly campaigned
at all. He did make use of free advertising in the Teamster magazine, much
of it devoted to negative campaigning aimed at Hoffa.
Ultimately Hoffa won with 54.5 percent of the votes cast. Leedham received
39.3 percent and Metz received 6.2 percent (Bearth, 1999). Since Leedham
had begun his campaign barely six months earlier as an unknown except among
activists, his showing may be seen as remarkable. While Hoffa claimed a
mandate for change, voter turnout was barely 28 percent of the membership,
down from 34 percent in 1996.
Although the election results as announced on December 5 are indisputable,
charges filed by the IRB in subsequent weeks cast a shadow over the outcome.
The IRB formally charged three of Hoffa's 1998 running mates, with the
actions of one of them directly linked to Hoffa himself. Vice president
elect Tom O'Donnell was charged for his role in the 1996 election when
he hired convicted felon Kevin Currie to work for the Hoffa campaign. Recall
that employment of Currie was one of the charges against Hoffa which was
substantiated by the investigation of Elections Officer Cherkasky. Charges
also have been filed against one of Hoffa's Southern regional vice presidents,
J.D. Potter, for falsely reporting illegal contributions to the Hoffa campaign,
and against Western regional vice president Jim Santangelo for improper
financial practices (Greenhouse, 1998b). Other charges may follow, as Hoffa
Eastern regional vice president Dan DeSanti allegedly had a campaign meeting
with suspended former Local 107 President Tom Ryan, according to information
released by the IRB on December 10.
IV. Analysis
Union Democracy. Union democracy is a topic which has received scant attention
from scholarly researchers in recent years. Fortunately, Strauss contributed
an overview of the topic to the 1991 IRRA volume, The State of the Unions.
Strauss' piece plus several commentaries on the Teamsters case provide
a framework which facilitates analytical treatment of the facts that we
have presented.
As Strauss points out, there are two competing definitions of union democracy.
According to one view, the objective is a high level of rank-and-file participation
so that the union empowers workers to exercise voice directly in decisions
that affect them (both within the union and on the job). Under the alternative
definition, the key contribution of unions to democratic society is in
their role as a countervailing force to employers, and to fulfill this
function a union must display unity through discipline and administrative
efficiency. It is not easy for a union simultaneously to promote member
involvement and to maintain the discipline necessary to speak as one voice.
Unions therefore face a "democracy dilemma" (Strauss, 1991, pp. 204-5).
Fraser (1998) takes the dilemma one step further. He notes that unions
perform at least three roles which are not always compatible: rank-and-file
participation and mobilization; representation of members' interests vis-a-vis
employers; and organization for combat including the imposition of "solidaristic
discipline." Both Fraser and Strauss point out that in order to cope with
these competing demands, elected leaders and union staff tend to exert
control over the operation of the union bureaucracy and to insulate themselves
from the vagaries of rank-and-file pressure.
In practice member participation is channeled into periodic mobilization
in support of contract negotiations, while day-to-day involvement is limited
to a small cadre of stewards who may be elected or appointed. Most workers
adapt to this approach and come to think of the union as an occasionally
militant insurance agency that provides representation services day to
day and coordinates strikes when necessary.
If the concept and experience of union democracy are ambiguous, then it
comes as no surprise that the role of government in promoting this democracy
also lacks clarity. For many political conservatives, government policy
should protect the individual rights of union members (including the right
not to join); for them, duty of fair representation requirements and provisions
allowing members to withhold dues payments that support political activity
are essential elements of democracy. For many political liberals, on the
other hand, union democracy means the right to vote for leaders with a
preference for some electoral choice, i.e., more than one candidate. However,
democracy is not seen by liberals merely as an end in itself, but also
as the best antidote to union corruption and autocracy. As Strauss summarizes
this point: "Democratic rules serve to foster democracy (however defined)
and reduce corruption. But these rules need to be enforced." He goes on
to describe the pending ( 1991 ) Teamsters election as a "critical test
of what the law can accomplish" (Strauss, 1991, p. 232).
Enforcement is more difficult to accomplish in some settings than in others.
Industrial unions with roots in the CIO are highly centralized; if the
national union operates democratically, then it reasonably can be assumed
that the locals are democratic. Most of these unions meticulously follow
federal regulations in conducting their national elections and in that
sense they are democratic, although many of them (such as the UAW) operate
as one-party states and have throughout their history.
Craft unions with roots in the AFL are a different matter entirely. Most
of them are decentralized with substantial local union autonomy. This makes
enforcement far more complicated since each local operates under its own
rules and in the context of its own institutional history. Even national
elections may be difficult to evaluate since in most unions they are conducted
via convention votes by delegates who are selected at the local level.
The Teamsters are an AFL union, and journalist Phil Dine has reasonably
posed the question, "Did those [in the government] who set out to reshape
the Teamsters understand its culture and history" (Dine, 1998)?
When considered in the context of the dramatic changes which have been
underway in the labor movement over the last decade, the challenge of promoting
union democracy is even more complex. Intensified market pressure caused
by technological change, deregulation, and globalization of markets has
wreaked havoc, but the inflexible practices of most unions also have contributed
to decline. In this environment progressive unionists have struggled to
lead their cohorts down the rocky road to transformation. In its purest
form, this initiative has grown out of rank-and-file insurgencies including
that of TDU and of the UAW's New Directions movement. These movements argue
that unions should pursue an "organizing model," mobilizing members to
practice activist unionism every day on the shop floor. Bob Muehlenkamp
summarized the concept as "organizing for everything we do" (Muehlenkamp,
1991). In 1988 when he issued this call Muehlenkamp was with the National
Union of Hospital and Health Care Employees; he joined Ron Carey's staff
as organizing director in 1992.
Many idealists have embraced the cause of the insurgents. In a "radical
retort" to the Fraser article cited above, Aronowitz defends grassroots
union democracy on two grounds: unions controlled by the rank and file
will be better able to wage class war; and participatory democracy is the
appropriate antidote to the "authoritarianism of liberal [electoral] democracy"
(Aronowitz, 1998, p. 84). Even Aronowitz, however, recognizes the potential
futility of his own idealism, admitting that in the context of the U.S.
industrial relations system unions naturally will gravitate to the insurance-agency
approach, or the "servicing model" as it is often called.
More pragmatic unionists, including the current leaders of the AFL-CIO,
are attempting to transform unions from the top down. There is little indication
that union members are interested in the degree of daily activism envisioned
in the organizing model, and no credible evidence at all that "class war"
is more than a leftist intellectual dream. Thus progressive union leaders
and staff are moving beyond the organizing model to develop strategies
to regain market power through increased organizing, more effective political
action, and selective reliance on militant confrontations. Targeted mobilization
of members plays a key role in these efforts but is not an end in itself
(Fletcher and Hurd, 1998).
This top-down approach to transformation is not satisfactory for supporters
of rank-and-file insurgency, such as Kim Moody, who complains of the current
AFL-CIO leaders, "Union democracy is not on their radar screen" (Moody,
1998). Others are more sympathetic. To return to Fraser, he argues that
a strong institutional labor movement and its attendant bureaucracy are
in fact what members want. Furthermore, procedural democracy in large national
unions may ultimately "replicate contemporary electoral politics" and have
"little to do with the rank and file" (Fraser, 1998). He cites the 1996
Teamsters election in support of this point.
Ultimately, the current efforts by the AFL-CIO to transform the labor movement
can be understood in the context of Strauss' second definition of union
democracy: Unions are democratic to the extent that in the defense of workers
they are an effective countervailing force to employers. As Fraser observes,
"From afar it is all too easy to declaim preoccupation with power while
failing to recognize the precariousness of the union institution itself"
(Fraser, 1998). Leaders and staff at the AFL-CIO want member involvement
and greater effectiveness and to some extent they see involvement as a
lever for effectiveness. But the primary focus has to be on results, so
concern for effectiveness predominates.
Teamster Democracy. With its strong tradition of local union autonomy,
the Teamsters union which entered into the consent agreement in 1989 was
anything but homogeneous. To be sure, some locals were controlled by leaders
who made sweetheart deals and were influenced by organized crime. Far more
common were locals that operated as traditional business unions embracing
the servicing model/insurance agent approach. Some leaders of these servicing
model locals collaborated with or at least tolerated their corrupt counterparts
elsewhere in the Teamsters. But many other leaders steered clear of questionable
elements in the union and operated clean locals. Some went so far as to
urge democratic reforms and an end to corruption (albeit in the context
of traditional servicing model unionism). There also were a growing number
of locals embracing the organizing model approach, in part due to the influence
of nearly twenty years of insurgency and rank-and-file militancy instigated
by TDU.
The three slates of candidates that ran in the 1991 Teamsters' election
reflected the interests of these three constituencies. The "incumbent"
faction was represented by both Durham and Shea slates, though some may
argue that the Shea slate had more corrupt old-line leaders than did the
Durham slate. Both slates included leaders who wanted to preserve the tradition
of local autonomy, even if it meant continuing to tolerate corruption in
some segments of the union. They also included leaders who were intolerant
of corruption in their own locals but who agreed on a common vision of
the servicing model of unions that discouraged member involvement. The
mixed motivations of these slates' leaders, however, did not include support
for the organizing model.
Carey clearly was a threat to corrupt elements because of his reputation
as a reformer. He also was perceived as somewhat of a threat to entrenched
local leaders because of his historic willingness to challenge the Teamsters
hierarchy and because of his current willingness to embrace TDU's more
grass-roots model. His opposition to corruption won him the support of
organizing model locals and members throughout the country who wanted to
break away from the corrupt history of the Teamsters, but Carey's expertise
and instincts personally were firmly rooted in the servicing model. His
endorsement by the TDU created problems for more traditional local leaders,
but he was able to gain enough support among those who wanted a change
to guide this coalition to victory.
This characterization of the three candidacies oversimplifies the political
dynamics of the first election, as advocates of the servicing model who
tolerated some corruption split their vote, and the election was won by
a coalition between advocates of the anti-corruption servicing model and
the organizing model (which gained nearly 50 percent of all votes cast).
No slate can be characterized entirely with one of these generalizations,
as Vicki Saporta, organizing director at the time of the consent agreement
and respected throughout the labor movement for her innovative bottom-up
organizing strategy, ran on Shea's slate even though her perspective likely
better fit the Carey team. On the other hand, some of those on Carey's
slate later were charged with inappropriate dealings and removed as a result
of IRB investigations. True to form, however, eventually more of those
on Durham's and Shea's slates left the Teamsters under a cloud than left
the Carey administration under similar circumstances.
Carey's win was a surprise inside and outside of the Teamsters. It reflected
an unexpected breadth of support for change among local leaders and members.
His victory was by no means complete, however, since he won only a plurality
of the vote with only 28 percent of members voting and did not subsequently
gain the support of a majority of local leaders. Many leaders of servicing
model locals who had opposed Carey in the first election supported him
afterwards, although in retrospect we might question the depth of their
commitment. But many others maintained their distance or openly challenged
his leadership, setting the stage for ongoing conflict.
When Carey took office in 1992 he implemented a wholesale replacement of
key national union staff. In a break with tradition, most of the newcomers
were hired from outside the Teamsters with the typical individual an experienced
professional from another union with a reputation for innovation and a
commitment to labor's revitalization. Joining Carey were Eddie Burke from
the Mineworkers as chief of staff, Judy Scott from the UAW as chief counsel,
Bob Muehlenkamp as organizing director, Marilyn Sneiderman from the George
Meany Center as education director, Ron Carver from the UE as director
of corporate campaigns, and many others.
While his new staff set out to change the Teamsters culture from above,
Carey cooperated with the IRB's investigation into corruption. Where the
IRB found evidence of corruption or of collaboration with former Teamsters
expelled for corruption, Carey established trusteeships. Eventually Carey
trusteed more than 60 locals scattered throughout the Teamsters, many of
those in traditionally corrupt areas such as New York and New Jersey. In
a parallel move, Carey first feuded with and then disbanded the Teamster
Conferences, intermediate bodies which had coordinated activity at the
regional level and which insulated locals from national control to some
extent (while allowing local leaders to draw additional salaries as described
above).
Carey's high-powered staff, his use of trusteeships, and his dissolution
of Conferences were part of an effort to centralize power in the national
union. At the same time, he maintained his uneasy alliance with the TDU
and with organizing model locals as he sought to establish his strategic
coalition. In Strauss' framework, Carey essentially was attempting to create
a solution to the democracy dilemma by simultaneously centralizing control
and promoting rank-and-file activism.
To step outside of the Teamsters briefly, Carey was widely applauded for
his efforts in the labor movement, particularly by those union leaders
and staff described in the preceding section as pragmatic progressives
working to lead union transformation from above. In due time Carey established
close ties with a small circle of national union presidents who shared
this perspective including John Sweeney of the SEIU, Gerald McEntee of
AFSCME, and Rich Trumka of the UMW (who had himself risen to power via
a government-imposed direct election). As a member of this group Carey
embraced the goal of transformation and became a key player in the 1995
ouster of Lane Kirkland as President of the AFL-CIO and in the subsequent
victory of the "New Directions" slate headed by Sweeney and Trumka.
The ascendancy of New Directions was not matched by good fortune for Carey's
"New Teamsters." As detailed above, the 1993 UPS contract was a disappointment;
the 1994 strike over the National Master Freight Agreement drained the
union treasury; the effort to raise dues was soundly defeated; and initiatives
to restructure and centralize the union were widely resisted. Throughout
Carey's first five years in office his opponents within the union resisted
him at every turn and attempted to undermine virtually every aspect of
his program.
In spite of these difficulties, Carey entered the 1996 Teamsters election
year secure in the presumption of continued support from his diverse coalition
of local leaders representing a majority of members. Nonetheless, the candidacy
of Jim Hoffa was a serious enough threat for Carey to assemble a high-powered
team of political consultants to coordinate his campaign. The convention
debacle exposed the lack of commitment among certain elements of Carey's
coalition, particularly more traditional forces committed to both the servicing
model and local union autonomy. It also exposed the weakness inherent in
Carey's strategic compromise with those more traditional forces: everything
he did to appease them (such as discouraging TDU activists from running
against them in delegate elections) set him up for the disaster that befell
him during the convention.
Although the Carey campaign (and subsequently Leedham's campaign) portrayed
Hoffa as captive to corrupt elements, his support actually was much broader.
The actions of the IRB and the corresponding trusteeships had done little
to challenge traditional servicing model unionism, and had in some ways
reinforced the appeal of local union autonomy. Hoffa assembled a network
of local leaders who were leery of efforts to centralize the union and
who yearned for a return to an environment where their own authority was
undisputed.
Hoffa's commitment to traditional servicing model unionism is clear in
his campaign materials: "Today we need a leader who understands the `ins
and outs' of labor law.... Experienced leaders like Jim Hoffa know how
to fight the employer and win." Nowhere in the Hoffa campaign was there
a hint of commitment to members activism; rather, rank-and-file involvement
is limited to voting for "... . the leadership it believes can solve its
problems over the long term." Furthermore, Hoffa strongly endorsed limiting
the use of trusteeships and returning authority to local unions and opposed
Carey's effort to raise the per capita tax above the current level of $3.90
per member per month.
Whereas Carey's conceptualization of democracy attempted to resolve the
democracy dilemma by combining rank-and-file involvement with strong leadership
committed to transformation, Hoffa's is much simpler. Democracy is limited
to Strauss' second definition, with unions serving as a countervailing
force to employers. For Hoffa this is best achieved by relying on a skilled
lawyer/negotiator in the national presidency, combined with local control
of the day-to-day representation of members.
Hoffa's message had broad appeal to local leaders and the depth of support
displayed at the convention should have served as a wake up call for the
Carey campaign team. The campaign actually continued to languish as Carey,
beset by physical pain (both knees were replaced after the election) and
struggling to maintain his strategic coalition, did not shift gears and
mobilize the membership until rather late. During the fall of 1996 (months
after the convention) Carey's campaign strategy was adapted from public
electoral politics, complete with a fund-raising operation which eventually
overstepped legal boundaries. Carey's allies in other unions could not
resist the temptation to assist their associate in his time of need, as
they apparently believed that the coordinated effort to transform unions
and rebuild the labor movement was in danger of unraveling.
Ironically, it was only after Carey's tainted election victory that the
1997 UPS contract fight actualized his vision for the Teamsters. Carey's
crackerjack national staff developed a model strategy, including a clear
public relations message about UPS's reliance on temporary workers and
low wages, along with a national network of UPS workers developed using
"member-to-member" mobilization. The AFL-CIO's financial guarantee of strike
benefits was the icing on the cake. Unfortunately for Carey, the ink was
barely dry on the contract before the elections officer voided the 1996
election due to campaign fund-raising improprieties.
Although irregularities were uncovered in both the Carey and Hoffa campaigns,
there is an important difference. The money funneled into Carey's campaign
came from the national union treasury in a "you scratch my back and I'll
scratch your back" scheme that indirectly traded funding of liberal organizations'
get-out-the-vote efforts for contributions to Carey's campaign. Ironically,
the "rank-and-file" Carey had access to these funds due to his control
of the national organization. Some of Hoffa's tainted funds, on the other
hand, came from local union treasuries in a more "traditional" way, as
local union leaders granted themselves bonuses and raises that in turn
were kicked back to Hoffa's treasury. Others came from employers, such
as Leebove, and most other funding came from local "Hoffa '96" campaign
organizations that kept insufficient records to allow tracing of the funds.
Though these practices of both campaigns were flawed, the legal distinction
was defining. In his position as national union President, Carey bore responsibility
for the illegal funding scheme and was removed from office, barred from
running in the 1998 election, and ultimately barred from the union. Since
it was local union presidents who shifted monies to Hoffa, and since he
was the challenger and not engaged therefore in "official" wrongdoing,
he was one step removed from the violations and thereby escaped with a
reprimand.
Only one piece remains to complete the Teamster democracy picture. Tom
Leedham eventually emerged as Hoffa's primary opponent in 1998. His view
of democracy, as reflected in his campaign, is much closer than Carey's
to Strauss' first definition a high level of rank-and-file involvement
with the union empowering workers to exercise voice. His support among
leaders came primarily from those who support the organizing model, including
TDU locals. Most leaders of servicing model locals who had participated
in the Carey coalition defected to Hoffa, as Leedham received support from
perhaps 10 percent of local leaders. In spite of this apparent limited
appeal, his grassroots outreach directly to members ultimately attracted
far more support than most observers had anticipated: Leedham carried the
majority of votes in freight, UPS, airline, and warehouse locals in the
Teamsters traditional strongholds, while losing big in miscellaneous multiple
jurisdiction locals whose members tend to be inactive and strongly dependent
on local leadership power (Roberts, 1998). The fact that he won 40 percent
of the vote indicates that the 1998 election did not necessarily resolve
the implicit debate about what vision of democracy best fits the Teamsters.
V Conclusion: Has Government Oversight Promoted Union Democracy?
Government oversight of the Teamsters has been pursued with twin objectives:
root out corruption and promote democracy. There also has been an implicit
expectation (at least on the part of academics in the field of industrial
relations) that a by-product of democracy and reduced corruption would
be institutional transformation. The results have been mixed. Quantitatively
at least, the effort to reduce corruption has had a major impact. Scores
of local and national officials have been removed from office and about
60 locals have been placed in trusteeship. Union members arguably are more
involved in their union and in leadership processes, and some evidence
suggests that union militancy and effectiveness may result from this involvement
(Witt and Wilson, 1999).
Effective democracy, on the other hand, has proved to be more elusive.
The imposition of a model of public electoral democracy unintentionally
provided incentives to import questionable fund-raising practices as well.
This kind of impropriety is widely viewed as unacceptable but prevalent
in our public electoral process; it is even less acceptable in the union
environment. Union elections are more vulnerable to manipulation than are
elections for governmental office because so much of unions' influence
lies in the private sphere inhabited by workers and employers as individuals.
The net impact has been to increase barriers to transformation both inside
and outside of the Teamsters. Ron Carey, the most effect voice for transformation,
has been silenced after succumbing to the temptations crafted by his advisors
and political consultants. Meanwhile, conservative Republicans in Congress
have had a field day with the steady streams of evidence uncovered by the
IRB related to both corruption and election fraud. This has allowed labor's
political enemies to purse an anti-union agenda (national right-to-work,
limits on political activity, reduced funding for the NLRB, and others)
under the guise of fighting corruption and defending democracy.
Optimistic proponents of government oversight of the Teamsters apparently
were not fully cognizant of institutional realities. Sidestepping the corruption
question for a moment, for nearly ten years we have witnessed a struggle
between the defenders of the status quo (local autonomy, servicing model
unionism) and the promoters of transformation (democratic centralized authority,
organizing model unionism). Although there have been differences within
both schools of thought, Shea, Durham, Hoffa, and Metz have all defended
the status quo while Carey and Leedham have promoted transformation. The
intensity of feeling about the strategic and organizational differences
between the two camps has to some extent overshadowed concern for democracy
or corruption. It is not surprising that in 1996 both presidential candidates
pushed the edge of the envelope regarding campaign practices, because they
were fighting over the future direction of an institution to which they
are devoted.
The alleged complicity of other labor leaders in the 1996 election violations
also can be understood in this light. The officials from the AFL-CIO, AFSCME,
SEIU, and other unions who apparently contributed to the Carey campaign,
along with the progressive staff professionals brought to the Teamsters
by Carey, all are committed to rebuilding unions around a strategy which
emphasizes organizing, increased political action, and member mobilization.
The Teamsters were viewed as integral to the intense effort being waged
to create a new labor movement.
Writing in the Harvard Business Review, Kotter counsels those who are leading
transformation efforts in corporations that they must remove those who
are blocking progress. Achieving radical change is almost impossible unless
the leader is able to rally all key participants in support of the new
vision (Kotter, 1995, pp. 64-65). In 1996 the Teamsters were clearly divided,
and the attention of Carey and his supporters was on how to get the blockers
out of the way. Their zeal to accomplish this objective apparently clouded
their judgement regarding both the anti-democratic implications of their
actions and the potential legal fallout.
The contest over the future direction of the labor movement is not yet
resolved. Advocates of tradition continue to compete for votes and for
support with those promoting transformation. But the central challenge
remains. Labor unions have declined in membership, influence, and bargaining
power for the last three decades, and something must be done by union members
and leaders to reverse the trend. For unions, the status quo is not an
option. As they struggle to lead change, union officials will continue
to grapple with the contradictions inherent in union democracy. And while
democracy is not sufficient to assure renewal, it is necessary if transformation
is to take hold and be self sustaining.
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MICHAEL H. BELZER
University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, MI 48109
RICHARD HURD
Cornell University, Ithaca, NY 14853
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Further reproduction or distribution is prohibited without permission.
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