ACCORDING
TO AFSCME’S NUMBERS, FEWER THAN HALF OF ILLINOIS STATE WORKERS VOTED TO
AUTHORIZE STRIKE
Illinois Policy Institute
In a recent strike-authorization vote,
fewer than half of state workers represented by the American Federation
of State, County and Municipal Employees cast ballots in favor of a
strike, despite union leaders’ characterization of the outcome as
majority approval.
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Union leaders representing Illinois state workers held a strike authorization
vote Jan. 30 to Feb. 19, 2017. The results were issued Feb. 23, and only 49
percent – maybe even fewer – voted to authorize a strike.
But that’s not how union leadership described the results. When the American
Federation of State, County and Municipal Employees announced that its members
had voted to authorize a strike over the union’s stalled contract negotiations
with the state, Executive Director Roberta Lynch was vague about actual numbers.
“We don’t want to get into that today. We’re not going to go into specific
numbers,” Lynch told reporters at a Feb. 23 press conference announcing the vote
results.
AFSCME’s unclear numbers
Lynch initially indicated that 81 percent of members had voted to authorize a
state worker strike. But when questioned later in the press conference, Lynch
admitted that 80 percent of eligible members had voted, and that it was “81
percent of 80 percent” that voted to authorize a strike.
Fewer than half of workers voted to authorize strike
Multiple factors go into the total number of workers eligible to vote for a
strike. First, a strike vote is limited to only those workers who are members of
the union. That means fair share payers are not eligible to vote.
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Additionally, workers in security positions – such as the 9,000
state employees in security positions at the Corrections and
Juvenile Justice departments – cannot go on strike under state law.
And because they cannot strike, they cannot vote.
AFSCME claims that it represents 38,000 workers across the state.
Subtracting the 9,000 security employees means a maximum of 29,000
were eligible to vote.
Using AFSCME’s numbers, 80 percent of those 29,000 workers voted for
a total of 23,200 workers. Of those, 81 percent voted to strike –
meaning that no more than 18,792 workers voted to strike.
That means only 49 percent of the 38,000 workers AFSCME claims to
represent voted to authorize a strike. And if fair share payers are
subtracted from the total number eligible to vote (AFSCME isn’t
forthcoming with that number), the percentage drops even further.
Union members should take note. AFSCME leadership is not providing
consistent and clear numbers regarding worker support for a
potential strike. Yet union leaders will expect members to walk away
from their paychecks – and risk their jobs – should the bargaining
committee demand it.
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