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.... there is enough evidence of corporate misconduct to conduct a hearing on a possible re-vote at the Alabama warehouse.
Anybody have a feel for how often those go in favor of the workers?
Like you got a chance in a union vote against arguably the most powerful corporation to have ever existed.
Most of the time the re-votes have no major impact on the decision to unionize or not unionize. The vote there in Alabama wasn't close, so I wouldn't expect a significant swing in opinion. The original vote came back 1798 against, 738 for. We'll see though.
It probably won't change, but the speculation is that the strong arm tactics led to a flawed number of no votes under duress, even if it was only implied.
Alabama is also a right-to-work state . . .
Right-to-work laws (called also "right-to-work-for-less laws") are not, as the name might suggest, laws that guarantee that citizens have a right to be gainfully employed (that would be another system altogether[2]). Rather, they are laws that forbid unions from doing things like requiring represented workers to pay any kind of dues. This means that workers are legally free to hold employment without paying a red cent to the union that represents them. It is highly debatable whether this freedom is of any practical use to workers.
"Right-to-work" laws are derived from legislation forbidding unions from forcing strikes on workers, as well as from legal principles such as "liberty of contract," which as applied here sought to prevent passage of laws regulating workplace conditions.[3]
The term itself was coined by one Vance Muse, a Republican operative who headed an early "right-to-work" group, the "Christian American Association", to replace the term "American Plan" after it became associated with the anti-union violence of the First Red Scare.[4][5] Muse used racist rhetoric when he campaigned for these laws, such as when he said:
From now on, white women and white men will be forced into organizations with black African apes whom they will have to call ‘brother’ or lose their jobs.[4][5]
Other stuff Vance Muse did: fought against women's suffrage, a child labor amendment, the 8-hour work day and Felix Frankfurter (a Jew) as a Supreme Court justice, while launching the very first steps towards the Southern Strategy.[4][5] His "Christian American Association" was also anti-semitic as well as anti-Catholic.[4][5]