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The primary function of the National Union is to organize and unite workers
around the polices and programs of action adopted by the National Convention.
Our aim is to improve the working conditions and living standards of all workers by
taking on the organized forces of the employers. We do this by organizing new workers into
our union and by providing guidance and help to existing UE locals.
It's Democracy (Not Anarchy)!
In UE, the members direct the work of the National Union each year at the UE
National Convention by setting the union's policies and programs. The General Executive
Boardwhich is made up of the General Vice Presidents (UE District Presidents),
District Secretaries, and the three national officersmeets three times a year to
decide on issues that come up between conventions. The day-to-day work of the union is
directed by the union's three General Officers (President, Secretary-Treasurer, and
Director of Organization).
How it Works
Members at all levels of the unionfrom local leaders, to the General Executive
Board, to the national officersare responsible for carrying out the policies and
programs of the union between the National Conventions.
Support for UE programs is not enforced. It's agreed upon democratically by UE locals
attending the National Convention. Our strength as a national union depends entirely on
how well UE locals live up to the agreement they strike annually with all the other locals
in our union. This is an impressive example of real democracy in action. A member of
another union, while watching a UE Convention, expressed amazement at how it was con
ducted. "It seems like your President is encouraging debate," he
exclaimed. "That would never happen in my union!"
Like any democracy, however, once the policies and programs are set, it's important
that members agree to abide by the decision of the majorityand sometimes this is
misunderstood. "The members run this union" by setting its direction and
policies, not by opting to ignore decisions that are not popular or convenient at a
particular moment.
The National Union
The role of the National UE, in carrying out the union's policies and programs, is to
provide guidance and assistance to District Councils and locals and to coordinate their
day-to-day activities. The National Union provides advice and assistance, so that members
can make fully informed decisions on matters that affect their locals, and active support
when the members and locals need it. It also organizes new members, because we understand
the fundamental reality that the wages and living conditions of all workers are
directly tied to the level of unionization.
Responsibility for this work falls on the union's national officers, who direct five
key areas of UE activity. They are:
- Organization The Director of
Organization guides UE's organizational workboth in new organizing and in servicing
UE Locals. A UE field organizer is assigned to each UE local to provide help and
assistance, when needed. International representatives, assigned to each District,
oversee the work of field organizers and, in turn, report to the Director of Organization.
The organizers and international representatives (often called field staff) are
also responsible for carrying out UE organizing campaignsorganizing new members into
the union.
The
Organizational Work of the Union involves organizing new members while providing help and
advice to UE locals.
- Collective Bargaining The field
staff, under the direction of the General Officers, assists UE locals in their collective
bargaining activities and grievance handling. UE works to set national standards for
contract negotiations and defending members' rights.
The General Officers indirectly oversee all negotiations and participate in bargaining
with General Electric (where UE has held a national contract since 1938) and in cases
where UE locals are facing particular difficulties.
UE bargains with a number of major employers including Rockwell
International, Honeywell, GE, and the state of Iowa among others. To ensure effective representation
of our members, we participate in the AFL-CIO's Coordinated Bargaining Committee (CBC) and
Industrial Union Department (IUD).
(Although we work with other unions on many levelsfrom strike and solidarity
actions on the local level to participation in Jobs with Justice nationwideUE
remains organizationally and philosophically separate from the AFL-CIO.)
- Political Action The UE's Political
Action Director, based in Washington D.C., works with the General Officers and UE Locals
to develop a plan of action, based on policies adopted at the National Convention. UE
Political action is issue oriented. Unlike most other unions, the National Union
does not have a "PAC Fund"we don't spend members' dues money on
politicians. Rather, we depend on a mobilized membership to deliver our demands to
politicians at all levels of government.
- Education and Publicity Education
on issues affecting working people, as well as on our unique style of rank-and-file
unionism, is an important part of the union's work. In UE, where the members have the
determining voice on all vital issues, it is obviously important that they be well
informed. Since the views of big business and major corporations dominate our society,
union education is critically important in helping develop working class policies,
understandings, and, most importantly, active stands on issues affecting working
people.
The General Officers carry out their responsibilities in this area through a variety of
means. One important way is through the UE News, which is published monthly by the
National Union. Another is by directing the work of the UE Education Department (which, in
addition to an Education Director, includes the full-time work of experienced field
staff).
The National Union regularly sponsors workshops and seminars in local areas and offers
a variety of training materials for UE members, officers and stewards. New pamphlets,
booklets and videos are also made available on a regular basis. Information on these
materials is available in UE Resources, a free catalog, available upon request from
the national office, and from fliers sent to UE locals.
The
primary function of the National Union is to organize all workers around the policies and
programs adopted by the National Convention.
- International Solidarity Of
increasing importance in recent years, is our work to build cross-border relationships
with workers in other countries. As the economy has become much more "global,"
so has the need to stop big business from shipping jobs from "high wage" to
"low wage" areas at willand from exerting a very strong, downward pressure
on wages and living conditions in the U.S. One pioneering effort by UE, under the
direction of the General Officers, is providing support for a democratic, rank-and-file
Mexican union federation (F.A.T.), which has agreed to target for organization UE
employers who operate in that country. UE also maintains strong relations with unions in
other countries, including Japan, France and El Salvador.
In carrying out all of these activities, the National Officers are assisted by several
national office departments and staff, including (in alphabetical order): Accounting, Affiliations, Auditing, Education, the GE Conference
Board, International, Legal, News and Publicity, Organizing, Political Action, Research,
and Shipping.
Role of Staff
In a rank-and-file union, the staff hired by the National Union plays a special role.
UE staff includes Field Organizers, International Representatives, and the people
who work at the UE National Office in Pittsburgh and the Political Action office in
Washington. In every case, there are two main responsibilities: to build the union and
maintain a healthy UE structure. Of particular importance is what UE staff cannot do: run
the union.
This means that UE staff members cannot dictate the internal politics of UE locals,
districts, and the National Union. They can provide help and advise on programs and
policies. But, ultimately, the running of our union is left to the members, as it has been
since 1936.
More Information?
To learn more about your union, read Them and Us: The Struggles of a Rank and File
Union and Solidarity and Democracy: A Leadership Guide to UE History. The UE
Policy Book, containing the resolutions adopted by delegates to the UE national
convention, is also published each year. These materials are available from the UE
National Office.

United Electrical, Radio and Machine Workers of America (UE)
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