The same bandwagon approach that has attempted to rally churches and universities against Israel is trying to get a foothold in the labor movement. With the intent of isolating Israel as a pariah state, political activists with a pro-Palestinian bias are attempting to co-opt as many institutions as possible in a campaign to push divestment from corporations operating in Israel. Organized labor is among those institutions.
The Presbyterian Church (U.S.A.) first joined the divestment push in 2004, with a General Assembly resolution to pursue “phased selective divestment in multinational corporations operating in Israel.” After witnessing a two-year firestorm of protest within the denomination and without, Presbyterian commissioners to General Assembly in 2006 wisely replaced the 2004 divestment resolution with a far more evenhanded resolution seeking the social and economic welfare of both Israelis and Palestinians.
Presbyterian Action worked beside other leaders on the Committee to End Divestment Now to help commissioners make this gracious and strategic decision.
Other Christian denominations, as well, have backed off of divestment or have avoided getting pushed into the one-sided divestment campaign on the part of partisan pro-Palestinian interests. Many universities and other institutions have likewise trod cautiously or acted more wisely than to be so co-opted.
Now, trade union leaders are similarly urging caution and good sense to avoid being pushed into harsh and unfair calls for divestment from Israel. In a joint statement, the leaders of more than two dozen unions have agreed that “[r]ather than divestment from Israel, we believe that investment of time, energy and material aid is the best means to alleviate the ongoing suffering of Palestinians and Israelis.” They stand opposed to union, trade, academic, and journalistic boycotts of Israel. Signatories of the statement include AFL-CIO President John J. Sweeney, as well as the heads of unions representing teamsters, mine workers, electrical workers, communications workers, government workers, and other trades.
Presbyterian Action joins these union leaders in seeking a fair, evenhanded resolution to the matter, realizing that “there are victims and victimizers on all sides,” and all parties need to come together to forge a just and secure two-state solution.
The text of the labor-leaders’ statement follows:
Statement of Opposition to Divestment From or Boycotts of Israel
We view with increasing concern the phenomenon of trade unions in a number of countries, including, most recently, the United Kingdom, issuing resolutions that either directly or indirectly call for divestment from and boycotts of Israel.
With the large number of local, regional and international conflicts, with the diverse range of oppressive regimes around the world about which there is almost universal silence, we have to question the motives of these resolutions that single out one country in one conflict.
We note with increasing concern that virtually all of these resolutions focus solely on objections to actions or policies of the Israeli government, and never on actions or policies of Palestinian or other Arab governments, parties or movements. We notice with increasing concern that characterization of the Palestinians as victims and Israel as victimizer is a staple of such resolutions. That there are victims and victimizers on all sides, and that many if not most of the victims of violence and repression on all sides are civilians, are essential items often not mentioned in these resolutions.
Any just and fair resolution of the Israeli-Palestinian conflict must be brought about through meaningful negotiations between their elected representatives. We believe strongly in a two-state solution, brought about through meaningful negotiations, with the involvement and encouragement of the world community.
Trade unionists and their organizations seeking such a just and fair resolution should be assisting those working to bring the two sides together in direct talks and then negotiations. In this regard, we call for increased engagement of trade unions with their counterparts on all sides of the Israeli-Palestinian conflict. We support efforts of Palestinian and Israeli trade unionists and their organizations to maintain contact and cooperative and mutually supportive activities, even in the midst of tumult and political change within their respective communities and polities.
Calls for academic boycotts of Israel are inimical to and counter to the principles of academic freedom and freedom of association, key principles for which academics and educational unions have struggled over many years. Rather than limiting interactions with Israeli educators, academics and educational institutions, we see the importance of maximizing, rather than proscribing, the free flow of ideas and academic interaction between peoples, cultures, religions and countries.
Similarly, calls for journalistic boycotts of Israel are inimical to the free flow of information and journalistic objectivity, and must be opposed.
Rather than divestment from Israel, we believe that investment of time, energy and material aid is the best means to alleviate the ongoing suffering of Palestinians and Israelis. Engagement, rather than disengagement, with the Israeli people and the Palestinian people is needed, so that a just and fair resolution of this conflict may be pursued, and so that meaningful progress towards achieving the legitimate needs of Palestinians and Israelis can be made.
We offer our support to assist trade unionists as well as interested members of the community-at-large who are grappling with these matters, and who share our concern over simplistic and non-constructive approaches, whether in the form of misguided resolutions or other statements on the tragic conflict between Israel and the Palestinians.
Stuart Appelbaum
President, Jewish Labor Committee
President, Retail, Wholesale and Department Store Union / UFCW
Edward J. McElroy
Secretary, Jewish Labor Committee
President, American Federation of Teachers
Morton Bahr
Treasurer, Jewish Labor Committee
John J. Sweeney
President, AFL-CIO
Anna Burger
Chair, Change to Win
Clayola Brown
President, A. Philip Randolph Institute
Timothy A. Brown
International President, International Organization of Masters, Mates & Pilots / ILA
R. Thomas Buffenbarger
International President,
International Association of Machinists and Aerospace Workers
William Burrus
President, American Postal Workers Union
Larry Cohen
President, Communications Workers of America
Barbara J. Easterling
Secretary-Treasurer, Communications Workers of America
John J. Flynn
President, International Union of Bricklayers and Allied Craftworkers
John Gage
President, American Federation of Government Employees
Ron Gettelfinger
President
United Automobile, Aerospace & Agricultural Implement Workers of America International Union
Michael Goodwin
President, Office and Professional Employees International Union
James A. Grogan
General President, International Association of Heat and Frost Insulators and Asbestos Workers
Joseph T. Hansen
International President, United Food and Commercial Workers International Union
Edwin D. Hill
International President, International Brotherhood of Electrical Workers
James P. Hoffa
General President, International Brotherhood of Teamsters
Frank Hurt
International President
Bakery, Confectionery, Tobacco Workers and Grain Millers International Union
Louis Lacarbonara
President, Italian-American Labor Council
Thomas F. Lee
President, American Federation of Musicians
Jill S. Levy
President, American Federation of School Administrators
James C. Little
International President, Transport Workers Union of America
William Lucy
President, Coalition of Black Trade Unionists
Gerald W. McEntee
President, American Federation of State, County and Municipal Employees
Bruce S. Raynor
General President, UNITE HERE
Cecil E. Roberts
President, United Mine Workers of America
Robert Scardelletti
International President, Transportation Communications Union / IAM
Michael J. Sullivan
General President, Sheet Metal Workers International Association
George Tedeschi
President, Graphic Communications International Union / IBT
James A. Williams
General President, International Union of Printers and Allied Trades
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