Gary N. Chaison is an industrial relations scholar and labor historian at Clark University.
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(27 quotes found)
“I think it may have emboldened some employers to reassess their situation, making them realize if they plan carefully they can withstand a strike, ... And that means, yes, you can ask for major demands from unions.”
Gary Chaison
“Quite bluntly, to an auto worker at General Motors or an airline worker facing demands for concessions, this doesn't mean a hell of a lot, ... Their concern is 'can my union deliver at the bargaining table?' I can't think of any union that would really be hurt at the bargaining table.”
“This is not going anywhere, ... This is not going to be settled.”
“Their feeling is, 'This is my only chance to get a job in this industry again, and I'm taking the job of a worker who miscalculated and walked off the job,' ”
“This is probably as bad as it gets for a union leader. He's in a fight with no allies.”
“[The strikers are on their own against] a very determined employer and a large pool of replacement workers, ... If things remain the same and continue on this path, then the strike would be doomed.”
“This is a small union, and it doesn't have any allies, because it's kind of a pariah in the labor movement,”
“They are trying to do an end-run around the union and go directly to the membership, ... They believe that what they're doing is acceptable to the membership, but not to the leadership.”
“They're doing it to appeal to the younger workers.”
“They're also doing it in order to show if you go on strike, this is money you're going to be losing.”