Member-Run Unions

A UE Guide to Democratic Practice


Chart: Signs of Strength, Danger Signs

Signs of StrengthDanger Signs
Democratic ProceduresMembers vote on contract proposals, settlements, arbitration, strikes, and dues. Frequent election of local and national officers; ability to recall both.Staff or national union make decisions on local contracts, grievances, strikes, and dues. Infrequent union elections.
Financial IntegrityMembers always have access to local and national financial records. Officer salaries equivalent to workers’ pay. No financial rewards for being a union officer.Finances kept secret from members. Officers and staff receive pay much higher than members’ wages, plus fat expense accounts.
Aggressive StruggleRecognizes that it takes a fight with employers to make gains for members.Officers believe that they must “co-operate” with employers to get anything for members.
EducationMembers, stewards and officers receive training from national union to help them run their own effective locals.Staff withhold from local leaders knowledge of how to do things for themselves, keeping them dependent on staff for basic operation of the union.
OrganizingBelieves that organizing benefits all workers. Spends a significant portion of its funds on organizing.
Involves members.
Views unorganized workers as rivals. Doesn’t try to organize workers or spends very little on this endeavor.
Worker SolidarityBelieves in solidarity of workers, here and abroad.Treats non-union and foreign workers as the enemy.
Political ActionFights on issues that benefit all workers, and is not tied to any one political party.Continues to support the Democratic Party, even when workers get hurt.
Role of StaffAssist locals in struggle and in building democratic, rank-and-file unionism.Staff attempt to run, or actually run, the union. Sees democracy as a hindrance to getting things done.