Federal Lawsuit Hits IGUA Union for Illegally Forcing DC-Based Security Guard to Pay for Union Politics
IGUA union officials provided contradictory information on amount a Master Security guard must pay the union to keep a job
When a Teamster union official says “things could blow up” people tend to notice. When Teamster President Jimmy Hoffa made that comment recently one wonders just what he means.
According to the Denver Post, Hoffa was talking about the continued efforts to threaten Colorado Gov. Bill Ritter for vetoing legislation that Big Labor tried to ram through the new Democrat state legislature earlier this year. The Union Bosses thought everything was in order to grant them new forced-dues privileges in the state, but at the end of the day Governor Ritter vetoed the measure that sailed through both legislative chambers.
Organized Labor officials are mad — really mad.
In fact, if things aren’t resolved in Big Labor’s favor by the Democrat National Convention next summer, that’s when “things could blow up” according to Hoffa.
Resolved is a relative term.
Capitulated is perhaps a better one.
IGUA union officials provided contradictory information on amount a Master Security guard must pay the union to keep a job
Thanks to the Committee's election-year program, union-label candidates like Sen. Jon Tester (Mont.) are being given a choice: pledge to change course and support Right to Work going forward, or face the potential political consequences.
Biden judicial nominee Nicole Berner has a track record of mindlessly repeating union bosses’ anti-Right to Work diatribes and defending their schemes to profit at the expense of the disabled.