Home Depot Founder to CEOs: You "Should Be Shot"

by: Michael Whitney

Wed Nov 19, 2008 at 12:03


In the fight for the Employee Free Choice Act, a bill in Congress that would give workers the free choice to form unions, we've seen some crazy hyperbole from greedy CEOs and their front groups who oppose free choice for workers.

Anti-free choice groups have thrown around tired union mob stereotypes, including actors from the Sopranos, bad "24"-style parodies, and photoshopped pictures in GOP election mail.  But next time anyone asks about "union intimidation," tell them to watch out for Home Depot founder and ex-CEO Bernie Marcus.

Thomas Frank in the WSJ this morning has the Home Depot Founder saying any CEO that doesn't contribute to Republicans opposed to Employee Free Choice "should be shot."

Michael Whitney :: Home Depot Founder to CEOs: You "Should Be Shot"
And hear the lamentations of the billionaires. "This is the demise of a civilization," moaned Bernie Marcus, cofounder and former CEO of The Home Depot, during an Oct. 17 conference call about card check. "This is how a civilization disappears. I'm sitting here as an elder statesman, and I'm watching this happen, and I don't believe it."

Mr. Marcus sketched out the doomsday scenario for his listeners, with unions going after what he called the "low hanging fruit" and proceeding to organize workers in industry after industry. He had taken it upon himself to notify the nation's CEOs of the danger, but they were not yet grabbing their guns. "This is as important as anything that's ever happened to these companies. And they're not reacting, and they're not fighting. The old time fighters are gone."

But in the class war, as in the real deal, there are always ways of motivating the yellow. "If a retailer has not gotten involved with this, if he has not spent money on this election, if he has not sent money to Norm Coleman and these other guys," Mr. Marcus said, apparently referring to Republican senators facing tough re-election fights, then those retailers "should be shot; should be thrown out of their goddamn jobs."

There you have it: ex-CEO says people who don't contribute to Republicans against Employee Free Choice "should be shot."

Marcus has been at the forefront of CEOs' fight against Employee Free Choice, trotting himself out as the representative of business groups' opposition to the bill.  He's debated the bill on CNBC, penned a WSJ op-ed warning of "economic ruin, and defended the status quo in the pages of Business Week.

Also, Frank trots out a quote from Wal-Mart CEO Lee Scott that very clearly illustrates what all CEOs opposed to free choice actually think:

Card check is about power. Management has it, workers don't, and business doesn't want that to change. Consider the remarks made by Wal-Mart CEO Lee Scott at an analyst meeting on Oct. 28, when he was asked about the possible coming of card check: "We like driving the car and we're not going to give the steering wheel to anybody but us."

That's really the heart of the fight for Employee Free Choice.  The anti-Free Choice groups say they're "fighting for worker freedom," and that they have the interests of America's working families at heart.  But their true intentions are now quite clear.

CEO-types like Home Depot's Bernie Marcus and Wal-Mart's Lee Scott have their hands on the steering well, and anyone who fails to heed their battle cry to block attempts by workers to take control of the wheel "should be shot." It's too bad that for the last several decades, this cavalier attitude has led these greedy CEOs to drive the car off the economic cliff.  


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Shared Sacrifice, not Dictation from Above (4.00 / 1)
Thanks for posting this.  Frank is really one of our best authors.

Along the same lines, I was also struck by this:

First, their huge disadvantage in costs relative to foreign brands must be eliminated. That means new labor agreements to align pay and benefits to match those of workers at competitors like BMW, Honda, Nissan and Toyota. Furthermore, retiree benefits must be reduced so that the total burden per auto for domestic makers is not higher than that of foreign producers.

That was Mitt Romney arguing against the Detroit bailout in today's New York Times.

I know I'm trying to lock the barn door after the horse has escaped, but we really need to get to the point where assholes like Romney don't feel they can make such points without being seriously contradicted.  

I mean, Mitt, who the fuck made you God with the right to tear up agreements that were negotiated in good faith 20 years ago just to adjust to competition in a race-to-the-bottom fashion?

I was listening to Ed Schultz today and he was all over Romney for this article without however getting to my point.  The era of dictation from the heights should be coming to a close.  When the geniuses that got us this mess have torn up their own contracts and agreed to work for peanuts, then maybe, just maybe, they'll be in a position to request - not demand - similar sacrifices from retirees,  

Until we get to the point where they understand this, our politics are going to be fucked up.  

sTiVo's rule: Just because YOU "wouldn't put it past 'em" doesn't prove that THEY did it.


Well put! (0.00 / 0)
When I read that Romney piece, I really had the urge to start running around breaking stuff.

Romney acts like unions are only there to suck money out of companies.  But in struggling industries, unions realize that if the ship goes down, their members drown, too.  This is why airline pilots cut deals with their bosses that involved cuts in pay and retirement benefits: they shared in the sacrifice necessary to keep their companies alive.  It will be that much tougher for auto workers, who don't make nearly the kind of cash that pilots do and can't accept the same kind of cuts in wages and benefits.

For the executives, whether there's a government takeover or not, they'll soon be unemployed millionaires.  For the workers, it's a choice between making some sacrifices to keep their jobs and being completely unemployed with maybe a few thousand bucks in savings.


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