Opinion

Organized labor paid the price for embracing illegal migrants

There’s a paradox when it comes to unions in America in 2024: On the one hand, approval for labor unions  than it’s been since 1965; Americans increasinglꩲy see the value of collective bargaining to protect workers from corporations.

And yet, just 6% of private sector workers are unionized, a number that has not signꦿificantly budged despite the rising popularity of unions.

The author’s new book, in which she details the link between the benefits of unions and the role of illegal migration.

What gives?  

To answer this question, I took a pilgrimage to o🤪ne of Amer🔯ica’s great union towns: Las Vegas.

Ve💖gas is the Promised Land for service-industry work🐽ers.

The average pay for a member of the Culinary Union is $26 an h🌸our including be꧙nefits.

Whether you clean hotel rooms or bake pastries or wash dishes, if you do it in Las Vegas, you do it ea🦋rning a living wage with full healt🐬h care and a pension plan.

You can feel that the American 🃏Dream is alive and well walk🏅ing through the casinos.

It’s in the optimis�﷽�m of the staff, in their swagger. 

“Anywhere else, if you’re working in a restaurant or if you’re cleaning toilets or you’re cleaning rooms, these are poor-people jobs,” Ted Pappageorge, secretary-treasurer for the Culinary Union, told me. “And the only difference is if there’s a union. And if you have a big union presence, then the nonunion has to compete, too. They gotta pay, otherwise, they can’t gꦯet people.” 

How do they do it? 

Certainly, the union has been instrum൲ental — even as Nevada remains a right-to-work state.

The union has successfully🐻 made the case to its workers that, as Pappageorge put it, “the 🤡idea that you should be alone and somehow try to take on this economy and this world and all those forces out there that are really opposing what working people need, [this] is a way to lose.” 

Strikers in Las Vegas in 2023. Sin City is unusual in that its highly-regulated gaming industry makes it almost impossible to employ undocumented workers. AP

But there’s another crucial factor in protecting hospitality workers in Vegas that’s at odds with where the Democratic Party — and even the Culinary Union itself💯 are at — at lea🐬st rhetorically.

Because the casinos are so highly regulated, they can’t hire illegal migrants, which sets them apart from the service industry in other parts of the country but especially in sanctuary cities and other Democratic metropolises like Los Angeles, New York, Washington, DC, Seattle, Boston, Atlanta, and Houston, where six in 10 undocumented immigrants live. 

As of 2021, there were 7 million immigrant workers in the United States are here illegally, making up 4% of the US workforce and 40% of them work in the service industry where they are paid less than minimum wage. 

According to sꦑome estimates, more t𝓡han 30% of New York City’s cooks and 54% of dishwashers are undocumented.

With a glut of wo𓂃rkers who will work for so much༺ less, how can legal workers expect to compete, let alone make a living wage? 

Because of the lack of cheaper, illegal competition, service-industry workers in Las Vegas are unusually unionized and unusually highly-compensated. Getty Images

Indeed, this is why for much of the history of labor in this country, unions were solidly in favor of limiting immigration: increasing the supply of labor means giving power to employ🐼ers over employees.

But organized labor did a 180-degree reversal on immigration in th♌e second half of the 20th century, coming to embrace immigrants, both legal and illegal, and by 2000, the president of the AFL-CIO called for amnesty for millions of undocumented immigrants. 

In reversing their opposition to mass immigration, America’s national unions eওnded up shooting themselves in the foot, telegraphing to desperate American workers that they will stand by the direct competiti🍷on. 

When seen through 💞this lens, it’s less surprising that Americans aren’t rushing to join unions, despite respecting the work they do to support labor. 

The author traveled around the nation looking at the ways current economic strategies are hurting the working class.

Unions undoubtedly improve the lives of working-class Americans, and no one who stands for the working class should oppose the power of collective bargജaining.

But with just 6% of the private sector unionized, it’s hard to see unions as a solution to what ails the working clas🦩s — although changing their tune on immigration would certainly mak🏅e them more popular with the workforce that desperately needs their representation. 

Worker power is tied to the 🍎number of workers relative to the number of jo🎐bs; it’s simple supply and demand–and it’s never been clearer than now.

Unlike in the past, just six percent of private sector workers belong to unions today. Getty Images

The post-pandemi♚c labor c🐬runch gave workers their first gains in decades—yet the labor shortage was met with the worst-policed southern border in U.S. history.

The Biden administration released millions of illegal immigrants into the country, and they had the exact impact on the economy you might have expected, filling jobs and halting the gains of working-class Americans iꦆn their tracks.

W🐽orkers are begging the elites to listen: They aren’t anti-immigrant, but don’t they deserve to live in a country that see🍌s their well-being as a priority?

What happened to the American Dream?

It’s time they were heard.

Batya Ungar-Sargon is the opinion editor of Newsweek; this op-ed is excerpted from “Second Class: How the Elites Betrayed America’s Working Men and Women.”