Release Date: Feb 23, 2007Contact: 888-249-NEWS
Chamber's "Virtual March" Heads Into Second Week
WASHINGTON, DC-The United States Chamber of Commerce's online demonstration of support for democracy and secret ballot elections for workers marched into its second week, and its effects are being felt across Capitol Hill.
"The business community is out in full force on this issue-and the "Virtual March" has created a real impact," said Bill Miller, U.S. Chamber vice president of public affairs. "Employers and employees alike are virtually marching on Washington and are keeping pressure on lawmakers to protect workers' democratic rights-the same rights that American voters enjoy in electing their representatives."
The "Virtual March," organized by the Chamber's grassroots advocacy team, is building broad and vocal opposition to proposed legislation in the House that would replace secret ballots in union elections with a card check system. The card check proposal compromises employees' freedoms and rights, according to the Chamber.
"Employees deserve the right to vote in private-free of coercion or influence-on whether or not to join a union," continued Miller. "Make no mistake: the marchers may be in cyberspace, but the threat is real. This legislation will deny every worker the basic democratic right to free and fair elections."
Background on the Employee Free Choice Act and the Chamber's "Virtual March" can be found online: www.chambergrassroots.com/.
The U.S. Chamber is the world's largest business federation, representing more than three million businesses and organizations of every size, sector and region.
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Related Links
- New Report by the Information Technology Industry Council, Partnership for a New American Economy, and U.S. Chamber of Commerce Confirms Labor Needs in Fields of Science, Technology, Engineering, and Mathematics
- Comments to PEFC on Use of ILO Conventions
- Comments to Labor Department on the new proposed “persuader” regulations
- Letter to the U.S. Senate on S. 964 the "Job Protection Act"
- Key Vote Letter Supporting S.J. Res. 30, a Resolution of Disapproval that Would Repeal Revisions the National Mediation Board Made to its Regulations Concerning Union Organizing Under the Railway Labor Act
- U.S. Chamber Highlights Continued Barriers to Job Creation at Annual Labor Day Briefing
- Key vote letter to the members of the U.S. House of Representatives regarding H.R. 1120, the “Preventing Greater Uncertainty in Labor-Management Relations Act.”
- Testimony on The Future of the NLRB: What Noel Canning vs. NLRB Means for Workers, Employers, and Unions



