Black Agenda Report
Black Agenda Report
News, commentary and analysis from the black left.

  • Home
  • Africa
  • African America
  • Education
  • Environment
  • International
  • Media and Culture
  • Political Economy
  • Radio
  • US Politics
  • War and Empire

The Blackenization of Public Sector Employment
16 Mar 2011
🖨️ Print Article

 

A Black Agenda Radio commentary by Glen Ford

Racism is a powerful potion. It invents fungible constructs that can be deployed against new targets that are not comprised wholly of people of color. “Public workers have now become fair game for abuse, because they are associated with Blackness – the ultimate American curse.”

 

The Blackenization of Public Sector Employment

A Black Agenda Radio commentary by Glen Ford

“Public employees have been associated with Blacks ever since they began unionizing.”

America’s racist chickens are coming home to roost – in Wisconsin, Ohio, New York and California, under Republican governors like Scott Walker and John Kasich, and Democratic governors named Andrew Cuomo and Jerry Brown, as well. Racism has always been the Achilles Heel of the U.S. labor movement, the insurmountable obstacle centered in white American hearts and minds that has prevent the United States from forging any kind of real, lasting compact between its peoples. If there is an American exceptionalism, it is race, which has kept the U.S. from even coming close to forming a true working people’s party.

It is racism that allows poverty to be perceived as something that Black people have afflicted on the nation, rather than the other way around. It is the multitudinous crimes of racism that have made criminality synonymous with Black in the American mind. And, through the remarkable powers of racial transference, public workers have now become fair game for abuse, because they are associated with Blackness – the ultimate American curse.

The fact that Blacks are disproportionately represented in government employment makes the entire public sector vulnerable to attack – not just because billionaires like the Koch brothers back Tea Party politicians, but because huge sections of the white public are prepared to withhold solidarity for racial reasons. When the Post Office became perceived as too Black, public support for the Postal Service began to evaporate. Black people’s relative success in the public workforce, where civil service regulations limited the reach of raw racism, has allowed rightwing politicians to slander public workers as the equivalent of “welfare queens.” Many of the same white workers that feel so assaulted by the language of the Right, deployed the same vocabulary against Black people they considered shiftless and lazy freeloaders and malingers. That’s the chicken coming home to roost.

“Racism has always been the Achilles Heel of the U.S. labor movement.”

Monica Wilson, a Black Madison, Wisconsin organizer, puts it this way: “They came for us already, and now they’re coming for all of them.”

Public employees have been associated with Blacks ever since they began unionizing. Nelson Lichtenstein, of the University of California's Center for the Study of Work, Labor and Democracy, says “the origins of public sector unionism coincide with the rise of the civil rights movement.

The most famous strike in American history, today, is the Memphis sanitation strike,” in support of which Dr. Martin Luther King was assassinated. Dr. Lichtenstein says the Memphis strike has “eclipsed” the 1936 Flint, Michigan auto workers strike, “and probably eclipsed Homestead,” the 1892 steel workers strike - two seminal moments in U.S. labor history.

And now Wisconsin and Ohio are moving to break their public sector unions. What does the future look like? It threatens to look like the same place most Black folks came from, and where more than half still live: the South. The future, if it is allowed to happen, looks like the present in Black activist Kevin Alexander Gray's home state. Gray will tell you that “South Carolina is first when it comes to everything bad, and last when it comes to everything good.” The nation's fate is anything but unknown. The chickens know where they came from.

For Black Agenda Radio, I'm Glen Ford. On the web, go to www.BlackAgendaReport.com.

BAR executive editor Glen can be contacted at Glen.Ford@BlackAgendaReport.com.


More Stories


  • Margaret Kimberley, BAR Executive Editor and Senior Columnist
    White Power
    17 Sep 2025
    The power structure in the U.S. can be boiled down to a system of might, and white, making right. Donald Trump has exposed its rotten foundations and the two-faced collaborators who keep it running.
  • Editors, The Black Agenda Review
    ESSAY: U.S., The Caribbean, and the Future, Tim Hector, 1984
    17 Sep 2025
    “There has been divide and rule in the modern Caribbean with a vengeance, all in the interest of US hegemony over the economic, military and political destiny of the Caribbean as a whole.”
  • Ann Garrison, BAR Contributing Editor
    Neocolonialism in Africa, from the IMF and the World Bank to the International Caucasian Court for Prosecuting Africans
    17 Sep 2025
    These are remarks prepared for a 09/16/25 Covert Action webinar on Neocolonialism in Africa.
  • Jon Jeter
    How Charlie Kirk’s Murder Exposes Free Speech as a Tool for American Exceptionalism
    17 Sep 2025
    The assassination of a far-right demagogue raises the question: when does 'free speech' become a tool for inciting violence? Nations like South Africa and Brazil have decided that some speech is not…
  • Africa Climate Summit
    Anthony Karefa Rogers-Wright
    Africa Climate Summit Reflections Part 2: The Youth Are Getting Restless…and That’s a Good Thing
    17 Sep 2025
    “The youth are getting restless. I can't hear you, Let them hear you all the way to Washington, The youth are getting restless, Own creation, The Youth are Getting Restless, And once again a nation,…
  • Load More
Subscribe
connect with us
about us
contact us