BY ALEXANDER COCKBURN
There was an affecting moment, back in 1996, when
Bill Clinton and Phil Knight of Nike clasped each other warmly in the Rose
Garden, and hailed the birth of the Apparel Industry Partnership. At his best,
as always when enjoying consummations, President Bill hailed the partnership as
"an unprecedented coming together" of industry, labor, church and human rights
groups, united in their resolve to confront the issue of labor exploitation in
sweatshops overseas. Companies abiding by a code of conduct would be rewarded
with a "No Sweat" label.
Two years rolled by, and the Apparel Industry
Partnership gave birth to a lovely child, the Fair Labor Association. News
stories did not dwell on the fact that the labor rep on the partnership, UNITE,
and the largest church group, the Interfaith Center on Corporate Responsibility,
had both quit, protesting the failure of the group to consider the explosive
topics of wages and the right to organize.
In fact, the final document laying out the mandate
and protocols of the Fair Labor Association was largely drafted by lawyers for
Nike and by Michael Posner, executive director of the New York-based Lawyers
Committee for Human Rights, an outfit whose scrupulous objectivity on issues of
corporate responsibility was advertised by the presence on its board at the time
of lawyers from Patton, Boggs; Akin Gump; Skadden, Arps; Williams and Connolly;
Arnold and Porter. Further luster was added by the presence on the Lawyers
Committee advisory board of reps from Reebok, the Gap, Liz Claiborne and
Disney.
The drafters did their work well. Information on
overseas factories would be kept secret. Better still, a company could win a "No
Sweat" endorsement for one product, even if 95 percent of its total output was
put together in a slave camp. Twenty months have rolled by since the Fair
Labor Association was set up, and they have not been trouble-free for Nike and
its campaign to portray itself as a zealous custodian of workers' interests,
although you wouldn't know this from the Fair Labor Association.
Indeed, the very fact that one could hear nothing
disobliging about Nike from this quarter prompted students across the country to
protest involvement by their universities with the association. Among those
students was a group at the University of Oregon. When Knight heard this, he
withdrew a $30 million donation to the university, prompting school president,
Dave Frohnmayer, to issue repeated descriptions of Nike as a "world leader" in
promoting fair labor. There are few so eloquent as university presidents when
they see bequests slipping through their fingers. The Eugene Weekly, on the
other hand, has risen splendidly to the occasion with a fine resume by Alan
Pittman of Nike's recent outrageous conduct and PR gyrations.
In April, a coalition of fair labor groups put out a
report about terrible working conditions at Nike contract factories in
Indonesia, Thailand, Cambodia and China. Punishment for minor infractions by
workers have included slaps and fines. Some workers have been forced to stand in
the sun or run laps round the plant. In Chinese factories, there's forced
overtime, 12 hours a day, seven days a week. (The coalition's report says Nike
has increased China's slice of its overall sneaker production from 10 percent to
40 percent in recent years; a wage of 11 cents an hour is an attractive
inducement.)
Let's return now to the Fair Labor Association. Why
the silence on Nike? After all, it has not just corporate lawyers but nonprofits
on its board: the Robert F. Kennedy Memorial and the National Consumers League,
in addition to the Lawyers Committee.
For illumination, we can turn to the Washington-based
Nonprofit Watch, which tells us that since the formation of the Apparel Industry
Partnership, there has been a "specific increase in apparel industry companies
donating to the group."
The National Consumers League gets contributions from
companies such as Liz Claiborne. As for the Robert F. Kennedy Memorial, it has
accepted funding from Nike, the Gap and Levi Strauss. Richard Donohue, who has
been at various times in his 23-year career at Nike president, chief operating
officer, and most recently, vice chairman, has been a 40-year intimate of the
Kennedy family. It's the way of the world. Another sweatshopper, Kathie Lee
Gifford, is a Kennedy in-law.
We need Marcel Proust to evoke the corruptions of
this aristocracy.
©2000
Creators Syndicate