By Teamsters General President James P. Hoffa

Excerpt from The Detroit News, October 13, 2010

If you understand politics as a battle between liberal and conservative, then you don’t understand politics at all. The central political battle today is between the corporate billionaires on one side and the little guy on the other. The fight is about whether the government should protect corporate power to enrich a few billionaires, or restrict corporate power to protect the liberty and property of the average American.

“The corporate billionaires will say the banks can correct their own behavior. The little guy will say the government needs to make sure they don’t do it again. It makes no sense to describe one as “liberal” and the other as “conservative.” It’s the many of us vs. the few of them.”  -James P. Hoffa, General President of the International Brotherhood of Teamsters

I’ll tell you who is winning: It isn’t the little guy.

Corporate power explains why the U.S. hasn’t made the transformation to renewable energy. It’s why we can’t trust our food, drugs, or toys to be safe. It’s why we’re struggling to develop new industries. It’s why workers’ wages have stagnated or fallen over the past decade and why so many families are losing their homes.

It’s why so many jobs moved offshore so quickly. U.S. multinationals now employ one third of their work force overseas.

For all those tea partiers who believe in individual freedom and smaller government, I have a message for you. Concentration of wealth in too few hands will lead to extraordinary abuses of power and the destruction of your property and liberty.

It’s the banks, not the government, that are taking people’s homes away from them without even making sure they have the right to foreclose on them. Last month, Jason Grodensky paid cash for a home in Florida, only to have the bank sell it out from under him in a foreclosure “mistake.”

Just the other day, Nancy Jacobini was alone inside her Florida home when she heard someone breaking into her front door. She locked herself in the bathroom and called 911. It turns out the intruder was someone who worked for JP Morgan Chase. He was changing the locks on her home, something he had no legal right to do.

The corporate billionaires will say the banks can correct their own behavior. The little guy will say the government needs to make sure they don’t do it again. It makes no sense to describe one as “liberal” and the other as “conservative.” It’s the many of us vs. the few of them.

We’ll see which side prevails on Nov. 2.

Teamsters Local 916 proudly represents over 4,000 hardworking men and women throughout the State of Illinois in the private and public sectors.