Taken from an editorial from the Tuesday, March 9, 2010 Wall Street Journal.
"Unions usually worry less about European-style chronic unemployment than merely protecting whoever has union jobs now."
There are two issues that confuse me in this sentence. The first is parallelism: unemployment is being compared to "protecting". Is protecting being used as a gerund in this sentence? I am not sure if there is a "gerund test" that we can apply. Also, is whoever supposed to be whomever? Thanks - Dan.
"Unions usually worry less about European-style chronic unemployment than merely protecting whoever has union jobs now."
There are two issues that confuse me in this sentence. The first is parallelism: unemployment is being compared to "protecting". Is protecting being used as a gerund in this sentence? I am not sure if there is a "gerund test" that we can apply. Also, is whoever supposed to be whomever? Thanks - Dan.












