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AFL-CIO ENDORSES OBAMA
Saturday, June 28, 2008
(PAI)AFL-CIO ENDORSES OBAMA
By Mark
Gruenberg
PAI Staff
Writer
WASHINGTON
(PAI)--As expected--it just took time for
emotions to cool and to round up the needed
votes--the AFL-CIO on the afternoon of June 26
announced it endorsed Sen. Barack Obama
(D-Ill.) for the
presidency.
Federation President John J. Sweeney said
Obama got the votes of members of the
federation’s General Board representing
unions with more than two-thirds of the
AFL-CIO’s 9.5 million members. He
polled board members by fax and conference
call.
“In so many ways--on jobs, health care,
gas prices and the war in Iraq--our country is
headed in the wrong direction,” Sweeney
said. “Obama has proven from his days
as an organizer, to his time in the Senate and
his historic run for the presidency, that
he’s leading the fight to turn around
America.”
Sweeney
called Obama “a champion for working families
who knows what it’s going to take to create
an economy that works for everyone, not just
Big Oil, Big Pharma, insurance companies, giant
mortgage lenders, speculators” and the
rich.
The endorsement
was not unanimous. The Machinists voted
“present” and IAM President Thomas
Buffenbarger and Transportation Communications
Union/IAM President Robert Scardelletti still
have questions for Obama. The Machinists
and other industrial unions have large segments
of blue-collar lower-income male voters who
favored Sen. Hillary Clinton (D-N.Y.) over
Obama in the Democratic
primaries.
“Blue-collar Democrats are born
skeptics,” Buffenbarger said. “Their
skepticism grew during this campaign. And
to turn skeptics into supporters takes more
than a perfunctory knock on the door of the
House of Labor.” Scardelletti and
Buffenbarger said “now is not the right time
for an endorsement.
“We look forward
to a productive conversation with Obama about
policies that can resonate with blue-collar
Democrats,” Buffenbarger added. “As
they demonstrated in state after state,
blue-collar Democrats respond overwhelmingly to
a candidate who will fight to improve their
lives. And they are just not there
yet. Nor are
we.”
Even without IAM,
major hurdles to the Obama endorsement were
overcome within the prior week when AFSCME, the
AFL-CIO’s largest union with 1.4 million
members, endorsed Obama, followed by the
700,000-member Communications Workers on June
24. AFSCME previously backed Clinton and
CWA was neutral. IBEW, the Bakery and
Tobacco Workers and Grain Millers (BCTG&M)
and the California Nurses Association also
issued separate Obama
endorsements.
Both the AFL-CIO and the 6-million-member
Change to Win back the Illinoisan, the presumed
Democratic nominee, against presumed GOP
nominee Sen. John McCain (R-Ariz.). The
unaffiliated National Education Association,
the nation’s largest individual union, with 3
million members, is expected to endorse Obama
at its convention over the Independence Day
weekend in Washington.
The AFL-CIO endorsement is significant
because it lets member unions--who split their
endorsements between Obama, Clinton and former
Sen. John Edwards (D-N.C.) before switching to
Obama--mobilize their get-out-the-vote and
voter information campaigns for
Obama. And the AFL-CIO endorsement
paves the way for the federations and NEA to
coordinate their efforts.
The AFL-CIO
said its top-tier states this year will be
Minnesota, Michigan, Ohio, Pennsylvania and
Wisconsin. But its drive will also cover
60 U.S. House races, “every viable Senate
race” and 510 races overall in 24
states. The federation aims to put
250,000 volunteers in the field, make 300,000
home visits even before Labor Day, make over
300,000 phone calls and distribute more than 2
million fliers. It already distributed
1.5 million worksite fliers and 500,000 mailers
criticizing McCain’s economic
record.
It also
launched a new website, www.meetObama08.com.,
to go with its “McCain exposed”
website.
The
federation estimated individual unions will
spend approximately $200 million on politics
this year, besides its own $54 million
get-out-the-vote, voter registration, voter
protection and non-partisan information
campaigns, presenting the positions of Obama
and McCain on a wide range of issues of
interest to workers.
It will emphasize four issues in its
drive this fall: Universal, affordable,
comprehensive health care with government as
regulator and backup provider, fair trade not
free trade, retirement security, and the
Employee Free Choice Act. EFCA will be
labor’s top priority in the next 111th
Congress.
“Leadership can re-engage
disenfranchised Americans and bring our country
together," the AFL-CIO board’s statement
said. “Obama has advocated a change of
direction for our nation that mirrors the
priorities of the labor
movement.”
The Employee
Free Choice Act, which Obama--a former
organizer--strongly supports and McCain
opposes, would help level the playing field
between workers and bosses in organizing
campaigns and in bargaining for initial
contracts. It would do so by writing
“card-check recognition”--automatic
recognition of the union when it achieves a
majority of signed election authorization cards
in a workplace--into law.
It also would
increase fines for labor law-breaking, make it
easier to get court orders against lawbreakers,
and would outlaw “captive audience
meetings” where workers must endure
anti-union management harangues under pain or
discipline and with no rebuttal. The bill
passed the Democratic-run House but fell victim
to a GOP Senate filibuster. McCain
supported the filibuster, while Obama opposed
it.
And the
legislation mandates that if a newly certified
union and management cannot reach a contract
within 90-120 days, the contract would go to
binding arbitration --ending bosses’ right to
indefinitely delay contracts, trying to outlast
the workers.
Steel
Workers President Leo Gerard added another
reason to back Obama: His endorsement of
union-created plans to revitalize U.S.
manufacturing and high-paying jobs. That
and “Obama's…commitment to make workers the
top priority in any trade agreement give our
members hope that his election will lead the
country in a new direction that's long overdue,
and inspire us to work as never before to
secure his victory,” Gerard said. His
union, like IAM, also has many male blue-collar
workers.
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