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OBAMA TO UNION LEADERS: 'WE CAN'T DO IT WITHOUT YOU'
Friday, August 1, 2008
(PAI)OBAMA TO UNION LEADERS: ‘WE CAN’T DO IT
WITHOUT YOU’
By Mark
Gruenberg
PAI Staff
Writer
WASHINGTON (PAI)--Prospective Democratic
presidential nominee Sen. Barack Obama (D-Ill.)
told more than 2,500 union leaders nationwide
that “we can’t do it without you” if he
is to win the White House this fall and advance
workers’ causes when he gets
there.
In a nationwide 15-minute conference call
arranged by AFL-CIO President John J. Sweeney,
Obama, speaking from Iowa, reiterated his
pro-worker positions, specifically twice
mentioning his determination to push and sign
the Employee Free Choice Act, the legislation
designed to help level the playing field
between workers and bosses in organizing and
bargaining.
“If I’m elected president, I’ll sign EFCA
because if the majority of workers want a
union, they should have one,” he declared.
“And we’re gong to have a president who
isn’t afraid to say labor needs to be strong,
a Department of Labor that works for workers
and a National Labor Relations Board” that
follows labor law, not management dictates, he
added.
Obama also promised to “negotiate new trade
agreements with worker rights in them, crate
three million” new ‘Green” jobs--a
longtime Steel Workers cause--“and create 2
million jobs “building locks and dams and
roads.” A lot of union workers, he
noted, would get high-paying jobs “aboard
those earth movers” and other construction
equipment in those
projects.
But, drawing on his experience as an organizer
on Chicago’s South Side--before he entered
the Illinois Senate and the U.S. Senate--Obama
warned the unionists that he could not win the
election by himself. Grass-roots
organizing, he said, is much more important and
effective than top-down
commands.
And the unionists’ efforts would be doubly
important, the senator said, because the GOP
“doesn’t have any new ideas, so they’ll
spend their time attacking me,
instead.” The attacks, from presumed
GOP nominee Sen., John McCain (R-Ariz.), have
already
started.
“So we depend on you to tell
them”--voters--“about where I am on
workers’ issues,” Obama said. Those
issues include not only EFCA but universal
health care, the suffering economy and what to
do about rising unemployment and
foreclosures.
“It’s a simple idea” that Obama wants the
unionists to advocate: “We have mutual
obligations towards each other” economically
and elsewhere. “I am my brother’s sister, I
am your sister’s kids.” By
contrast, the GOP idea is “you’re on your
own,” he
said.
Obama got a rousing ovation at the start of his
call from a crowd jammed into the large hall at
AFL-CIO headquarters, and Sweeney introduced
him by saying that “it would be nice to look
across the street” at the White House “and
see we have a friend there” after eight years
of GOP President George W.
Bush.
Neither the senator nor Sweeney took questions
after Obama’s talk. Obama’s phone
line was electronically dropped.
The operator tried but failed to reconnect
him.
Obama’s economic emphasis followed his
closed-door meeting on July 28 with 20 economic
advisers, from both parties, including Sweeney
and Change to Win Chair Anna Burger. What
impressed the group, Sweeney said, was
Obama’s willingness to listen to new ideas,
not just talk about his
plans.
“He has a great understanding of the problems
faced by working families,” Sweeney
said. Neither divulged specifics of what
was discussed. But Sweeney told
Washington Post columnist Harold Meyerson after
the session that “people need to be confident
that the next president will help create jobs
that actually enable families to keep up with
rising prices.”
And Economic Policy Institute head Jared
Bernstein, another participant, called Obama
“an ‘and’ guy, not an ‘or’ guy” in
considering economic plans. Bernstein
also said the senator agreed that a second
economic stimulus package is
needed.
The week before Obama spoke to the union
leaders, the AFL-CIO began distributing mailers
comparing Obama with his GOP foe, Sen. John
McCain (R-Ariz.). The mailers are a
federation effort to “define” both
presidential hopefuls in the key states such as
Ohio, Pennsylvania, Michigan and
Wisconsin. It plans to distribute 600,000
mailers to union swing voters those four states
alone, and more
elsewhere.
“Union voters, like many voters across the
country, are still learning about Obama and
have heard many things--some true, some
false,” the fed said. “One is aimed
directly at dispelling myths and rumors about
Obama,” such as that he’s a Moslem.
“The other features testimonials from workers
on Obama's record in support of good
jobs, health care reform and workers'
rights.”
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