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FED GOAL: FILIBUSTER-PROOF SENATE MAJORITY
Friday, August 8, 2008
(PAI)FED GOAL: FILIBUSTER-PROOF SENATE
MAJORITY
By Mark Gruenberg
PAI Staff
Writer
CHICAGO
(PAI)--The AFL-CIO has set a political goal,
second only to helping presumed Democratic
nominee Barack Obama win the White House, of
achieving a filibuster-proof 60-vote pro-worker
Senate majority in this year’s
elections.
But to do
so may be an uphill battle, as it would require
Democrats to win at least nine of 11 targeted
U.S. Senate races and not lose a single seat of
their own. And even several of the
hopefuls, seeking strong labor support during
the AFL-CIO Executive Council meeting in
Chicago, described the problems they face on
the campaign trail.
Democrats and Republicans are currently tied at
49 seats each in the Senate. Two independents,
who vote with workers on their issues, caucus
with the Democrats.
The GOP needs
only 41 votes to keep filibusters going and to
kill progressive legislation, including
pro-worker laws and attempts to start
withdrawal of U.S. forces from GOP President
George W. Bush’s war in
Iraq.
The Senate
Republicans have launched at least 86
successful filibusters--an all-time
record--against Democratic initiatives,
including the Employee Free Choice Act, to help
level the playing field between workers and
bosses in organizing and bargaining.
In
another case, on legislation important to the
Fire Fighters to order states to give
collective bargaining rights to public safety
workers, the filibuster failed. But the
GOP talked that bill to death by launching 20
amendments and discussing them
endlessly.
All that
led federation President John J. Sweeney, at an
August 4 reception for Senate hopefuls, to
proclaim the fed’s goal as “60 in ’08,”
referring to the filibuster-proof margin unions
need. The GOP is defending 23 of
the 35 Senate seats up this
year.
“We have to
win nine seats to have a filibuster-proof
majority and achieve a fair shot at health care
we can all count on, fair trade, revenue to
provide new jobs in this economic crisis and
the Employee Free Choice Act,” Sweeney
said.
Sweeney listed
races in Minnesota, Oregon, Maine and
Kentucky--against Minority Leader Mitch
McConnell, the filibuster orchestrator.
He added New Hampshire, North Carolina, Alaska,
Colorado, New Mexico, Virginia and
Mississippi. In a later talk, AFL-CIO
Political Committee Chair Gerald McEntee told
PAI the federation realistically expects a net
gain of “six or seven” seats. He
listed those in Virginia (Democrat Mark
Warner), New Hampshire (Jeanne Shaheen), “a
good shot in Alaska” (Tom Begich), Colorado
and New Mexico. He also thinks they’ll
pick up 25 more U.S. House
seats.
The hopefuls
who spoke to unionists in Chicago had varying
messages:
(continued)
Press Associates,
Inc. (PAI) -- 8/8/2008
(Senate, cont.
-2)
* Oregon House
Speaker Jeff Berkley (D) touted his
legislature’s pro-labor record and the
flip-flips of his foe, incumbent Gordon Smith
(R). Smith, Berkley said, is busy
changing positions to flee a voting record that
is 90% supportive of Bush--because polls show
Bush is more unpopular in Oregon than in any
other state.
“Workers couldn’t get benefits, but we
changed that in the state legislature. We
adopted the Employee Free Choice Act for public
employees,” guaranteeing card-check
recognition for them, he added. “And we
ended the use of non-compete contracts”
steered to favored, non-union, bidders, Berkley
said.
Berkley said he
wants to bring the same progressive record to
the U.S. Senate/ “But I can get it done
only with you,” he
explained.
* Kentucky
industrialist Bruce Bensford can finance his
own race against McConnell, but was not the
first choice of several unions due to his past
business practices. He proclaimed he
already has shifted the terms of the campaign
and has the minority leader “in
trouble.”
McConnell, Bensford said, has already spent
$1.5 million on ads, and none have touted
McConnell’s own 24-year Senate record.
“They’re all attacking me” and his
support of the Employee Free Choice Act,
Bensford told the
crowd.
Signaling a
campaign theme, Bensford added that for workers
“everything you hold dear has been taken away
by George W. Bush and Mitch McConnell.”
But Bensford did not mention one key fact: That
Kentucky has not elected a Democratic U.S.
Senator in years.
*
Popular ex-New Hampshire Gov. Shaheen (D), who
lost a close race to then-Rep. John Sununu (R)
in an open-seat contest in 2002, vowed the
outcome would be different this year. New
Hampshire has been trending Democratic since
then.
But she also
said she’s “in a tough race” where Sununu
“has $3 million more in the bank than I do,
and they’ve spent $5 million in independent
expenditures” by outside pro-GOP groups not
formally affiliated with the senator’s
campaign.
Shaheen said a Sununu-hired cameraman is
trailing her campaign appearances, taping
everything and asking her why she “does not
support the secret ballot” in union
elections--the GOP-Right Wing campaign slogan
against EFCA in all the contested Senate
races. “I support the right to
organize,” she replies to him. Shaheen
pointed out the cameraman in one town, pointing
him out to listeners and saying: “This guy is
part of the crowd that doesn’t support a
living wage, that doesn’t support retirement
benefits for workers, that doesn’t support
health care for all….They tossed him out of
the
hall.”
###
Press Associates, Inc. (PAI) --
8/8/2008
