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SWEENEY: OBAMA CAMPAIGN TO SEEK 3M VOLUNTEERS, UNIONISTS INCLUDED
Friday, August 8, 2008
(PAI)SWEENEY: OBAMA CAMPAIGN TO SEEK 3M VOLUNTEERS,
UNIONISTS INCLUDED
By Mark Gruenberg
PAI
Staff Writer
CHICAGO
(PAI)--Imagine mobilizing one of every 100
Americans, a population equal to that of the
entire city of Chicago, and putting them out on
the campaign trail.
That’s what Barack Obama’s presidential
campaign seeks to do.
In talks August 5 to the AFL-CIO Executive
Council meeting in Chicago, Obama’s top two
staffers, strategist David Axelrod and manager
David Plouffe, set that as their goal for
nationwide mobilization. They now have
1.2 million
volunteers.
“We
were impressed,” AFL-CIO President John J.
Sweeney said in an exclusive interview with
Press Associates Union News Service and with
the Bureau of National Affairs after the
meeting closed. Politics, as might be
expected, dominated the
meeting.
Axelrod and
Plouffe, joined by Obama himself on a
videoconference to the council that day, again
pushed for labor’s wholehearted support for
the presumed Democratic presidential nominee in
this fall’s
election.
“I
need labor’s mobilization to win,” Obama
told the union leaders. They did
not seek a numerical “pledges or
commitments,” Sweeney said.
Nevertheless, he added, the AFL-CIO and the
Obama campaign “are already talking about
specific geographic areas where we may be able
to help in volunteers,” the AFL-CIO president
added.
“We’ll
discuss in which cities they need our people
the most,” Sweeney said. “The program
we outlined is what we’ll discuss with the
Obama people,” he added. That program,
federation Political Director Karen Ackerman
has said in the past, includes hundreds of
thousands of volunteers, millions of worksite
visits and flyers, and at least $54 million in
get-out-the-vote and educational
spending.
In the
August 6 interview, ranging over the content of
the 2-day meeting in Chicago, Sweeney said he
was most impressed with “how active our
affiliates”--AFL-CIO member unions--“are,
in so many different ways,” not just
politically. Other activism he mentioned
included:
* New
organizing drives, particularly by the American
Federation of Teachers in Texas, by the Steel
Workers among car wash workers in Los Angeles
and--though the Auto Workers did not come to
Chicago--the UAW among Atlantic City casino
workers.
Sweeney also
noted that Dennis Van Roekel, who will take
office Sept. 1 as
(continued)
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Associates, Inc. (PAI) -- 8/8/2008
(Sweeney,
cont. -2)
president of the National
Education Association, challenged the executive
council on August 6 on organizing. The
independent NEA, with 3.2 million members, is
the nation’s largest union. In some
states, including Minnesota and New York, NEA
and the American Federation of Teachers have a
joint affiliate.
“His main focus is for us to consider change,
to look at new models for organ-izing, and that
we don’t have workers in the same sectors we
had, like manufacturing,” Sweeney said.
Van Roekel admitted “it took some working at
it to accept change and in the right directions
to go” in organizing. Sweeney said he
believes, from this meeting, that AFL-CIO
member unions are moving in the direction Van
Roekel outlined, too.
* The growth of Working America, the
federation’s affiliate for people who lack
opportunity to formally organize into a local
union and collectively bargain. The
group,, founded in 2003, has 2.5 million
members and another 1.5 million
relatives, he
said.
Working America
members, who pay nominal yearly dues, agree
with the federation on various issues, but need
a vehicle to express them, Sweeney said.
There is little difference, Working America
canvassers noted, “between the members they
sign up and the union member next
door.”
“They
realized they had to be part of a movement to
address issues” affecting the middle class,
Sweeney said of Working America’s
millions. “They’re just not at the
point of achieving collective
bargaining.”
*
Continuing cooperation with both NEA and Change
to Win on politics, primarily through the
Solidarity Charter program--which has been
extended through the AFL-CIO convention in
November 2009--with CTW member unions and the
Labor Solidarity Partnership program with NEA
locals. The NEA partnerships let those
locals participate in AFL-CIO affairs as if
they were directly affiliated local unions, not
members of an international
union.
“Some of the
Change to Win unions are fully engaged,” in
the AFL-CIO’s political program, Sweeney
said, singling out the Laborers, who rejoined
the federation’s Building Trades Department
earlier this year. Other CTW affiliates
“are partially engaged,” Sweeney added.
There are more than 3,000 Solidarity charters
for locals of the seven CTW unions: The
Laborers, Teamsters, the United Food and
Commercial Workers, UNITE HERE, Carpenters,
Farm Workers and Service
Employees.
But an
AFL-CIO council statement, approved in its
closing hours, indicated not all may be
sweetness and light in the Solidarity Charters
program. It said if a CTW member
local “raids” an AFL-CIO local--or dumps
its charter before launching a raid--the
AFL-CIO may be forced to retaliate by yanking
the charters from other locals in
the
(continued)
Press Associates, Inc.
(PAI) -- 8/8/2008
(Sweeney, cont.
-3)
raiding local’s union.
Sweeney cited a nasty confrontation this year
between the AFL-CIO’s California Nurses
Association, and SEIU in Ohio, but expects it
to be solved.
All of
this, however, is against the backdrop of the
presidential election.
“We’re
mindful we have to do our damnedest to elect
Barack Obama,” Sweeney
said.
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