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Union Political Mobilization Has Turned Around America

by Seth Michaels, Sep 14, 2009

 
    

Four years ago, an anti-worker majority in Congress and the Bush administration were conducting a corporate-funded assault on workers and the programs that supported America. They were implementing policies that steered the economy toward the very wealthiest and leaving everyone else behind. What a difference four years makes. Now in the White House, we have Barack Obama, the first African American president and a supporter of unions and working families and pro-worker majorities in both houses of Congress.

Today, at the AFL-CIO Convention, attendees got a chance to examine the successes of union political mobilization and look forward to continuing the fight to elect pro-worker candidates and passing a pro-worker legislative agenda. Delegates adopted a strong resolution in support of continuing an active political program.

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Big Business Blocks Working Family Bills by Keeping Franken’s Senate Seat Vacant

by Seth Michaels, Apr 17, 2009

Photo credit: Laura Markwardt  
  Al Franken received strong support from union members during his 2008 Senate campaign.  
 
 

It’s April 2009 and we’re still checking back in to see who won in Minnesota’s hard-fought 2008 Senate race between incumbent Norm Coleman and AFL-CIO-endorsed challenger Al Franken—because corporate front groups are dumping money into delaying and dragging out the process.

When last we visited Minnesota, the state was just beginning to recount the votes in the excruciatingly close race. The recount was an exhaustive, transparent process, with every step open to the public and examined closely by Minnesota’s judiciary. And this week, a three-judge panel—in a 68-page decision issued after extensive consideration—ruled that Franken “received the highest number of votes legally cast” and is “entitled to receive a certificate of election.”

Yet Franken can’t be seated, because ex-Sen. Coleman is planning to appeal to the Minnesota state Supreme Court. Although election-law experts suggest that Coleman’s arguments are unlikely to have any more effect on the state Supreme Court than they did in front of judges from around the state who have heard them throughout this long process, Coleman is still keeping his team of lawyers busy and well-paid. And who’s paying for those mounting legal bills? The same corporate front groups bankrolling the fight against the Employee Free Choice Act.

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2008 in Review: Union Members: Yes, We Can; Yes, We Did

by Mike Hall, Jan 1, 2009

Here’s the final part in our series taking a look back at 2008. Be sure to check out Part 1, Part 2, Part 3, Part 4 and Part 5.

 
   

Change was in the air—and on the way—in November, as the AFL-CIO’s biggest-ever political mobilization headed toward the finish line. Tens of thousands of union volunteers packed local union halls to phone bank or to talk with union family voters in neighborhoods around the country in the final get-out-the-vote push to elect Barack Obama and win even bigger working family majorities in Congress.

Obama chose a union hall as his last campaign stop. On Election Day morning, he popped into UAW Local 550’s Indianapolis phone bank. Said Keith Neargardener, UAW Region 3 CAP director:

You know, to make the union hall your last stop before becoming president sends such a great message. It shows how he’s not afraid to say the word union and to embrace and support unions openly.

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Obama Reaffirms Support of Freedom to Form Unions

by Seth Michaels, Dec 11, 2008

This week, President-elect Barack Obama sat down with the Los Angeles Times for his first in-depth newspaper interview since his historic election. In the interview, Obama said that part of his economic agenda would be fighting for workers’ freedom to form unions and bargain for a better life—the goal of the Employee Free Choice Act, which Obama co-sponsored in the Senate and pledged to sign as president.

When it comes to unions, I have consistently said that I want to strengthen the union movement in this country and put an end to the kinds of barriers and roadblocks that are in the way of workers legitimately coming together in order to form a union and bargain collectively.

Since the election, Obama’s staff has confirmed that he supports the passage of the Employee Free Choice Act, as he stated repeatedly throughout the campaign season.

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Franken Still in Contention as Minnesota Counts the Votes

by Seth Michaels, Dec 4, 2008

Election 2008 isn’t quite over yet. The closest Senate race in the country is still up in the air, as Minnesota is recounting ballots in the contest between Sen. Norm Coleman and AFL-CIO-endorsed Al Franken. While the recount is scheduled to finish tomorrow, final decisions on thousands of ballots are still pending, which means it could be another week before we know who will be the next senator from Minnesota.

On election night, the initial count showed that, out of some 2.86 million votes cast, just over 200 separated Coleman and Franken—a difference of less than 0.01 percent. Under Minnesota state law, a recount is required in any statewide race where the difference is less than half of 1 percent. The recount is under way and will be completed sometime tomorrow.

So who’s ahead, and who is likely to wind up leading when the counting is finished, as required under state law, tomorrow? That’s a good question, and one that nobody seems to be able to answer.

 

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Martin Misses in Hard-Fought Georgia Senate Runoff

by Seth Michaels, Dec 3, 2008

In yesterday’s runoff election for Georgia’s U.S. Senate seat, working family-friendly candidate Jim Martin made a strong effort but wasn’t able to unseat incumbent Sen. Saxby Chambliss. Chambliss won with 57 percent of the vote, while Martin took 43 percent.

Martin’s presence in the runoff and the votes he won last night are thanks, in part, to the efforts of hundreds of union volunteers who have been working hard contacting active and retired members around the state. Union volunteers knocked on 100,000 doors, sent 300,000 pieces of union mail and leafleted more than 150 worksites. Union phone bankers made more than 300,000 phone calls, and Martin himself took part in a union phone bank as the election approached.

Throughout the race, union volunteers identified and mobilized union voters. Though they weren’t successful this time, they’ll be ready to turn out votes in future Georgia races.

 

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Tomorrow: Georgia’s Senate Runoff Race

by Seth Michaels, Dec 1, 2008

Tomorrow, Georgia voters go to the polls to vote in the runoff election for U.S. Senate. AFL-CIO-endorsed Jim Martin is in a close contest with anti-worker incumbent Sen. Saxby Chambliss in a race that could determine the ability to pass a pro-working family agenda in 2009 and beyond.

Union volunteers are putting in long hours and mobilizing around the state to get out the vote in the Senate runoff. If Martin wins, he’ll be the 59th pro-worker vote in the Senate, providing a critical voice for policies that will rebuild America’s middle class and strengthen the economy. Chambliss would continue to stand in the way of progress on health care, job creation and the Employee Free Choice Act.

 

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Sen. Chambliss Gets Angry When Asked About Role in Sugar Dust Blast

by Seth Michaels, Nov 21, 2008

Sen. Saxby Chambliss, the anti-worker senator fighting for his career in a tight Georgia runoff election, is facing a subpoena to testify about his relationship with Imperial Sugar. As we’ve noted, Imperial Sugar—an ally and patron of Chambliss—is hoping to evade responsibility for a deadly sugar dust explosion that killed 14 workers last February.

Yesterday, Chambliss responded to a question about the subpoena by swatting away a camera held by a volunteer (see video). Not only is he dodging a court order, but he doesn’t want to discuss his relationship with the company or his attacks on a whistle-blower who exposed the dangerous conditions at the Imperial plant.

As Firedoglake reported, Chambliss received $21 million in campaign contributions this election cycle from the sugar industry.

 

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Working Families Propel Obama to White House, Win in Senate, House

by Mike Hall, Nov 5, 2008

After last night’s historic election of Barack Obama as president of the United States, AFL-CIO President John Sweeney sums it up well, saying:

The political pendulum is swinging back toward sanity, after many months of work by people of all ages, races, stations and faiths hungry for change.

Obama’s victory was sealed when West Coast polls closed last night, and we await the final calls in North Carolina and Missouri, where the race between Obama and Sen. John McCain remains too close to call. As of 11 a.m., Obama has 349 electoral votes in his column and McCain 163.

The popular vote total tally stands at Obama, with 62.4 million (52 percent) and McCain, 55.4 million (46 percent).

Several important congressional races remain too close call. Working families picked up five Senate seats last night, but the races in Alaska, Georgia and Oregon still remain too close to call.

 

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Obama-Biden Win for Working Families

by Seth Michaels, Nov 4, 2008

 
Barack Obama, president for working families.  
   

We’re cheering as we write: Sens. Barack Obama and Joe Biden will be the next U.S. president and vice president, respectively, propelled to the nation’s highest office with the critical support of union members in the labor movement’s biggest-ever get-out-the-vote mobilization. The Obama-Biden ticket so far has won 284 electoral votes, more than the 270 needed for victory and all votes from the states have not been tallied. And although the Senate count is not yet final, working families so far have voted in another four union-endorsed candidates to the U.S. Senate.

After eight years of an administration hostile to unions, workers and a working-family friendly economy, America’s union members helped bring about much-needed change by electing Obama and working family-friendly candidates up and down the ballot.

 

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