April 10, 2008
- Conference Sets Stage for Historic Election,
Employee Free Choice
- Clinton, Obama Pledge Support on Key CWA Issues
- CWA and AFL-CIO Ramp Up Fight Against Colombia
Trade Deal
- Civil Rights and Equity: 'A Movement ... Not a
Moment'
Conference Sets Stage for Historic Election,
Employee Free Choice
While the rest of the country speculates on who will
get the Democratic nomination for president, CWA members
at the union's annual Legislative-Political Conference
focused on the bigger picture: Ensuring that the
November election brings sweeping change that will
rapidly usher in the Employee Free Choice Act and a
pro-worker agenda.
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Democratic presidential
candidates Sen. Barack Obama, left, and Sen.
Hillary Clinton, right, said enactment of the
Employee Free Choice Act is critical to
restoring America's middle class. |
The CWA audience cheered both Democratic presidential
contenders Hillary Clinton and Barack Obama and a parade
of other speakers who made it clear that workers'
rights, health care reform, fair trade and retirement
security will be top priorities for a Democratic
president and worker-friendly House and Senate.
"You can feel the excitement as we imagine the change
we can bring about in the next 12 months," CWA President
Larry Cohen told the crowd of 700 members that filled a
Washington, D.C., hotel ballroom to capacity.
As participants registered for the four-day
conference, April 6-9, they filled out postcards urging
what will be the new Congress and new president to take
immediate action to pass the Employee Free Choice Act.
The labor movement is gathering 1 million postcards and
will submit them with photos of many of the signers so
that they can be displayed in the Capitol after the
November election, putting both names and faces to the
fight. CWA has committed to getting 15 percent of its
membership, about 90,000 people to sign cards.
CWA Executive Vice President Jeff Rechenbach said the
key to all of it – to passing Employee Free Choice,
enacting health care reform and more – is victory Nov.
4. "It's all riding on the election," he said. "For the
next six months, that's our focus."
Participants heard from lawmakers and other leaders
in the mornings and spent the rest of the day on Capitol
Hill meeting with representatives, senators and their
staffs to discuss CWA's key issues.
In meetings and in speeches, leaders expressed strong
support for the Employee Free Choice Act, grave concern
about the state of the U.S. economy and anger that the
world's wealthiest nation isn't providing health care
for tens of millions of its citizens. They also focused
on another top CWA priority: high-speed Internet access
for every American. Right now, the United States lags
far behind other developed countries in both access and
upload and download speeds.
"If we want to compete in the global economy, we need
to be investing in universal high-speed broadband
access," said Rep. Chris Van Hollen (D-Md.)
He and other speakers urged what they praised as an
already tireless union to get even more involved over
the next six months, ensuring that working families
across the country understand the issues, know what's at
stake and will turn out on Election Day.
"We cannot turn the tide without your help," said
Rep. Andre Carson (D-Ind.), who was elected in March
with labor's support to fill the seat of his late
grandmother, Julia Carson. Reps. David Obey (D-Wis.) and
Rob Andrews (D-N.J.) also spoke, as did West Virginia
Gov. Joe Manchin, a Democrat who is credited with
bringing new, living-wage jobs to his state and enacting
tough worker safety laws.
The conference included a panel of national political
directors and advisers who detailed what seats are open
and which are vulnerable in the House, Senate and in
governor's offices across the country -- all campaigns
that CWA locals and their members will be working on in
addition to ensuring that John McCain does not become
president.
Panelists were Paul Dioguardi of the Democratic
Governors' Association; Martha McKenna of the Democratic
Senatorial Campaign Committee; John Vogel of the
Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee; and Parag
Mehta of the Democratic National Committee.
On the conference's final morning, DNC Chairman
Howard Dean spoke, emphasizing that the party has two
extraordinary candidates and that one of them can, and
must, beat John McCain.
He noted what he termed McCain's "Let them eat cake"
speech recently in which he ignored Wall Street's and
the administration's role in the free-falling economy
and suggested instead that people struggling to pay
their mortgages get second jobs and cut back on other
spending. "He is completely disconnected from the
struggles of working-class people," Dean said.
Speaking at her final CWA legislative conference
before her retirement at June's convention,
Secretary-Treasurer Barbara Easterling honored McCain's
military service but condemned his terrible record on
working-family issues.
Calling this the "the greatest election opportunity
of our lifetime," Easterling said, "We are here on a
mission, a mission to build a political movement to
restore bargaining rights in America. And if we do our
jobs and work as never before, come Election Day we will
win and we will usher in a powerful new movement to
change America for generations to come."
Clinton, Obama Pledge Support on Key CWA Issues
Hillary Clinton and Barack Obama had CWA members
jumping to their feet, cheering and clapping wildly
Tuesday morning during speeches in which both candidates
pledged support for the Employee Free Choice Act, health
care reform, universal broadband and other key CWA
issues.
The back-to-back appearances at the
Legislative-Political Conference by the two remaining
Democratic candidates for U.S. president drew dozens of
reporters and crews from every major TV network.
Clinton, who spoke first, took note of all the union
members she encounters or benefits from in a given day –
from the crew staffing her plane to hotel and restaurant
employees to workers who built the cars her campaign
uses.
"The reason we have been such a rich and successful
country is because of the American labor movement,"
Clinton said. "For far too long we've had a president
and a vice president who don't appreciate what you do."
Like Clinton, Obama pledged to fight for and sign the
Employee Free Choice Act. Listing some of the many
assaults on workers and working families over the past
seven years, he said, "It's time we had a president who
didn't choke saying the word 'union.' We need to
strengthen our unions by letting them do what they do
best – organize. If a majority of workers want a union,
they should get a union. It's that simple."
Both candidates drew loud cheers when they blasted
the Bush administration's proposed free trade deal with
Colombia and vowed to make sure that trade policies in
the future protect American jobs.
Clinton said she's angry that the administration and
those in Congress who are hostile to unions have "taken
to questioning the patriotism of those who want to
organize workers."
Both candidates pledged to restore the mission of
protecting workers to the Department of Labor and the
National Labor Relations Board, a mission crushed by
corporate interests during the Bush administration.
"It's not the Department of Management, it's the
Department of Labor, and we are here to take it back,"
Obama said.
The nose-diving economy means unions are more
important than ever, Clinton said. "We need unions not
just in good times but in hard times, too - - especially
in hard times because you know what it's like to fight
for the underdog."
Obama recalled turning down a job offer on Wall
Street as a young man to work as a community organizer
in Chicago neighborhoods struggling after steel plants
closed. Between job training and other aid, he said,
"Block by block, we turned those neighborhoods around.
And it taught me the most valuable lesson of my life –
that ordinary people can do extraordinary things so long
as they're organized and mobilized."
Both candidates said they're committed to the goal of
CWA's Speed Matters campaign to ensure that telecom
companies extend affordable, high-speed internet access
to all Americans, bringing the United States out of the
technological basement among developed nations.
The candidates drew major distinctions between
themselves and Republican John McCain on health care,
corporate welfare, trade and more.
The conference's other speakers made the same point,
emphasizing that the working families have two
"extraordinary" candidates to choose between.
CWA and AFL-CIO Ramp Up Fight Against Colombia Trade
Deal
The battle for fair trade vs. free trade accelerated
this week as President Bush sent his Colombia Free Trade
Agreement to Congress, two Democratic candidates for
president blasted the deal at CWA's
Legislative-Political Conference and the AFL-CIO
launched a telephone and e-mail campaign to convince
lawmakers to reject the deal.
Under "fast track" rules, the House must vote the
agreement up or down without amendment within 60 days.
The Senate has 90 days in which to act.
"No free trade with Colombia while violence against
trade unions continues," Sen. Hillary Clinton told CWA
conference participants. "I will vote against it and I
will do everything I can to get Congress to reject it,"
she added.
Sen. Barrack Obama also condemned the agreement. He
applauded CWA President Larry Cohen "for the role he has
played in making sure the whole world knows about the
tragedy of how workers in Colombia are treated."
Accompanied by representatives of the AFL-CIO and the
Steelworkers, Cohen last week briefed Senate staffers on
Capitol Hill, telling them of the nearly 2,600 murders
of unionists in Colombia over the last 20 years, calling
for collective bargaining and organizing rights in any
trade deal and demanding that it begin to address the
United States' $725 billion trade deficit.
In an op-ed piece for USA Today this week, AFL-CIO
President John Sweeney also condemned the Colombia FTA.
"Globalization is here," Sweeney noted. "What is left
to decide is how globalization will impact ordinary
people around the world. We have a choice. The test of
trade should not be how much profit it generates. Trade
should lift workers out of poverty and strengthen
democracy. It should take place with countries that have
the capacity to enforce human rights and environmental
standards."
Thousands of CWA members have lost manufacturing jobs
due to the international trade imbalance. You can tell
your representative to vote "no" on the Colombia Free
Trade Agreement by calling toll free (866) 338-5720 or
by sending an e-mail from the website at
www.unionvoice.org/campaign/no_colombia_trade_deal.
Civil Rights and Equity: 'A Movement ... Not a
Moment'
CWA's National Civil Rights and Equity Conference,
held in conjunction with the legislative-political
conference, had just gotten underway the evening of
April 9 as the newsletter went to press. Some 200
participants looked forward over the next three days to
hearing from prominent civil rights activists and
participating in panel discussions and workshops
challenging them to more fully integrate civil rights
issues with the union's core work of organizing,
political activism and representation.
In his opening address Wednesday night, CWA President
Larry Cohen noted that just a week ago the nation marked
the fortieth anniversary of the assassination of the
Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. in Memphis, Tenn. "King was
a visionary, one of the first who saw the connection
between the civil rights movement and the labor
movement, that both were fighting for social justice and
a more equitable society," Cohen said.
"We've made a great deal of progress," he said,
noting that four seats have been added to the CWA
Executive Board which have been filled by persons of
color and women. Alluding to the conference theme, A
Movement .. Not a Moment, "we have to keep this energy
going," he added, urging participants to work to elect
friends of working families to the White House and
Congress in November and to help CWA achieve passage of
the Employee Free Choice Act, health care for all, jobs
and fair trade and retirement security.
"The Employee Free Choice Act is the most important
piece of civil rights legislation we've seen in
generations," said CWA Executive Vice President Jeff
Rechenbach, stressing the importance of the AFL-CIO's
"Million-Member Mobilization" to present one million
cards to the new president and Congress in January
urging passage of EFCA.
Welcomed to Washington, D.C., by Ron Collins,
assistant to District 2 Vice President Pete Catucci and
by host Local 2336 President Jim Pappas, the
participants were scheduled to hear from AFL-CIO EVP
Arlene Holt-Baker, the first person of color to serve in
one of the federation's top three offices, as well as
legendary civil rights activist Rep. John Lewis (D-Ga.).
Their agenda included a review of the history of
CWA's civil rights program and presentation of the
Mays-Carroll Award to honor members who over the past
year made outstanding contributions to civil rights and
minority practices. The award, named for Eugene Mays,
the first African-American CWA officer and staff member,
who served as assistant to the vice president of
District 1 from 1969 until his death in 1973, and Mary
Mays-Carroll, who headed CWA's Civil Rights and Fair
Practices office from 1989 until her retirement in 1999,
is to be presented to Local 6310 member Keith Robinson,
Local 1298 member Tonya Hodges and to Local 1180.
The conference was organized by CWA's National
Committee on Equity: Chair and Local 9421 Executive Vice
President Lupe Mercado; Local 1180 Secretary-Treasurer
Gloria Middleton; Local 2300 President Daisy Brown;
Local 3204 Job Steward Sheila Williams; Local 4309
President Pam Wynn; Local 6215 member Michele Flood
Luce; Local 37082 President Yoko Kuramoto-Eidsmoe; and
Local 13101 member Simone Harris; along with Leslie
Jackson, CWA representative for Civil Rights and Fair
Practices. |