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Connecticut AFL-CIO endorses war hawk Joseph Lieberman for
Democratic primary
By Kate Randall
29 June 2006
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On Tuesday, the Connecticut AFL-CIO endorsed Senator Joseph
Lieberman for the August 8 Democratic primary. With the endorsement,
the labor federation, which represents some 180,000 members in
the state of New England, went on record supporting the Democratic
senator most identified with the Bush administrations Iraq
war policies.
John W. Olsen, chairman of the state AFL-CIO, said Lieberman
was endorsed by a two-thirds voice vote of the approximately 350
delegates at its 6th Biennial Political Convention in New Haven.
Lieberman, a three-term incumbent, is facing a challenge for
the Democratic ticket for the first time since entering the US
Senate in 1988. Ned Lamont, a millionaire cable television executive
from Greenwich, Conn., is opposing Liebermans stance on
the war, tapping into growing opposition to the war and the Bush
administrations attacks on social conditions and democratic
rights.
Lamont has been steadily gaining ground on Lieberman. A June
8 Quinnipiac University poll showed Lamont trailing the incumbent
Senator 57 to 32 percent among all Connecticut Democrats, compared
to 65 to 19 percent only the month before. Lieberman has indicated
he may run as an independent candidate if he doesnt win
the Democratic nomination. He recently told reporters, I
am not going to close out any options.
Lieberman would have to file 7,500 signatures on nominating
petitions by August 9, the day after the primary, to secure a
spot on the November ballot, meaning he would have to begin collecting
signatures before the primary election results were tallied. The
AFL-CIO has left its options open should Lamont win the Democratic
nomination and Lieberman decide to run as an independent.
In supporting Lieberman in the primary, and leaving open the
possibility that it may support him against Lamont if he loses
in the primary, the Connecticut AFL-CIO has underscored the vast
gulf that exists between the trade union bureaucracy and rank-and-file
union members, as well as the working class in general. The Quinnipiac
poll reported that 73 percent of all Connecticut voters disapproved
of the way President Bush is handling the Iraq war.
Lamont received a third of delegates votes at the Connecticut
Democratic Party convention in May, thus avoiding having to petition
to place his name on the ballot for the August primary election.
This has caused considerable consternation within the Democratic
Party establishment, which is determined to marginalize the issue
of the Iraq war in its campaign for the November midterm elections.
New York Senator Charles Schumer, head of the Democratic Senatorial
Campaign Committee, recently asked Lamont to drop out of the race.
Lamont called for support for the non-binding Levin-Reed Amendment,
which was rejected in last weeks Senate debate on the war
by a 60-39 vote. The measure called for the Bush administration
to begin withdrawing an undetermined number of American troops
by the end of this year and announce a timetable to further withdrawals
some time in the future. It was defeated by a 60-39 vote margin.
A resolution put forward by Democratic Senator John Kerry to
set a deadline of July 1, 2007 for withdrawal of US troops was
overwhelmingly rejected by a vote of 86-13. Lamonts campaign
manager Tom Swan told the Hartford Courant recently
that Lamont supports a withdrawal by July 2007.
A statement on Lamonts web site makes it clear that his
opposition to the war is of a tactical, rather than a principled,
nature, and that he does not challenge the imperialist basis of
the war, or of American foreign policy in general. The statement
declares that to stay the course is not a winning
strategy for Iraq or America and our frontline military
troops should begin to be redeployed and our troops should start
heading home.
Lieberman, the Democrats vice presidential candidate
in 2000, opposed both Democratic resolutions and sided with the
White House in the Senate debate. He has been the Democrats
most strident supporter of the war, vocally defending both Defense
Secretary Donald Rumsfeld and President Bush. He attacked opponents
of the war last December, saying, in matters of war, we
undermine presidential credibility at our nations peril.
As Al Gores running mate in 2000, Lieberman went on record
opposing the Constitutional principle of the separation of the
church and state, commenting at a campaign appearance in Detroit
that the Constitution guarantees freedom of religion,
not freedom from religion.
In the wake of the 9/11 terrorist attacks, he enthusiastically
supported the passage of the USA Patriot Act and, as chairman
of the Senate Governmental Affairs Committee, worked to create
the Department of Homeland Security. He has backed all of the
antidemocratic measures enacted by the Bush administration in
the name of the war on terror.
Running as a supporter of the Iraq war in the race for the
Democratic presidential nomination in 2004, he was forced to withdraw
after obtaining disastrously low votes in a series of primary
elections.
A substantial group of unionsincluding SEIU Local 1298,
American Postal Workers Local 237, Communications Workers of America
Local 1103, Electricians Local 90, UNITE HERE, and the United
Food and Commercial Workershave endorsed Lieberman in this
years Democratic primary election. Some of these unions
are affiliated to the AFL-CIO and others have joined the breakaway
Change to Win union coalition. Their common endorsement
of the chief representative of the most right-wing, pro-war faction
of the Democratic Party demonstrates the absence of any principled
political differences between the two rival factions within the
trade union bureaucracy.
The endorsement of Lieberman is a clear expression of the nationalist
and pro-imperialist politics of the American unionspolitics
that underlie their collaboration with the corporations in imposing
ever more brutal attacks on the American working class. It is
one more demonstration of the deeply reactionary and anti-working
class character of these bureaucratic organizations.
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