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AFL-CIO leaders pledge $200 million to Democratic Party campaigns
By Naomi Spencer
27 September 2007
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At an executive council meeting last week in Washington, D.C.,
leaders of the AFL-CIO announced a $200 million effort aimed at
Democratic Party victories in the 2008 elections. This pledged
payout stands at complete odds with the needs and interests of
the 10 million rank-and-file members who remain in the labor federation,
and who did not vote on the decision to bankroll this pro-war,
big-business party.
The pledge amounts to record campaign spending for the federation,
$50 million more than in the 2004 elections. More than a year
before the 2008 elections, the entire US campaign process is awash
in cash. With the unions contributions, the Democrats
war chests may surpass those of the Republicans for the first
time in decades.
AFL-CIO President John Sweeney told the press Friday, Today
the AFL-CIO is sending a powerful message that we are going to
change the course of our country in 2008 by electing a president
and candidates at all levels who are committed to restoring the
promise of America to working people. These words echo the
ringing endorsement the AFL-CIO general board gave in 2004 to
the pro-war Democratic presidential candidate John Kerry, describing
him as all of the best things America has to offer.
The AFL-CIO spent $40 million to support Democratic congressional
candidates in the 2006 midterm elections. Since gaining the majority
in Congressan expression of growing opposition to the Bush
administrations war policiesDemocratic candidates
promises for improvements in health care, education and other
social programs have not materialized. Instead, working people
have seen their standard of living deteriorate, while the Democrats
continually vote to authorize Bush administration requests to
fund the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan.
This state of affairs, however, has not deterred the AFL-CIO
executive council from pledging record amounts for the big-business
party this electoral cycle. For 2008, the federation has committed
$53 million to a so-called grassroots campaign initiative. Press
releases suggest this will entail the largest mobilization of
union members in history for purely electoral purposes. According
to Atlantic Monthly blogger Marc Ambinder, the AFL-CIO
plans to partner with other groups and use reams of consumer
data to market precise political messages neighborhood-by-neighborhood.
The AFL-CIO said it would activate and deploy more than
200,000 volunteers in 2008.
AFL-CIO Political Committee Chair Gerald McEntee, president
of the American Federation of State, County and Municipal Employees
(AFSCME), told the press, Our members are building an army
to make more calls, knock on more doors and turn out more voters
than ever. Were going for the trifecta: the House, the Senate
and the White House.
By pouring resources into districts in the Midwest with heavy
concentrations of union workers, AFL-CIO leaders hope to secure
the presidency for the Democrats and widen the Democratic majorities
in the Senate and House. AFL-CIO political director Karen Ackerman
stated in a press release that the federation was particularly
determined to hand Ohio to the Democrats, given that in 2004 the
questionable results within the state were decisive in Bushs
re-election.
Federation leaders say the initiative will engage union
voters about the issues theyre concerned with: health care,
retirement security, good jobs, economic equality, trade policy
and the freedom to form and join unions.
Nowhere to be found in their 2008 agenda is a mention of the
other issues of the most pressing concern: the wars in
Iraq and Afghanistan, aggression against Iran, domestic spying,
and the stripping of habeas corpus and other fundamental democratic
protections. The Democrats, who are complicit in all of these
crimes and others, represent no alternative for working people
as this political crisis escalates.
The record $200 million allocation comes only two years after
seven major unions broke away from the AFL-CIO, taking with them
6 million union members to form the rival Change to Win coalition,
reducing the federation to 10 million members. The split was not
a product of principled differences, but chiefly involved infighting
over union dues income and influence with the employers and the
state. The rupture signaled nothing progressive, but marked a
further degeneration of the rotten bureaucratic apparatus.
Since parting ways, each of the rival groups has continued
to pursue the policies of economic nationalism, labor-management
collaboration and support for the Democratic Party that produced
the collapse in the labor movement in the first place. The largest
union within the split-off, the Service Employees International
Union, has already announced it will spend more than $30 million
on the 2008 campaigns. Change to Win convenes next week to announce
its electoral spending and will undoubtedly pledge funding to
the Democrats.
The Democratic Party victory in the 2006 mid-term elections
expressed widespread antiwar sentiment within the American population.
However, in the wake of this victory, while posturing as opponents
of the war, Democrats in Congress have refused to cut off funding
for the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan. Far from representing any
alternative to the Bush administration and the Republicans, the
Democrats have played an instrumental role in facilitating the
most reactionary and pro-business policies throughout Bushs
two terms.
Fearing being seen as soft on terror, the Democrats
recently provided the key votes to make permanent and expand provisions
of the Protect America Act of 2007, which grants vast
powers to the government to spy on Americans. They have repeatedly
provided the votes necessary to eliminate fundamental protections
against secret detentions, and have played a crucial role in sanctioning
torture.
On domestic issues, the Democrats have collaborated with the
Bush administration time and again to cut funding and dismantle
basic social, health and safety programs. Health care costs, the
issue most heavily stressed by the AFL-CIO, have skyrocketed under
loosened regulations on the pharmaceutical and medical industries.
Since the Clinton administration, the Democrats have allowed the
social safety net to unravel, leaving tens of millions of Americans
uninsured and in poverty. The Democrats are also in lockstep with
the most reactionary, chauvinistic elements on the issue of immigration,
by refusing to oppose militarization of the borders and criminalization
of undocumented workers.
The AFL-CIO executive councils pledge of $200 million
to support the Democrats 2008 electoral bid is a betrayal
of the interests of union members. It is another indication that
this upper-middle-class layer is motivated by protecting its income
and privileges at the expense of the living standards of the working
class as a whole. Defense of the interests of working people requires
a complete break with the Democratic Party and all its financial
backers, allies and apologists.
See Also:
Total surrender by US auto union
[27 September 2007]
As impact of walkout spreads
GM strikers confront intransigence of US auto giant
[26 September 2007]
Connecticut AFL-CIO
endorses war hawk Joseph Lieberman for Democratic primary
[29 June 2006]
AFL-CIO Executive
Council meeting marks further disintegration of US labor federation
[2 March 2006]
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