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June 5, 2008
Obama Endorsement Resolution Approved by CWA
Board for Convention
CWA's Executive Board has approved a statement endorsing
Senator Barack Obama for president of the United States, and
will be submitting it to the Resolutions Committee for action by
delegates at this month's 70th Annual Convention in Las
Vegas.
The statement anticipates the critical changes that workers
and working families can expect from an Obama administration
after the hardships and challenges of the last 7 ½
years.
Senator Obama has made clear his commitment to CWA's four key
issues, the Employee Free Choice Act, universal health care,
fair trade and good jobs and financial security for
retirees.
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| Senator Barack Obama and wife Michelle greet
crowd at primary night rally June 3 in St. Paul,
Minn. | "The differences between
Senator Obama and the presumptive Republican nominee, Arizona
Senator John McCain, could not be more clear-cut," the
resolution states. "It is the choice between fundamental change
for the better for working Americans or four more years of
policies that favor the rich, that ship jobs overseas, that
thwart the rights of workers to organize and bargain contracts,
that leave health care decisions to the whims of insurance
companies, that attempt, again, to privatize Social Security.
And the list goes on."
Obama has repeatedly pledged to support and sign the Employee
Free Choice Act, telling the AFL-CIO convention in April that,
"It's time we had a president who didn't choke saying the word,
'union.' A president who knows it's the Department of Labor and
not the Department of Management. And a president who
strengthens our unions by letting them do what they do
best – organize our workers."
McCain not only voted against the Employee Free Choice Act,
he has a track record of supporting anti-union "right-to-work"
laws, voting to let employers hire permanent replacements during
a strike and voting to deny collective bargaining rights for
police and firefighters, as well as TSA airport screeners, the
Board noted.
On health care, Obama is committed to universal, affordable
coverage. While he has laid out a detailed plan, he has made
clear that he is open to new ideas, including those from CWA's
health care campaign.
As the Board statement describes, McCain's only plan for
health care reform is to make a bad situation worse. McCain
wants to make employer-provided health care benefits part of
taxable income. Experts say the likely effect would be the end
of employer health plans, pushing workers into the private
health care market where insurance companies could continue to
refuse coverage.
On trade issues, Obama supports fair trade agreements with
labor, safety and environmental protections. He has been a
staunch opponent of the Colombia Free Trade Agreement and other
pacts that are bad for American workers and workers in other
countries.
McCain, the Board said, "has never seen a trade deal he
didn't like." Despite the loss of more than 1 million good,
American jobs to the North American Free Trade Agreement, he
continues to see the pact as good for America. He has
enthusiastically voted for all subsequent trade agreements and
"fast track" bills allowing the president to bypass Congress
when negotiating trade deals.
McCain also remains an eager supporter of privatizing Social
Security. In his Senate career he has voted many times to
undermine the system, from his support of deep benefit cuts to
his refusal to back a plan that would have created a strategic
reserve for Social Security through a slight reduction in tax
cuts for the rich.
Senator Obama adamantly opposes schemes to privatize Social
Security and has pledged to take steps to ensure that it remains
solvent. Unlike McCain, he doesn't support a plan to raise the
retirement age for Americans and has laid out a strong agenda
for corporate reform to protect workers' pensions.
The Board's resolution recognizes not only Obama's shared
values with CWA, but the revolution that his "hopeful, spirited
campaign" has been for millions of Americans. He "has
invigorated a new generation of voters and touched Americans of
all ages – Democrats and Republicans – who have felt
discouraged and hopeless over the last 7 ½ years," the
Board said.
The Board urges CWA delegates to resolve not just to support
Obama but to "use every tool at our disposal and give generously
of our time to work to elect him and to elect Democrats to
Congress to ensure that his pro-worker policies have the support
of true majorities in both the U.S. House and Senate."
"CWA will work as never before to get out members to the
polls on Nov. 4, 2008, to cast their votes to transform our
country's political landscape and restore the rights, dignity
and financial security of America's workers and working
families," the proposed resolution concludes.
CWA, IBEW Mid-Atlantic
Verizon Bargainers Meet
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| CWA and IBEW Verizon "South" negotiators met at CWA
headquarters this week to review issues in early contract
talks. IBEW Pres. Ed Hill and CWA Pres. Larry Cohen
attended, and are shown standing just right of center. A
similar joint bargaining team is meeting in New
York. |
Democrats Introduce New Direction on
Trade
A bill that promotes global trade as long as agreements are
fairly negotiated and include effective labor,
environmental and product safety standards is being introduced
by Democrats on Capitol Hill with the support of CWA and other
labor unions.
"We're here to play offense," said CWA President Larry Cohen.
"We're tired of playing defense."
The TRADE Act calls for a review of all existing trade
agreements and provides a process to renegotiate them. The bill
includes principles outlining what should be included in future
trade agreements, and spells out that the role of Congress in
trade policymaking should be strengthened. It will reverse years
of trade policy that have elevated capital, financial and
property interests above all else, Cohen noted.
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| CWA President Larry Cohen joins U.S. senators,
representatives and other labor leaders on Capitol Hill on
Wednesday to speak in support of a new bill that encourages
trade deals that are negotiated fairly and include labor, safety
and environmental
standards. | Senator Sherrod Brown
(D-Ohio), Representative Michael Michaud (D-Maine) and other
TRADE Act sponsors, speaking with Cohen and other labor leaders
at a news conference on Wednesday, said the bill should put an
end to the myth that Democrats and unions are opposed to
trade.
"The TRADE Act will help Congress and the White House craft a
trade agreement that benefits workers, business owners and our
country," said Brown, who introduced the bill in the Senate. "We
want trade, and we want more of it. The TRADE Act is a critical
first step."
The bill is formally called the Trade Reform, Accountability,
Development and Employment Act.
Cohen said that enforceable labor standards are critical to
fair trade, so that companies can't simply abandon the United
States or other countries for nations with even weaker workers'
rights.
He called the proposed Colombia Free Trade Agreement a "new
low, even for hard-core free traders." Colombia leads the world
in denying workers the right to collective bargaining.
Simply by labeling workers as contractors, self-employed, or
cooperatives, when these workers are employed by major
corporations, Colombia has allowed 85 percent of its 18 million
workers to be stripped of any possibility of gaining collective
bargaining rights. "This trend exists in the USA, but in
Colombia we see the end point with no corporate responsibility
and an extreme disparity between wage earners and the economic
elite," he said.
Wednesday's news conference also featured Senator Byron
Dorgan (D-N.D.), Representative Linda Sanchez (D-Calif.), and
Teamsters President James Hoffa.
IUE-CWA Will Fight to Save Moraine, Ohio, GM
Plant
Blaming weak sales of sport utility vehicles, General Motors
this week announced plans to close the IUE-CWA-represented plant
in Moraine, Ohio, along with three other plant shutdowns,
prompting the union to declare that the workers and the
community are victims of GM's "failure in reading the U.S.
automotive market and securing future product for our
facility."
IUE-CWA President Jim Clark said in a statement that the
union "will work as hard as possible and reach out to all
potential allies to try to save the plant" by convincing GM to
bring new auto production lines to the facility. "If GM
still wants to make an excellent product at a profit in the
United States, we can do it in Moraine," he said.
IUE-CWA represents 2,500 workers at the suburban Dayton
plant, which manufactures several lines of SUVs.
"Through unprecedented work rule flexibility and an unmatched
commitment to quality, the workers at (Moraine) have
consistently delivered a profitable product," Clark noted.
"GM should recognize the loyalty and the skill of the Moraine
workers with a new product placement. GM could reward the
community's long-time support by working to rebuild the plant's
future, not abandoning an already hard-struck area. I hope
that GM is not out of fresh ideas and new products," he
declared.
At the same time, IUE-CWA "will fight equally as hard to
ensure that our members and retirees get all they deserve and
all they have earned after years of working for GM," Clark
stated.
Harry Swaim Dies, Retired District 3 Staff
Rep
Harry Swaim, 74, retired District 3 staff representative,
died May 26, at the Middle Tennessee Medical Center in
Murfeesboro, Tenn. "Harry was a gentle giant, always
working most of the time unnoticed, for the rights of working
men and women," said District 3 Vice President Noah Savant.
Swaim became active in CWA from the moment he went to work
for South Central Bell in 1954. During the next 21 years, he
rose through the ranks of Local 3806, in Memphis, serving as
steward, secretary-treasurer, vice president, and president. He
appointed a CWA representative in 1975 and moved wherever he was
needed – from Alabama, to Louisiana, and finally to
Tennessee. He retired in 1999.
"There's nothing Harry wouldn't do for you," reflected a
colleague, retired District 3 Vice President Gene Russo. "During
a tough round of bargaining with the old United Sprint
bargaining unit in Johnson City, he moved to Johnson City from
his office in Nashville and stayed put until a contract was
reached."
He is survived by his wife, Jeanette, sons Eddie, Michael,
Jay and Victor, along with eleven grandchildren and one
great-grandchild.
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