The largest labor organizations in the country have formed a coalition
to guide talks of a unified labor movement: the AFL-CIO and Change to
Win, in addition to major affiliate unions and the unaffiliated
National Education Association, today formed a National Labor
Coordinating Committee, chaired by former Rep. David Bonior, whose name
was once floated as a possible Labor secretary for President Obama, and
who heads American Rights at Work, a labor action group that works with
unions, federations, and other pro-labor groups on legislative and
political initiatives (such as the Employee Free Choice Act). The
AFL-CIO and Change to Win have been in talks
about possible unification this year. Change to Win, led by Andy Stern
of SEIU, split away from the AFL-CIO in 2005; Change to Win claims to
represent six million workers, while the AFL-CIO claims to represent 11
million.
With a labor-friendly president in the White House and
Democratic majorities in the House and Senate, labor now finds itself
acting as a major player in two massive legislative/lobbying efforts:
the Employee Free Choice Act and health care reform. Bonior today
implied that labor needs to unify if it wants to take advantage of its
newfound position of power: "Recognizing the historic moment we face,
the American labor movement must unify to restore the American dream
for working families...A unified labor movement is the way to ensure
that the vast majority of Americans who want a union are able to join
one," he said in a written statement announcing the new coalition.
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Apr 7 2009, 7:12 pm






