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November 9, 2006


THE PAST WEEK:
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Friday, Nov. 3
Thursday, Nov. 2

WSLC Reports Today
Updated DAILY... Almost Every Day™ by 9 a.m.

Links are functional at date of posting, but sometimes expire. Some links require free registration.  WSLC Reports Today links to stories of interest to organized labor; some positive, some negative.  The intention is to inform.


 

THURSDAY, NOV. 9   Union member vote drove shift in nation's balance of power -- High turnout among union households (accounting for roughly 1 in 4 voters) turned a win into a sweep with 74% of union voters supporting union-endorsed candidates in the House and 76% supporting Democratic candidates in Senate races -- a whopping 50-point margin for those candidates. Non-union voters supported the Democratic House candidates by a 2-point margin.
▪  In today's Congressional Quarterly -- Labor leaders say union workers critical to Democratic wave -- A post-election survey of union members showed 74% of those surveyed voted Democratic.
▪  In today's SF Chronicle -- Voters in six states approve increase in minimum wage -- The AFL-CIO and other initiative sponsors followed a clear political strategy, pushing the wage increases in states where Democrats had good chances of victory and opportunities to rally their supporters.

Now What?   Labor's agenda includes passing Employee Free Choice Act -- Join the fight! 
▪  In today's Seattle P-I -- New clout for the state in D.C. -- Dicks may lead the Interior Appropriations Subcommittee, overseeing billions in federal spending. Murray could be Senate Transportation Subcommittee chairman, and possibly, the first woman chairman of the Senate Veterans Affairs Committee. McDermott may lead a Ways and Means subcommittee dealing with health care. The Olympian reports Smith could become chairman of an Armed Services subcommittee. Hastings could move from Ethics chairman to basement hall monitor. (OK, we made up that last one.)
▪  From AFP -- Unions want election success payback -- Labor leaders want the Dems to forge ahead with promises to raise the minimum wage, lower health care costs, and protect jobs.
▪  In today's NY Times -- Talking common ground -- One big winner from the election is organized labor, which has been marginalized in Washington in recent years and now has some important allies in leadership positions... If business groups support the Democrats’ efforts to increase the minimum wage, extend student loans and expand affordable housing, Rep. Barney Frank says, then the Democrats would support efforts to reduce trade barriers and burdensome regulation.
▪  In today's LA Times -- Election could drive minimum-wage hike -- The first federal increase in a decade is likely following Dem election victories and passage of ballot measures in six states.
▪  In today's Wash. Post -- What the new Congress will mean for business -- Rep. Rangel says he'll act quickly as Ways and Means chairman to authorize Medicare to negotiate lower drug prices.
▪  In today's Oregonian -- Legislative control puts prized goals within reach -- The Oregon governor's agenda: spending record amounts on schools and raising taxes on corporations and smokers.
▪  In today's LA Times -- San Francisco labor hails passage of sick leave measure -- It's the first city in the country to mandate paid sick leave for all workers. Business groups call it "outrageous."

Election Redux:
▪  At AFL-CIO Now -- Three-for-three in Washington state 
▪  Today from AP -- Two more Democrats declared winners; shifting control of the U.S. Senate
▪  In today's Seattle Times -- Spotlight on self may have hurt McGavick -- Campaigning that his intelligence and temperament made him superior to Cantwell, Mike!™ got the weakest support of any major party candidate running for U.S. Senate in this state in more than 20 years.
▪  In today's Seattle Times -- Reichert clings to shaky lead over Burner -- Overall, Reichert leads by less than two percentage points -- about 2,700 votes out of more than 152,000 counted thus far.
▪  In today's Yakima H-R -- Sen. Deccio announces retirement; GOP appointee will finish term
▪  In today's Seattle Times -- Anti-Bush mood reached down to our state races -- Republicans struggle to grasp the enormity of their election losses in the state Legislature: At least eight GOP incumbents were swept from office, and the party lost several open seats it previously held.
▪  In today's Spokesman-Review -- Marr, Barlow victories buck 68-year trend in Spokane
▪  In today's Spokesman-Review -- "Supermajorities" in sight, Dems have muscle to flex in Olympia -- Lawmakers predict the added clout will breathe new life into past defeats, such as a bill making it easier for school districts to pass tax levies. But they also expect to see more demands from traditional Democratic allies... Meanwhile, "Looking back over the last 18 months, I don't know what we could have done much differently," says Kevin Carns, House Republican political director (and the mastermind behind this year's infamous phony sex-predator postcards).
▪  In today's Tri-City Herald -- Something's different in Eastern Washington -- Says one local political observer: "At a bare minimum, (the election results) would cause Dino Rossi to have many second thoughts about throwing his hat into the gubernatorial race in 2008."
▪  In today's Seattle Times -- Initiatives defy geography (editorial) -- Anyone planning political campaigns has to rethink old shibboleths about the state's values as defined by geography.
▪  In today's News Tribune -- As "faux populism," I-933 met with richly deserved fate (editorial)

Local news:
▪  In today's Tri-City Herald -- Brown & Cole supermarkets file for bankruptcy -- The Bellingham-based retail chain operates 27 supermarkets in Washington under various trade names including Food Depot, $ave-On-Food$, Cost Cutter and Food Pavilion. The unionized company blames Wal-Mart's march into the Pacific Northwest and rising health care costs, among other things.
▪  In today's Yakima H-R -- Food Pavilion likely to close local stores -- The Sedro-Woolley Market Place and the Lynden Cost Cutter also likely to close in reorganization, says Brown & Cole.
▪  In today's Bellingham Herald -- Wal-Mart gives up on expanding Bellingham store, looks for new site
▪  Today from AP -- More A380 orders could be cancelled, Airbus says 
▪  In today's Everett Herald -- Efficiently inching along: 777s move along a new rolling assembly line

Last throes update:
▪  In today's Wash. Post -- Stage set for Iraq policy shift -- There is likely to be more pressure on the Iraqi government to rein in sectarian violence and a clamor to begin a drawdown of U.S. troops.
▪  In today's NY Times -- Rumsfeld's departure (editorial) -- The voters told Bush that they wanted him to come up with an exit strategy in Iraq. Yesterday, he accepted the resignation of Rumsfeld. Announcing his decision, Bush sounded cranky, and his insistence that Rumsfeld had done a great job was ridiculous. But everyone would like this to be the beginning of a new era, and it seems best to simply applaud the decision. Whether Bush understands what a failure Rumsfeld has been is far less important than whether he is really prepared to rethink the Iraq strategy now.

 

 

 

THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 9, 2006
Union member vote drove shift in nation's balance of power

The following news release was distributed Wednesday by the AFL-CIO:

Union voters drove home a victory for working family friendly candidates in yesterday's historic election, in which voters nationwide rejected the status quo. Election day exit polling and an independent national election-night survey released by the AFL-CIO today show that union members accounted for four-fifths of the Democratic victory margin.

High turnout among union members turned a win into a sweep with 74 percent of union voters supporting union-endorsed candidates in the House and 76 percent supporting Democratic candidates in Senate races -- a whopping 50 point margin for working family candidates.  Non-union voters supported the Democratic House candidates by a two-point margin.  Union households accounted for roughly 1 out of 4 voters.

"We're very proud and excited to see from the numbers this morning that union voters drove a wave that elected a pro-working families majority in the House and very likely in the Senate," said AFL-CIO President John Sweeney.  "The leaders in control of Congress neglected the needs of working Americans while catering to corrupt special interests, and working people said 'no more'."

Sixty-nine percent of union members said they disapprove of President Bush's job performance, according to an election night survey conducted for the AFL-CIO by Peter D. Hart Research Associates, Inc.  The war in Iraq and the economy and jobs were union voters' top tier issues.

"We knew that our challenge at the AFL-CIO was to provide the organizing to transform the frustration and anger into political power," said Sweeney.  "We responded with the biggest, most energetic grassroots program in our history, and it worked." Sweeney said the AFL-CIO program was "by far" the largest voter turn out effort on the progressive side.

Ninety-two percent of union members in battleground states said they heard from their union this election cycle.

The AFL-CIO's program reached out to 13.4 million voters in 32 battleground states.  It reached union members, members of union households, retirees and members of Working America, the AFL-CIO's community affiliate for workers who don't have a union.

More than 205,000 union members volunteered for the AFL-CIO's political program this year.  Union members knocked on more than 8.25 million doors, made 30 million phone calls and passed out more than 14 million leaflets at workplaces and in neighborhoods.  The AFL-CIO's program sent out more than 20 million pieces of mail to union households, not including those sent by affiliate unions.

The AFL-CIO's "Final Four" program in the final four days of the election proved to be a powerful counter to the RNC's 72-hour program.  The AFL-CIO turned out 187,000 volunteers, made nearly 8 million phone calls and knocked on 3.5 million doors in the final four days.

Working America, the AFL-CIO's community affiliate, played a central role, reaching out to 1.7 million members.  Working America put special emphasis on Ohio, Pennsylvania and Minnesota, where it hired canvassers, mostly students, for the final four days.  The program was effective in moving voters:  Working America was able to increase the vote for Rep. Sherrod Brown among its members to 72 percent from 53 percent through the fall, for example.  Sixty-two percent of Working America members who had not voted in 2002 turned out to vote this year.

The AFL-CIO concentrated heavily on turning out "drop-off" voters -- voters who usually don't turn out in mid-term elections.   The program reached these voters as many as 25 times through a schedule of worksite contacts, phone calls, mail and home visits.  The AFL-CIO reached out to 496,000 drop-off voters in Ohio alone.

Of the 79% of the union drop-off voters who said they voted, 76% cast a Democratic ballot both for the Senate and the House, according to election night polling.  Drop-off voters cited as their top two motivations for turning out: "send a message that we need a change" (43 %) and "support candidates who support working people" (37%).

Sweeney said immediate priorities for Congress should include passing a higher minimum wage, giving Medicare the power to negotiate for lower drug prices, ending rewards for companies for sending our jobs overseas, restoring college funding and giving workers the freedom to organize and bargain.  Long-term goals include health care reform, laws supporting retirement security and bringing our troops home from Iraq.

The AFL-CIO helped lead campaigns to pass the six minimum wage ballot initiatives that swept through Missouri, Ohio, Nevada, Colorado, Arizona and Montana.  Together with ACORN, the AFL-CIO spearheaded many of the community coalitions that gathered the necessary signatures for the ballot initiatives, then educated voters and turned them out to vote.

The AFL-CIO's voter protection program turned out hundreds of volunteers in 23 communities in 6 battleground states to educate citizens about their voting rights and help prevent the kinds of voting rights violations that marred the 2000 presidential election.  The program focused on communities in Michigan, Missouri, Nevada, Ohio, Pennsylvania and Washington and partnered closely with community groups and lawyers to provide election day support.

The AFL-CIO is the nation's largest umbrella organization of unions, representing 10 million working men and women nationwide, and reaching out to 13.4 million voters in union households. 

THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 9, 2006
Labor's agenda includes passing Employee Free Choice Act
Also: Increase minimum wage, lower Medicare drug prices, stop exporting jobs

Following is an excerpt from an email sent to the AFL-CIO Working Families Network. Click here to join this email group and find out how you can continue the fight!

Today, there is much to celebrate. This victory means we can and will change the course of this country. But the fight is far from over. Now that we have elected a Congress that will fight for what matters to working families, we must hold their feet to the fire to make sure they live up to the promises they’ve made along the campaign trail. Can we count on your help?

Electing a new Congress simply isn’t enough to turn this country around for America’s workers.  Now we’re determined to work together to move an agenda, on Capitol Hill and in our states, to change America and renew economic opportunity for all.

There are five things that the 100th Congress must accomplish in their first days in office:

  • Raise the minimum wage to $7.25 an hour.
  • Restore workers’ freedom to form unions: Pass the Employee Free Choice Act and reverse the National Labor Relations Board’s recent ruling that allows employers to deny workers’ union rights by classifying them as “supervisors.”
  • Overturn the ban prohibiting Medicare from negotiating with drug companies for more affordable prescription drugs.
  • Stop sending our best jobs overseas: Reward companies that create jobs at home instead of giving tax dollars to companies that export our jobs. 
  • Reverse the cuts in student loans made by the Republican Congress.

These five goals are just the beginning of the agenda we will accomplish together. We have an exciting and unprecedented opportunity to make a difference not only for ourselves but for our children and grandchildren. Together, we can make affordable health care a reality for all. We can provide real retirement security for our workers and retirees. We can bring our troops home from Iraq rapidly. We can revitalize manufacturing and safeguard good jobs, give a world-class education to every child and create an immigration system that protects the rights of all workers.

Thank you for everything you have done to ensure this historic victory for working families.  

We are ready to continue the fight -- and we invite you to join us.

If you have news items regarding unions or workplace issues in Washington state that you would like to see posted here, please submit them via e-mail to David Groves or via fax to 206-285-5805.

Copyright © 2006   Washington State Labor Council, AFL-CIO