Hillary Clinton Wins
Biggest Labor Union Endorsement
AFL-CIO pledges to get out the union vote for the
Democratic nominee.
As Hillary
Clinton racked up labor endorsements over the course of the Democratic primary
contest, the biggest labor federation in the country was conspicuously absent
from her list of backers, having decided to remain neutral throughout the Democratic primary
even as its member organizations largely flocked to the front-runner. But on
Thursday, with the final votes in the Democratic primary contest now cast, the AFL-CIO's board voted to
endorse Clinton, in an effort that could help unite the party's factions and
try to win over disaffected blue-collar voters who might be attracted to Donald
Trump's protectionist message.
"The
activism of working people has already been a major force in this
election," AFL-CIO President Richard Trumka said in a statement, "and
is now poised to elect Hillary Clinton and move America forward."
It's not
surprising to see the 12.5
million-member labor federation, which has backed every Democratic candidate
for president since it sat out the 1972 contest, throw its weight behind the
presumptive Democratic nominee. As Politico's
Brian Mahoney noted ahead of the vote, 80 percent of the people sitting on
the AFL-CIO's executive board, which voted on the endorsement, hailed from
unions that had already thrown their support to Clinton.
Trumka gave
a slight nod to Bernie Sanders in offering the endorsement, saying that his
"impact on American politics cannot be overstated."
The AFL-CIO
promised to turn on its political machine immediately to start boosting
Clinton. "This election offers a stark choice between an unstoppable
champion for working families and an unstable charlatan who made his fortune
scamming them," Lee Saunders, the AFSCME president and chair of the
AFL-CIO's political committee, said.
Though there's been some speculation that Trump's appeals to white
working-class men might allow the Republican to attract a larger swath of union
voters in states like Pennsylvania or Wisconsin, so far the national
organizations haven't shown any sign of breaking away from the Democratic
candidate.
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