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Politics : Liberalism: Do You Agree We've Had Enough of It? -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Carolyn who wrote (91245)9/17/2010 6:18:08 PM
From: Hope Praytochange1 Recommendation  Respond to of 224707
 
Unions Find Members Slow to Rally Behind Democrats
By STEVEN GREENHOUSE
Published: September 17, 2010
The Democrats will depend on labor unions — the shock troops of their political campaigns — to offset two new developments this election cycle: Tea Party enthusiasm and corporations’ ability to spend unlimited amounts thanks to a Supreme Court ruling.
Labor leaders, alarmed at a possible Republican takeover of one or both Houses of Congress, promise to devote a record amount of money and manpower to helping Democrats stave off disaster. But political analysts, and union leaders themselves, say that their efforts may not be enough because union members, like other important parts of the Democratic base, are not feeling particularly enthusiastic about the party — a reality that, in turn, further dampens the Democrats’ chances of holding onto their Congressional majorities.

“The problem for us is to really re-excite the rank and file to the greatest degree possible,” said Gerald McEntee, president of the American Federation of State County and Municipal Employees and chairman of the A.F.L.-C.I.O.’s political committee. “They’ve been disappointed that the House and Senate haven’t done more, especially to create jobs.”

It is a measure of the dread among Democrats and their labor allies that several unions are no longer threatening to withhold endorsements from some conservative or moderate Democrats, like Representative Zack Space of Ohio, because they had bucked labor on health care legislation or other issues. Now, unions are generally backing those Democrats, feeling labor cannot afford such a strategy when the Democrats’ prospects seem so troubled.

“People are evaluating this a little bit differently from three months ago,” said Jon Youngdahl, political director of the Service Employees International Union. “Our goal obviously is to have a majority for Speaker Pelosi next year. That’s driving a lot of decisions.”

The stakes of labor’s participation may be even higher this year than in 2008 when new voters, including students, came out in droves, overwhelmingly supporting President Obama and the Democrats. Political experts say these midterms, unlike in 2008, will not be a “surge” election — students, for instance, are markedly less passionateabout the Democrats this year.

In a base election, the party that gets its traditional supporters out to vote is more likely to carry the day. And the Republicans’ base, which may be angry and insurgent, is highly motivated to topple the Democrats on Capitol Hill.

Unions feel a need to respond, and that means energizing their rank and file. “You have to go educate your base, mobilize your base, inspire your base,” said Larry Scanlon, political director of the state, county and municipal employees’ union.

Moreover, corporations — freed by the Supreme Court’s Citizens United decision in January that lifted restrictions on direct corporate and union spending on political campaigns — are expected to spend record amounts in this election cycle, making labor’s vaunted ground war all the more important to Democrats, who hope it will neutralize the corporate advantage in the advertising air war.

A.F.L.-C.I.O. leaders say that they will spend around $50 million on races in 26 states and that unions already have 1,500 full-time campaign workers on the ground. The service employees have budgeted $44 million for the election, while other unions will spend tens of millions of dollars more. All told, labor strategists say their ground troops will make more than 10 million phone calls to members’ homes, distribute millions of flyers at workplaces and knock on millions of doors.

But Charlie Cook, a nonpartisan political handicapper, questioned how successful labor’s push will be. “The question is, how effective can labor be when so many of their people are unemployed or underemployed and just not happy campers?” he said. “How effective will they be in getting people to do the hard work — to do the phone banks, the get-out-the-vote, all the heavy lifting?”

Patricia Elizondo, president of the 2,000-member Milwaukee local of the International Association of Machinists, fears just that.

“People are disappointed,” she said. “People have been unemployed for two years, and they’re unhappy that the healthcare bill was not as good as they expected. Two years ago, I had many members going door-to-door to campaign. Now they’re saying, ‘Why should I? We supported that candidate, but he didn’t follow through.’ ”

Two years ago, the big political problem many unions faced was persuading white union members to vote for Mr. Obama despite his race. This year the problem will be persuading union members to vote Democratic despite the bleak economy.

For the union brass, turning around voters like Mike DeGasperis, a steelworker from Martins Ferry, Ohio, could prove difficult. Mr. DeGasperis says he was “anti-Bush” over the past decade, but he now voices little enthusiasm for the Democrats.

“We heard everything was going to change, but there hasn’t been much change and the unemployment is still bad and the area we live in is still really depressed,” said Mr. DeGasperis, who was laid off for 10 months last year from his job running an overhead crane at a Severstal Wheeling steel mill.

He said he had not decided whom to back in the House, Senate and gubernatorial races — all key in Pennsylvania, a pivotal swing state. “I’m going to keep my options open.”

Union leaders say Mr. Obama’s Labor Day speech at a union picnic in Milwaukee and his hard-hitting, populist speech in Cleveland on Sept. 8 should help whip up rank-and-file enthusiasm.

Labor leaders, once frustrated themselves about Mr. Obama and Congressional Democrats, have warmed to them in recent days after they enacted a $23 billion package to save the jobs of teachers, police and firefighters and after the president proposed a $50 billion job-creating infrastructure plan. And now they are asking Mr. Obama for another favor — to order trade penalties against China over charges that it illegally subsidizes its clean energy industry, a move that would anger China and possibly spark a trade war.

While many union members are feeling ambivalent, the most powerful man in American labor, Richard Trumka, president of the A.F.L.-C.I.O., is eager to throw all of labor’s resources behind the Democrats.

“There’s no ambivalence here with the leadership,” Mr. Trumka said. “We hope to provide union members with the facts to show that there are stark choices in this election — whether we go forward to build an economy that works for everyone or whether we go back to an economy where corporations and Wall Street run wild.”

Doug Heye, communications director for the Republican National Committee, voiced respect for labor’s operation.

“They’re always effective,” he said. “The union leadership is wedded to the Democratic Party. But what we’ve seen cycle after cycle is the membership demonstrates real independence and votes independently of the union bosses.” (According to a national exit poll conducted by Edison/Mitofsky, 60 percent of union members voted for Mr. Obama in 2008 and 37 percent for Senator John McCain.)

Mr. Heye voiced confidence that Republicans would outdo the Democrats in November, even with labor’s big push, because the enthusiasm gap greatly favors the G.O.P.

Mr. Trumka said: “I don’t think the Republicans even want our votes. They just want us to get so frustrated and angry that we don’t even vote so then they’d have an easy walkover. We’re going to make sure that doesn’t happen.”

To wit, labor leaders are telling the rank and file that Mr. Obama and the Democrats have done good things for working people — the $787 stimulus package, the healthcare overhaul, Wall Street reform and the rescue package for Detroit automakers. They note that Mr. Obama has appointed a union-friendly labor secretary and union-friendly members to the National Labor Relations Board.

Labor leaders keep reminding union members that Mr. Obama and the Democrats wanted to enact more stimulus to create jobs, but the Republicans often stymied them. They also note that many Republicans have vowed to privatize Social Security and repeal the healthcare law and Wall Street reform.

“A lot of people are frustrated, and we have to turn that frustration into positive energy,” said Randi Weingarten, president of the American Federation of Teachers.

This article has been revised to reflect the following correction:

Correction: September 17, 2010

An earlier version of this article misstated when President Obama delivered a speech in Cleveland. It was last Wednesday, Sept. 8.