Archive for the ‘Democrats’ Category

State Democrats roiled by resolution opposing Israeli settlements – The Boston Globe

Har Homa neighborhood in east Jerusalem.

State Democratic Party heavyweights are sounding a red alert against a provocative proposal for their state committee to declare opposition to Israeli settlements in the West Bank without specifically mentioning Palestinian violence, a step some top leaders fear would lead to an exodus of Democratic voters.

If approved, a resolution offered by Carol Coakley of Millis, an 18-year member of the Democratic State Committee, would put the state party on record that Israels settlements in the occupied West Bank are obstacles to peace.

Advertisement

It would call on the states 11-member congressional delegation all Democrats to clearly express their opposition to Israeli settlements in the occupied territories, in pursuit of a negotiated peace.

But former state treasurer Steve Grossman and other Democratic leaders are sounding the alarm, and hoping to derail it before the effort could go before the full Democratic State Committee next week.

Get Fast Forward in your inbox:

Forget yesterday's news. Get what you need today in this early-morning email.

Grossman, the former chairman of both the state and national Democratic parties, as well the one-time head of the pro-Israel American Israel Public Affairs Committee, said the resolution, if successful, could gravely damage Democrats politically.

He said it feeds a one-sided blame game, which is playing out across college campuses and in pockets of the progressive wing of the Democratic Party, and would send a disturbing message to many Democratic activists.

A lot of people would read about it and would read the language and say: Frankly, thats the last straw. This is not a place I feel comfortable any longer, Grossman said.

Advertisement

Many would see it as an attempt to drive a rhetorical stake through Israels heart and lay the blame not part of the blame, but virtually the exclusive blame for the failure of the peace process at Israels door, to the exclusion of any responsibility by Palestinians, he said.

Coakley, in an interview with the Globe, said she was inspired to propose the resolution in part by the anti-Islamic sentiment stirred up by the 2016 presidential election.

Her resolution quotes from the State Department under former president Barack Obama, which at one point last year described settlement activity as corrosive to the cause of peace.

Theres a much better chance to get to some negotiations if they stop building settlements, Coakley said.

Israeli settlements in the West Bank have grown under every Israeli government over the past 50 years, despite international opposition, and Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu recently announced construction of 5,500 new houses.

In February President Trump told an Israeli newspaper that settlements dont help the process and that he didnt believe going forward with these settlements is a good thing for peace.

Coakley acknowledged there has been a fair amount of pushback from Democrats who think the resolution would alienate supporters.

Coakley proposed the resolution last August; party leaders sent the resolution to a new subcommittee of about a dozen members to study it.

The subcommittee held a hearing on the resolution Wednesday night in Boston. Several members of the public testified in favor of Coakleys resolution; fewer testified against it, according to a person who was in the room.

The subcommittee members will vote on the resolution over the weekend, according to its leaders, Alex Pratt and Marianne Rutter.

The subcommittee has several options. It can refer the document to the full state committee for a vote on April 29. It can table the resolution. It could amend it. Or members can farm it out to another subcommittee for more review.

Cole Harrison, the executive director of Massachusetts Peace Action and a Democratic activist, testified Wednesday in favor of Coakleys resolution, which he said has been repeatedly delayed by the party.

Grossmans warnings, he said, are just scare tactics.

This resolution targets a hypocrisy in the position of the national Democratic Party lets call it the Hillary-wing of the party which says it supports a two-state solution, but gives huge aid and backing to Israel and very little to Palestinians, Harrison said.

He denied the resolution is one-sided and pointed to language saying Massachusetts Democrats deplore all acts of violence against civilians including acts of terror, as well as all acts of provocation, incitement, and destruction; and we concede that these too are obstacles to peace committed by both sides.

Besides Grossman, other Democrats are also weighing in against the resolution.

James Segel, a former state representative and aide to Barney Frank, said in a letter that the very partisan and divisive resolution blames one party for the deadlock in the peace process, while ignoring the many contributions of the other to the conflict.

He submitted different wording that he said is more aligned with the national partys platform. The Democratic National Committee platform calls for a two-state solution of the Israeli-Palestinian conflict negotiated directly by the parties.

The Democratic State Committee cannot afford such a divisive and ill-advised resolution at a time when our party needs to unite to protect the values and commitments we hold dear, Segel wrote.

If adopted it is almost certain to spark a bitter, very public and entirely unnecessary debate that would seriously undermine party unity and alienate many of our core supporters, he said.

Boston City Councilor Josh Zakim submitted written testimony, calling Coakleys effort unnecessarily divisive and pushing for Segels wording, which Zakim called a more balanced approach.

But Richard Colbath-Hess, a leader of the Cambridge-based Palestine Advocacy Project said his group backs the Coakley resolution.

Settlements are illegal under international law, he said. Were glad the Democratic Party is trying to step up to this. We dont want people in the Democratic Party to be apologists for the State of Israels human rights abuses.

Coakley, the resolutions author, disagrees that it would drive away supporters.

I think there will be some people upset, but I think its pretty obvious [settlements] are an obstacle to peace, Coakley said.

Its pretty obvious nobody in this country would put up with those living conditions, she said. I dont find many opponents of the resolution among people who are active on [the issue] because they just think [settlement policy] is an embarrassment.

Gus Bickford, the chairman of the state Democratic Party, did not respond to repeated requests for comment Thursday.

Read more here:
State Democrats roiled by resolution opposing Israeli settlements - The Boston Globe

Democrats throw millions, Hollywood punch into Georgia House …

Democrats are pumping millions into the Georgia congressional election set for Tuesday, hoping a 30-year-old political upstart who's attracting star power can deliver a rebuke to President Trump and help the party reclaim lost momentum.

Hollywood has even come out for the off-cycle vote, with actor Samuel L. Jackson cutting a radio ad urging voters to flip the seat once held by Republican Tom Price, who is now Trump's health secretary.

Vote for the Democratic Party. Stop Donald Trump, a man who encourages racial and religious discrimination and sexism, Jackson says in the ad, casting the race as a chance to undermine the Republican president and throwing in "Pulp Fiction" references for good measure. We have to channel the great vengeance and fury we have for this administration into votes at the ballot box.

Democrats tried a similar tactic last week in their failed bid for the open seat of Kansas' Mike Pompeo, arguing a win in that conservative district would prove just how eager Americans are to end Trump and fellow Republicans control of Washington.

Washington Democrats, however, put essentially no resources into the race. By contrast, Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee staffers are on the ground in Georgia, and supporters have given top Democratic candidate Jon Ossoff $8 million-plus, with 80 percent of the money coming from outside the state.

Republicans have held the suburban Atlanta seat for nearly four decades. However, Democrats saw an opening for an upset after Trump last year narrowly defeated Democrat Hillary Clinton in that district, while Price won with 61 percent of the vote.

Democrats also see a win as a catalyst for them in the 2018 midterm elections, though Republicans would still have a roughly 44-seat majority in the House and a four-seat advantage in the Senate.

The race Tuesday features 18 candidates -- 11 Republicans, five Democrats and two independents. To outright take the so-called jungle primary, the winner must get more than 50 percent of the vote. If not, the leader would face the second-place finisher in a runoff.

Ossoff is expected to get the most votes but not the majority, likely sending him and one of the Republican candidates to the June 20 runoff.

Trump and other Washington Republicans have gotten into the act -- a clear indication of their desire to keep the seat and blunt any momentum toward a possible 2018 Democratic comeback.

The super Liberal Democrat in the Georgia Congressioal (sic) race tomorrow wants to protect criminals, allow illegal immigration and raise taxes!, Trump tweeted Monday.

He also tweeted Sunday: The recent Kansas election (Congress) was a really big media event, until the Republicans won. Now they play the same game with Georgia-BAD!

Republican field staffers also have been dispatched to Georgia. A GOP political action committee backed by House Speaker Paul Ryan, R-Wis., has spent more than $2 million attacking Ossoff.

In addition, the amount of money going to Ossoff is also a liability.

"I don't care what party you're from," said Marty Aftewicz, a 66-year-old Republican voter from Marietta. "If the money's coming from outside the district, it's dirty. Anyone raising that much outside money can't represent me."

Republicans have also run a barrage of campaign ads trying to tie the 30-year-old Ossoff to House Minority Leader Rep. Nancy Pelosi, a California Democrat, and portray him as too sophomoric and inexperienced to govern.

The Congressional Leadership Fund super PAC, for instance, is running ads showing him pretending to be Star Wars character Han Solo while attending Georgetown University.

"Jon is being bankrolled by the most extreme liberals, said Karen Handel, a former secretary of state and one of Ossoff's Republican challengers. No one is naive enough to think that he will not be beholden to those who are bankrolling him."

Ossoff, nevertheless, pledges to be an "independent voice" in Congress. And he defends his campaign as a grassroots success powered by small and medium donors.

Ossoff is a former staffer to Rep. Hank Johnson and intern for civil rights icon Rep. John Lewis, Georgia Democrats now supporting Ossoff in the race.

Though he could get the most votes Tuesday, national Republicans think he would lose in June to Handel or fellow GOP candidates Bob Gray, a technology executive, or Dan Moody or Judson Hill, former state senators.

Handel vows to work with Trump on common-ground issues but says her job is to be a voice for people of the 6th District."

Gray says he would be a "willing partner" in the effort to fulfill Trumps legislative agenda.

The Associated Press contributed to this report.

Follow this link:
Democrats throw millions, Hollywood punch into Georgia House ...

Who are the Democrats? – Washington Post (blog)

The results from Georgias 6th are in, let the overanalyzing begin.

First, just to state the obvious, the Democrats fell short of their goal. They tried to pitch the special election as a referendum on President Trump, but that message failed. It seems strange, but todays liberals invested a huge amount of money, media attention, and hopes and dreams in a 30-year-old straight, white Southern male. I think it points to the bewilderment within the Democratic Party. Looking at the mixed bag of confusing images and messages that have come from the left of late, its easy to ask: Who are the Democrats?

On the one hand, the Obamas took a well-publicized trip on a Hollywood billionaires mega-yacht. They reinforced negative stereotypes about Democrats being too cozy with and solicitous of the entertainment industrys billionaire mogul class just as Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-Vt.) and new DNC Chairman Tom Perez launched a nationwide unity tour to help save the United States from the billionaires. Ironic.

And meanwhile, the Democrats in Congress have no agenda beyond being anti-Trump. Of course, Sanders and Perez are playing to their stereotype. Theyve called for a trillion-dollar infrastructure plan with no plan to pay for it. And again, Sanders and Perez are demanding a $15minimum wage but have offered no explanation for how they settled on that amount.

Finally, weve come to the Democrats latest initiative electing Jon Ossoff to a historically Republican district in Georgia. How did they let their expectations get so out of hand? On its face, Democrats should have hedged at least a little. Their candidate is young, unproven and does not even live in the district he is running to represent. Expectations for a victory had not been this high for a Democrat since Hillary Clintons 2016 campaign. Its still not impossible for Ossoff to win in the runoff, but the consensus is that Tuesdays election was his best shot and the Democrats fell short. They claim Ossoff came close, but coming close isnt worth anything in elections. You either win or lose.

The Democrats appeared to make the same usual mistakes: they allowed the big liberal interest groups to nationalize the election and raise hordes of money from outside the state; they had a somewhat ill-fitting candidate run to represent a district he didnt even live in; and, star-struck, the Democrats consultant class couldnt resist recruiting Hollywood celebrities to come on down and help. No less than Samuel L. Jackson got involved. And he appeared to reprise his role as Jules Winnfield from Pulp Fiction, exclaiming in a radio ad: We have to channel the great vengeance and fury we have for this administration into votes at the ballot box.

Anyway, they should have known better.

With all the mixed messages, muddled policies, and now, two losses in special elections, back to our question: Who are the Democrats? At 77 and 66-years-old respectively, House and Senate Minority Leaders Nancy Pelosi (D-Calif.) and Charles Schumer (D-N.Y.) hardly represent the next generation of Democrats. Even Sanders, who seems to have the most energy of any Democrat, is 75. Chelsea Clinton doesnt represent anything but a small slice of Manhattan liberals and the dwindling few that live off Clinton nostalgia. The ill-considered and clueless Black Lives Matter movement is not a movement that can attract new voters to the Democratic Party; in fact, it contributes to the opposite. And their Hollywood supporters appear to be a spent force, except as an occasional fundraising platform. Democrats need a new bag of tricks.

Meanwhile, the Republican organizations led by the RNC did a good job of ensuring adequate Republican turnout despite the fragmented field, and the Trump administration appears to be engaging the wheels of government. It has moved past the squabbling and randomness of its early days in a way that is less alarming and is being taken more seriously. With the Democrats looking like a ragtag band of confused and hapless roving protesters and Team Trump getting its act together, the contrast appears to favor Republicans.

Originally posted here:
Who are the Democrats? - Washington Post (blog)

Democrats and Labor: Frenemies Forever? – Boston Review

Image: DonkeyHotey

The Democratic Party has hastenedthe demise of the labor movement, but unions have little choice but to stick with them.

The past eight years have been a decidedly mixed story for American workers.

On the positive side, the Obama administration was one of the most pro-union administrations in decades. Obamas second-term secretary of labor, Tom Perez, was probably the most effective secretary of labor since Franklin Roosevelts choice of Frances Perkins, and his appointees to the National Labor Relations Board were widely heralded by unionsindeed, former Communication Workers of America president Larry Cohen said, The quality of this board is the best ever.

Under this leadership, the Obama administration secured multiple victories for workers rights. In 2016 the Department of Labor issued a rule forcing companies to reveal the union-busting firms they hire; then it published another requiring government contractors to provide paid sick leave to their employees. For its part the NLRB granted franchised workers the right to unionize against McDonalds, rejecting corporate claims that McDonalds employees actually worked for the franchisee. It also ruled to allow workers union representation when forced to take a drug test, and that so-called permatemps are considered employees of their place of work during union elections.

The Obama administration secured multiple victories for workers rights, but could not turn the long tide of declining union membership.

Yet the Obama administration could not turn the long tide of declining union membership. After peaking at around 35 percent of American workers in the mid 1950s, by 2008, only 12.4 percent of American workers were union members. In 2016 that number was 10.7 percent.

Progressive policy and victories from the Obama administration also could not counter extreme anti-unionism from increasingly hostile Republicans. As they took over statehouses around the country, Republicans pressed a stridently anti-union agenda that took former union strongholds by storm. Nowhere was this more prominent than in Wisconsin, a former center of American liberalism. Governor Scott Walker signed a draconian right-to-work bill that allowed workers to opt out of their union as well as a bill that stripped public sector unions of the ability to bargain over almost anything, while limiting contracts to a single year. The trend continued elsewhere in the country, with Missouri and Kentucky both becoming right-to-work states, and Iowa passing an even more radical bill than Wisconsins. Even Michigan, the home of the United Auto Workers, stripped public sector workers of their rights in a right-to-work bill.

This mixed bag for American workers suggests both the possibilities and limitations of labor unions integration into the Democratic Party. Nothing in American labor history suggests unions can succeed if the government opposes their causes, but unions have consistently failed to further a pro-labor agenda within the Democratic Party. And without a realistic alternativethe Republican Party, after all, has waged a multi-decade war on workersunions have no choice but to keep working within the Democratic Party.

Historically unions have faced three fundamental challenges within the Democratic Party. First, and perhaps most importantly, they are politically isolated, thanks to geographical limitations. Unions only ever held significant power in a handful of states in the Northeast and Midwest, with smaller numbers on the West Coast. This meant that politicians throughout the South, Great Plains, and Rocky Mountain states could ignore unions, attract companies to their states by claiming they would remain non-union, and pay no political price for hostility to organized labor.

Second, the Democratic Party has lacked a coherent industrial policy for the last half-century that would foster union growth. Both Democrats and Republicans have helped companies move their union factories to overseas locations while having no realistic job plans for those workers left behind.

Third, and as a result of the other two issues, the labor movement has remained a junior partner in the Democratic Party, unable to be the kingmaker it hoped to be after World War II. Without meaningful input or control of the Democratic agenda, it remains reliant on the goodwill of national Democrats and the few allies it does manage to cultivate to promote its agenda.

In the early twentieth century, American unions generally avoided party politics. But during World War II the Congress of Industrial Organizations, the industrial union federation formed in 1937 to organize the millions of unorganized factory workers in the auto, steel, rubber, and electrical industries, tied its fate to the Democratic Party. Union leaders such as Sidney Hillman took top advisory positions in the Roosevelt administration, and the administration promised unions that wartime workers would have to join their organizations in exchange for a no-strike pledge during the war. This led to millions of new members for industrial unions such as the United Auto Workers and United Steel Workers of America and the integration of these unions deep into Democratic Party planning. Union leaders such as UAW president Walter Reuther played a critical role in the development of post-war liberalism.

The labor movement has remained a junior partner in the Democratic Party, unable to be the kingmaker it hoped to be after World War II.

Yet the limitations of labor within the post-New Deal coalition quickly became clear. In 1947 Congress overrode President Trumans veto of the Taft-Hartley Act. This law made many of the direct action tactics that the CIO had used to win its groundbreaking victories, such as the sit-down and the sympathy strike, illegal. It also allowed states to pass the right-to-work legislation that Republicans have embraced in the last eight years.

Taft-Hartley passed with many Democratic votes because unions were so concentrated in a few states. At its peak in the early 1950s, more than half of CIO membership was in five statesNew York, Pennsylvania, Ohio, Michigan, and Illinois. They never succeeded in organizing the South, the Mountain West, or the Great Plains, which meant that large numbers of prominent Democrats cared little about them. When Lyndon Johnson ran for Senate in 1948, he accused his opponent Coke Stevenson of being cozy to unions. This was a lie, but it was very effective in anti-union Texas.

The unions, of course, had tried to organize the South, but southern politicians saw the union effort as a direct attack on regional industrialization. They had attracted the textile industry there by promising to keep it union-free. Alabama helped start this process in 1894 by repealing its child labor law after a Massachusetts company promised to relocate there if it could employ children. Textile companies hoping to escape unions then began leaving the Northeast en masse beginning in the 1910s. By 1934 the United Textile Workers, a declining union based in New Englands last textile mills, launched a massive union effort involving hundreds of thousands of southern textile workers. Southern politicians and employers had tried to paint unions as foreign, as agents of racial equality, and as dominated by Jews, but the poor conditions workers faced had eroded this opposition, making the 1934 textile workers strike one of the largest at the time. The southern politicians, however, were far more committed to serving the mill owners than their constituents. Four southern governors called out the National Guard to crush the strike, and the UTW died soon after.

In 1946, the CIO was fearful that much of the rest of the northern industry would move South too. They launched Operation Dixie, pouring hundreds of organizers into the South to bring southern industries into the federation. While it had early victories in the tobacco industry, southern whites prioritized white solidarity over class interests. With the CIO tarred as supporting integration, the union tried to downplay its organizing among black workers, alienating those actually interested in joining. It was a dismal failure.

Unionization rates in the South remained the lowest in the nation, as they are today. This years overwhelming rejection of the International Association of Machinists attempt to organize Boeings South Carolina plant, with 74 percent of workers voting against unionization, is just the latest rebuke of unions by southern workers, an issue for which organized labor has never developed an effective answer.

Unions remained central players within the Democratic Party during the 1950s and 1960s, but their inability to organize the South limited their political power. They could never overturn Taft-Hartley or pass comprehensive labor legislation. Their inefficacy became all the more clear as two southern Democrats from non-union states became president. The relative weakness of the labor movement today is in no small part the legacy of the indifference of both Jimmy Carter and Bill Clinton toward organized labor.

Carter came to power as a moderate, reformist southern governor, bringing southern politics back to respectability after a generation of staunch segregationists had dominated the nightly news. But unions had struggled to gain much traction in Georgia, and Carter owed little to them. When he took office, during a period of high inflation, oil crises, and the first large-scale economic downturn since the Great Depression, Carter governed well to the right of a liberal Democratic majority in Congress. He vetoed several pieces of liberal legislation and significantly weakened much of what he did sign. Nowhere was this more damaging to the union agenda than the Humphrey-Hawkins Act in 1978.

Unionization rates in the South are the lowest in the nation.

As originally drafted, Humphrey-Hawkins would have drastically transformed the fundamental status of what work meant in the United States. Its sponsors, Democrats Hubert Humphrey of Minnesota, the AFL-CIOs biggest supporter in the Senate, and Augustus Hawkins of California, a founder of the Congressional Black Caucus, intended it as a full-employment bill that would create a government commitment as an employer of last resort for unemployed workers. Carter and his advisors, fearing the impact on inflation and disdainful of this level of government planning, weakened the bill to the point of near meaninglessness before agreeing to sign its remnants. In the bills final version, the government had no legal obligation to provide jobs for workers and the goal of full employment was more rhetoric than reality.

All of this alienated organized labor. In Stayin Alive, a wonderful history of the working class in the 1970s, the historian Jefferson Cowie recounts when a journalist asked International Association of Machinists president Wimpy Winpisinger what Carter would have to do to recover his reputation among unions. Die, Winpisinger answered. Though he did not really want Carter to die, he also called Carter, The best Republican president since Herbert Hoover. This contempt ran through the labor movement, distressing union leaders who wanted to see a Democratic president fight for the rights of working people.

After three straight presidential defeats, including Carters loss to Ronald Reagan in 1980, Democrats finally won again in 1992 with another southern moderate governor who had few debts to pay to unions: Bill Clinton. Clintons Third Way policies explicitly distanced his administration from unions, especially the North American Free Trade Agreement that he signed after it passed with support from congressional Republicans in 1993 and the welfare reform bill that devastated the already thin safety net for poor families. Labor lobbied hard against these bills, especially NAFTA, but Clintons commitment to neoliberalism led him to ignore all the power the unions could muster. By the end of his second term, labors discontent with the Democratic Party was robust. While unions did support Al Gore in 2000, their disillusionment contributed to the Ralph Nader protest vote that helped throw the election to George W. Bush.

Barack Obama had a strikingly different background than Carter or Clinton. Obamas history in Chicago, one of the nations last great union cities, made him much more familiar with and friendlier to unions than his predecessors. Obama never tried to distance himself from unions in the same way as Carter or Clinton, and they nearly all supported his two presidential campaigns, providing key election funding and get-out-the-vote operations.

Yet Obamas support of unions, if not workers, was tepid in his first term. The political capital expended to pass the Affordable Care Act combined with the rise of the Tea Party and the unprecedented Republican stonewalling of his agenda, meant that pro-union legislation faced an uphill battle. Moreover Obama never seemed particularly interested in labors hopes of passing a card check bill as a method for employees to organize. And Obamas embrace of charter schools was a slap in the face to the teachers unions who had supported him. His Secretary of Education, Arne Duncan, consistently fought for education reform and charter schools, often in coordination with other leading Democrats such as then Newark mayor Cory Booker. And in his first term, the Department of Labor remained a backwater under Hilda Soliss leadership, with unions once again facing disappointment.

As discussed above, Obamas second term saw a stark improvement in labors agenda, but ultimately, unions remained a junior partner in the Democratic coalition. Improving their status was no politicians top priority.

Unions decline is also part of a broader failure of American industrial policy. Neither Democrats nor Republicans have any meaningful answer to the problems of capital mobility and deindustrialization. Democrats have let the working class die on the vine, offering communities in places like Youngstown, Erie, and Flint nothing but cheap bromides about getting more education and maybe some retraining classes for jobs that, if they exist at all, pay far less than their former union jobs. They have allowed companies to move wherever they want, whether to nonunion states or out of country, without consequences. Moreover they have not learned important historical lessons about how the government can influence the shift of industry to certain parts of country.

Before World War II American industry was concentrated in the northeast and Great Lakes states. But during the war, the federal government took advantage of the rapid growth in defense plants to spread them around the country, both for military reasons and to raise the standard of living in less developed parts of the nation ranging from Alabama to Oregon. Combined with large scale government investment in power projects that provided the energy for large industry (e.g., the Tennessee Valley Authority and river development in the West), the government guided both the geographical development and industrial capacity of the United States.

Neither Democrats nor Republicans have any meaningful answer to the problems of capital mobility and deindustrialization.

Then in 1965 Mexico created the Border Industrialization Program to draw U.S. industry across the border. Within just a few years, the textile and electronics industry were closing American factories and reopening them in Mexico. Heavier industry soon followed, both to Mexico and then East Asia and Central America. The Johnson administration supported the Border Industrialization Program, with most policymakers and economists assuming the economy would find new employment for displaced workers. Surprisingly little thought was put into the long-term impact of corporate flight on the American working class or the unions.

By the late 1970s, deindustrialization and mass layoffs were top stories on the nightly news, and Democrats lacked any meaningful plan to help unemployed workers. Unions lost millions of members and Democratic politicians largely shrugged their shoulders, passed some relocation assistance programs, and moved ahead with their neoliberal project to which they showed increasing commitment. Were the government to try and convince employers to locate work in these struggling communities, as they had sought to move industrial production to poor areas of the nation during World War II, it would have done a great deal to reinforce the labor movement. Instead Democrats have left unions to slowly die, meaning that with each election that sees union labors share of the workforce shrink, they become an increasingly junior member of the party.

Organized labor remains useful for fundraising and get-out-the-vote operations, but unions have not held major power within the Democratic Party since 1968, when the tumultuous Democratic National Convention in Chicago aired the partys rifts out in the open. AFL-CIO head George Meany was a great supporter of the Vietnam War and a central player in the Democratic Party machine seeking to repress the anti-Vietnam protests both outside and inside the convention hall. After the chaos of 1968, the party initiated reforms to bring more rank-and-file democracy into the partyand much of this came at the expense of Meany. He took revenge in 1972 by not supporting the antiwar and reform candidate George McGoverns presidential nomination, leading to a long-term rift between labor and the Democratic Party.

A new generation of Democratic leaders such as Gary Hart, who had worked for McGovern, never forgave Meany and distanced themselves from unions. While the reforms that pushed dinosaurs like Meany aside were necessary for greater grassroots participation in the party and for creating the modern primary system, organized labor was and remains the primary voice representing working-class interests in American politics. The declining power of that voice paved the way for Bill Clinton and the pro-corporate New Democrats in the 1980s and 1990s, which in turn helped employers control much of the NLRB-supervised election process, often delaying union recognition for years, even if the workers won their initial union election. The playing field is no longer even between unions and employers.

The reality of the postCitizens United world even further marginalizes organized labor within the Democratic Party. Democratic candidates are increasingly reliant upon both corporate grandees and small donors to run election campaigns. But while progressives mostly like the small donor model, which worked so well for Bernie Sanders, what this really means is that legions of middle to upper-middle class white donors will be funding grassroots Democratic campaigns. Without a strong union influence over candidates, union workers, who are increasingly African-Americans and Latinos and who lack the resources to donate to candidates individually, will be shut out of the process. Such a model might be good for progressive initiatives such as gathering support for minimum wage hikes, but significantly less so for union-specific legislation such as passing card check legislation or reversing a national right-to-work bill if Trump were to sign one. If unions could not reverse legislative setbacks during the Johnson or Obama eras, it seems even less likely that they will be able to the next time Democrats control the White House and both houses of Congress.

Paradoxically, unions have little choice but to continue tying their fate to the Democratic Party.

Unions are perfectly aware of their problems. Some, like the building trades, have chosen to cozy up to Republicans. They have embraced Trumps revival of the Keystone XL Pipeline and Dakota Access Pipeline and lobbied him to reject a repeal of the Davis-Bacon Act presently before Congress. AFL-CIO president Richard Trumka has also approved of some of Trumps anti-immigration measures, continuing a long traditionbeginning with union support of the Chinese Exclusion Act in 1882of unions opposing immigration.

Other unions have embraced grassroots activism to elect liberal and friendly Democrats. The latter is unions best answer if combined with committing as many resources as possible to organizing. Because, paradoxically, unions have little choice but to continue tying their fate to the Democratic Party. Indeed it is even more important now than five decades ago. Even though Democrats have helped create their demise, unions only chance against a full-on war with the Republican Party is a moderately favorable relationship with the Democrats acting as a kind of political bulwark.

Unfortunately, as the story of the Obama administration demonstrates, it may not be enough. It is entirely possible that in a decade, remnant unions will exist in pro-union states in New England and the West Coast, but the combination of a national right-to-work bill, a hostile Supreme Court doing the same for public sector workers, and continued Republican anti-union radicalism at the state and national level may put the final nails in the coffin of the American union movement. This is a grim but not unrealistic diagnosis.

That said, the movement for workplace justice will never disappear. Whatever it looks like, be it traditional labor unions or something entirely new, it will require a political strategy that engages one or both of the nations major parties for it to succeed. A worker movement that attains the power unions dream about will have to organize workers in all parts of the country, it will have to leverage that power in the political system to counter corporate influence, and it will have to be inclusive of all of the nations workers. This is a tall task, but a necessary and noble one.

Read more here:
Democrats and Labor: Frenemies Forever? - Boston Review

Democrats embrace some stupid ‘st’ – Washington Examiner

The Democratic National Committee is cashing in on its chairman's claim that Republicans don't "give a shit about people."

The committee's newly elected chief, Tom Perez, alleged last month that President Donald Trump and House Speaker Paul Ryan, R-Wisc., don't "give a shit" about Americans, particularly poor people. Rather than apologize for his salty remarks, teh DNC chairman has embraced them. He repeated the charge at a rally on April 17.

"Republican leaders and President Trump don't give a shit about the people they were trying to hurt," he told a crowd in Portland, Maine.

He added later in reference to the GOP budget, "They call it a skinny budget: I call it a shitty budget."

Oh brother.

The DNC followed its chairman's lead, and started selling "give a shit"-branded merchandise this week on its website. The group is selling a shirt for $30 that reads, "Democrats give a sh*t about people."

"Show Republicans that you give a sh*t with this American-made t-shirt," the site's description reads.

The speed with which the DNC has moved to capitalize on Perez's line, and the fact that it is actually seeking to cash in on his coarseness, suggests that this is not so much about being good and angry as it is about sending a carefully tailored message to angry grassroots supporters.

To put it more simply, the "give a shit" line is part of a routine. It's not authentic anger. It's about striking a pose that appeals to people who've been despondent since the Nov. 8 elections.

Perez's remarks have attracted the normal praise and condemnation one would expect for that sort of language.

The GOP, for its part, appeared offended by the foul-mouthed merchandise Wednesday morning, which is sort of amusing considering the president, a Republican, has been known to pepper his language with the occasional obscenity.

The DNC responded Wednesday to the GOP's tsk-tsk'ing with the following message, "Taking away health care from 24 million people is going low. Giving a shit about people is going high."

Can't you just feel the authenticity? Can't you just feel the genuine rage? Me neither.

See the article here:
Democrats embrace some stupid 'st' - Washington Examiner