Report given to the National Committee
      U.S. corporations invested one million to buy the White House, Congress,
      and the Supreme Court. The Labor 2000 campaign, although outspent 15 to1,
      mounted a national campaign that fought the corporations to a stand-off,
      a draw.
 With a nearly evenly divided house and Senate, we have a guarantee that
        the fight-back by labor and the labor-based electoral coalition built
        up to win elections 2000 will continue on into the post-election period.
        Legislative battles of both an offensive and defensive nature will be
        taking place. Social Security, health care, public schools and services,
        the minimum and prevailing wage laws, racial profiling and hate crimes,
        will all be on the table in the halls of legislature both nationally and
        locally. 
 ‘Pay check protection’ and ‘right to work’ will be national as well
        as local issues. But expect the fortunes of the NLRB to move front and
        center in the struggle. Every trade unionist is aware that with only 12%
        of the work-force organized, a decisive victory over corporate power is
        extremely difficult. Labor has scored some crucial victories in organizing
        farm and low-wage service workers, major defensive strike struggles have
        been won in basic industry, particularly the steelworkers, and militant
        strikes have been won in the professional field, particularly teachers
        and nurses. But to make real gains in organizing the unorganized, especially
        among temporary and part-time workers, the unions know they are fighting
        a difficult uphill battle without labor law reform. Union recognition
        through card-check and stiff penalties for corporate violators is a demand
        that has echoed throughout the labor movement for some time. 
 On the other hand the corporations consider the NLRB an unnecessary
        nuisance and will be pressuring to weaken if not eliminate whatever rules
        still exist which can be used in the interest of workers. And when looking
        forward to legislative battles, what about Clinton’s executive order on
        ergonomics? The corporations are foaming at the mouth to launch their
        attack on that the first day of the new Congress. 
 What was the content of Labor 2000 and what was built that will carry
        us into the post-election battles? John Sweeney says ‘It’s clear that
        union members exercised the unmatched power we hold as a unified political
        force in our country.’ CNN exit polls show that of the total vote, union
        households rose from 23% in 1998 to 26% this year. The national AFL-CIO
        reports that 93% of union members heard from their unions, 82% remembered
        receiving union publications on the elections, and 21% remembered being
        contacted on the job. One thousand union co-ordinators were trained and
        brought together by local and state Federations to build the campaign,
        with 100,000 volunteers in GOTV work the last two weeks. Eight million
        phone calls, 14 million leaflets, 12 million mailings, 755 different work-site
        fliers at work-site distributions. Project Vote activities brought 2.3
        million new voters. Texas Truth Squads criss-crossed the country. In addition
        to the impact on the Presidential and Congressional elections , anti-worker
        ballot initiatives were defeated in California, Oregon, and Michigan.
        Nationally thousands of unionists walked in neighbor to neighbor and labor
        to labor community mobilizations. 
 The work of both International Unions and state and local Federations
        of Labor needs to be understood and studied, and the NLC should help initiate
        district discussions on these and other issues such as problems which
        prevented a maximum effort. The UAW in Michigan, USWA in Pittsburgh, as
        well as the SEIU stand out. Union retirees were an important factor, such
        as SOAR in steel, the Retiree Council in Cleveland, and many more centers,
        which helps provide a base for organizing the Alliance for Retired Americans.
        Coalition Building, a major feature of Labor 2000, saw a new level of
        unity in action between labor, and the African American and Latino communities.
        Unity was expressed in many ways; in Project vote registration drives
        including labor, the NAACP, CBTU, grassroots political organizations in
        African American and Latino communities, which brought a 10% increase
        in new voters nationally. These coalitions may be brought into a drive
        for election law reform resulting from the election fiasco in Florida.
        Coalition building needs to be studied. Are all unions convinced and involved?
        Were opportunities for coalitions to be built missed, resulting in election
        losses? The experiences of Labor 2000 need to be studied and lessons drawn,
        emphasizing the strong, positive features of that campaign, and also pinpointing
        weaknesses and some ongoing difficulties that need to be examined with
        a critical eye toward solutions. 
 Unions are wasting no time in discussing weaknesses, mistakes which
        need to be corrected, where will the focus be for the next year. For example,
        the failure of the Ohio AFL-CIO to endorse Rev. Marvin McMickle, a leading
        African American Baptist church leader in Cleveland, for U.S. Senate,
        was discussed with some criticism at a luncheon including Cleveland Federation
        board members and the Presidents of the Cleveland and Ohio AFL-CIO. This
        within a sharp confrontation shaping up to replace the Ohio Democratic
        Party Chairman. Can the problems in running steelworker candidates be
        examined with a view to dealing with problems of disunity in labor, a
        problem which is prevalent in many districts? Discussions in Cleveland
        lead us to believe that building the Alliance for Retired Americans can
        lead to strengthening unity in some Federations. A demand that unions
        have a greater input in the selection of candidates they support came
        up in the Cleveland Retiree Council when the successful election of several
        labor Democrats was discussed, and the failure to elect two legislative
        candidates in two critical races. ‘Weak Democratic candidates’ is a problem
        raised in many discussions throughout the country, emphasizing the need
        for unions to begin immediately to seek out labor candidates to run in
        upcoming municipal elections, and to have more to say about candidate
        selection before endorsements take place. 
 The failure of Democrat Party organizations to conduct campaigns in
        state after state is being discussed, with large numbers of union people
        coming to the realization that the party’s grassroots organization is
        weak, and always has had to depend on the unions to provide campaign workers.
        The increase in trade union political mobilization with members working
        under direction of their unions and Federations is driving home the fact
        that labor not only needs to build independent political structure but
        is already on the way to doing it. In doing so labor is in fact moving
        into a vacuum of political organization at the grass-roots level,a ready
        made situation for moving into the municipal elections. John will further
        develop this theme based on Cleveland. 
On the Florida situation
 Last Thursday the National AFL-CIO asked the staff to organize town
        hall meeting and news conferences calling for Count The Votes. The news
        conference in Cleveland included the presidents of the Ohio and Cleveland
        AFL-CIO, two congresspeople, chair of the Democratic Party, and about
        thirty labor leaders. There was some publicity in the news media, but
        no follow-up actions are proposed at this time. Many people are feeling
        frustrated, looking for some direction. In a discussion in the Cleveland
        Retiree Council two speakers brought up the subject of Fascism (not Party
        members). We know that AFL-CIO leaders in Florida and Ohio want action.
        We have reports that in New York and other places some mass action is
        taking place. We need to explore quickly if mass action can be stimulated,
        hopefully under labor leadership in coalition with community forces. It’s
        under discussion in Cleveland. 
 The Florida struggle for basic democratic rights reflects an intensification
        of corporate assault on the rights of all working people, an intensification
        of the class character of Elections 2000. This needs to be understood
        by trade unionists and they need to be mobilized. Without a clear call
        from the top, ready avenues for action are not available. But we in the
        Party are no strangers to mobilizing from below, and if we succeed in
        some modest initiatives, we can rest assured the leadership will approve.
        We in the Party have a particular role to play here in increasing dialogue
        with our friends and co-workers in the trade unions, in strengthening
        our work in preparation for the post-election battles and upcoming municipal
        elections, and right now in helping with the Florida crises.
       



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