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AFT ENDORSES CLINTON
Another big union, the million-plus-member American Federation of Teachers, has endorsed Sen. Hillary Clinton (D-N.Y.) for the
Democratic presidential nomination, the union and
Clinton announced Oct. 3.
The decision, by AFT’s 41-member executive board in
Washington, was split. Clinton had strong backing
from the United Federation of Teachers, AFT’s New York
affiliate and biggest local. AFT’s oldest local, the
Chicago Teachers Union, and the Illinois Federation of
Teachers advocated the candidacy of Sen. Barack Obama
(D-Ill.).
The Teachers’ decision continues the pattern of
unions supporting separate Democratic presidential
hopefuls. The Teachers join the Letter Carriers, the
Machinists and the Transportation Communications Union
in backing Clinton. The Steel Workers, Mine Workers
and the Carpenters--a non-AFL-CIO union--back former
Sen. John Edwards (D-N.C.). The Fire Fighters back
Sen. Christopher J. Dodd (D-Conn.).
No international union backs Obama, yet. The AFL-CIO
needs votes of unions representing two-thirds of its
10 million members to issue a federation-wide
endorsement--an unlikely prospect before the February
5 round of 25 primaries.
“Our members have told us they want a leader they can
trust to strengthen public education, increase access
to healthcare, promote common-sense economic
priorities and secure America’s place in the world,”
said AFT President Edward J. McElroy after the
endorsement. “Hillary Clinton is that leader.”
Clinton in turn promised to improve and strengthen our
public schools, provide support for teachers, “and
ensure our education system is able to meet the needs
of the global economy and that we have commonsense
laws that make that possible.”
She also reiterated her support for access to
universal affordable quality health insurance and
promised to sign the Employee Free Choice Act, the
labor-backed legislation designed to help level the
playing field between workers and bosses in organizing
and bargaining.
AFT said it took seven months to get data and ideas
from its members on “their issues of concern and the
candidate they believed would best address those
concerns.” That included a “You Decide” web page,
which has logged 50,000 visits. The board also held
local and regional meetings on the issues and
candidates.
Seven of the Democratic hopefuls--all but Mike
Gravel--who answered AFT’s questionnaire and were
later interviewed individually by the council were
considered. No Republican hopefuls answered the
questionnaire and thus were not considered.
The Illinoisans dissented from the Clinton choice.
CTU, in its own House of Delegates meeting the evening
of Oct. 3, endorsed Obama for the Feb. 5 presidential
primary, promising to activate its 32,000 members in
the metro area.
CTU President Marilyn Stewart, an AFT board member
who championed Obama and then--when that
failed--neutrality, called him “Illinois’ favorite son
and a good friend of teachers, paraprofessionals and
labor.” She told her delegates that “we want to show
him our appreciation and support.”
The IFT is holding meetings statewide before its own
decision in December, spokeswoman Gail Purkey said
from state headquarters in Springfield. “We respect
the process they (AFT) went through and this will be a
topic of discussion,” she added.
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