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Road to Victory

Back to the ‘Burg for Barack: The Story of a Union Activist's Return to Pittsburgh

December 01, 2008  |  BY Linda Foley

Linda Foley

I decided to go back home to help change America.

I left Pittsburgh, Pa., permanently in March 1977. I’ve been back many times since then to visit my parents and siblings who remained behind. Never overstaying my welcome and not interacting too much with my past or my ever-evolving hometown.

On Sept. 1, 2008 (Labor Day), after 30 years of living elsewhere, I moved back in with my parents. For eight weeks I worked with my union, the Communications Workers of America (CWA), and members of the Allegheny County Labor Council to help make Barack Obama the next  President of the United States. I came back to Southwestern Pa. with full knowledge of the political opportunities and challenges “our area” (as Pittsburghers like to refer to their little corner of the world) would present to the African-American, Democratic nominee seeking the highest office in the land.

As if I needed to be reminded, The New York Times, in an Aug. 20 article that ran as I was packing my bags, summed up the dynamic “our area” would pose in this election. Noting that Hillary Clinton had bested Obama by 40 percentage points in Western Pa., the Times stated, “this economically ravaged region, once so solidly Democratic, poses a particular hurdle for Senator Obama.” The unions were solidly behind Obama, the Times said, but “one hears much hesitating talk about Mr. Obama, some simply quizzical or skeptically political, and some not-so-subtly racial.”

***

Pittsburghers are open and honest, almost to a fault. They work hard, and many of their parents worked even harder than they do. They are very cognizant of their roots, both to their home and to the cultures and traditions their ancestors brought to “our area.” They love their city, and their country, and their families, and their high school football team. And the Steelers. 

Obama made an appearance in Pittsburgh on Oct. 27. In front of a packed house at Mellon Arena (where the NHL Penguins play), the future president-elect electrified the crowd. But not until he was first introduced by Dan Rooney, owner of Pittsburgh’s beloved Steelers. After well-received political speeches by Gov. Ed Rendell and U.S. Sen. Robert Casey, the crowd leapt to its feet as the announcer said, “Now please welcome Dan Rooney, owner of the Pittsburgh Steelers.” As if on cue, 17,000-plus Obama supporters spontaneously chanted in unison, “Here we go Steelers, here we go! Here we go Steelers, here we go!” 

Rooney presented Obama with a black and gold Steelers jersey, emblazoned with “Obama 08” on the back. Obama told the screaming crowd he had been a Steelers fan since he was a boy in Hawaii, which has no NFL team of its own.  In the minds of many Pittsburghers, that probably cinched the election for him.

Rooney, along with Steelers great Franco Harris, campaigned all across Western Pennsylvania and Eastern Ohio for Barack Obama.  With the help of the United Steelworkers, they organized a Steel Blitz for Barack tour. And for $40, anyone could get a Steelers-like jersey with “Obama 08” on the back.

***

When I was a child, every Christmas season, our family would drive up to Mount Washington, a rather majestic hill that towers over downtown Pittsburgh and the confluence of the three rivers that form the city’s epicenter “Point.” On Light-Up Night, all the lights in all the buildings in downtown Pittsburgh would blaze into the evening, signaling the start of the Christmas shopping season. It was spectacular. But even more spectacular was the bright, solar-like light emanating from hundreds of steel blast furnaces that lined the Monongahela River just a few miles to the east. They turned the night into day.

Those mills are almost all gone now. So is the foul air and smelly water that in another era earned Pittsburgh the nickname, Smoky City. And so are thousands of good-paying jobs that forged a prosperous working class which kept the city’s economy humming.

But the legacy of those mills and those jobs remains part of the Pittsburgh’s fabric even today. Most of the steel mills in Allegheny County were shuttered by 1995, but nearly everyone still living in Pittsburgh has some connection to the steel industry and to the Steelworkers union.

The Steelworkers' headquarters in downtown Pittsburgh was where we conducted our phone banking for the campaign.  It also served as one of several locations from which we launched weekly Labor Walks in various Allegheny County neighborhoods.

This phone bank was like no other I’ve experienced. It was filled nearly every night (50 phones on the first floor and another 30 high-tech “predictive” dialers on the second floor, plus a back-up location one block away at another union headquarters.) From the beginning of October through Nov. 4, we were making upwards of 6,000 calls a night to persuade union members to vote for Obama.

It was worth it. Literally thousands of union members made calls, knocked on doors, passed our flyers at work and attended rallies to garner support for our presidential nominee. And they were effective.

About two weeks after I arrived in Pittsburgh, Frank Snyder, the AFL-CIO state’s director, gave a rather grim report about the state of the presidential race among union members in Region 9 (“Our Area”.) Obama’s support was running at about 53 percent, behind where John Kerry and Al Gore had run in 2004 and 2000. Obama’s support would have to improve if Pennsylvania were going to stay blue. 

By Nov. 4, it had improved -- greatly.  Obama’s support among union members in “our area” ended up at about 67 percent, exceeding that for both Kerry and Gore. 

***

The United Steelworkers’ role in determining the outcome of Election ’08 can’t be understated.  The union unleashed an army of hundreds of walkers and dialers across Pennsylvania and the nation. 

On Sept. 19, a few hearty activists from the CWA, including me, gathered at 5:30 a.m. to help our USW brothers handbill steelworkers at U.S. Steel’s Clairton Works, one of the few remaining working steel mills in Allegheny County. 

A steady stream of burly, stoic men trudged past us through the darkness into work. It was chilly; you could see your breath. They were chilly, too.

Although most of them grudgingly accepted a flyer, “Barack Obama Supports Working Families,” many refused; some even offered that there was “no way.” We were all pretty worried about their collective reaction.

A month later, the morning after the vice presidential debate between Joe Biden and Sarah Palin, Jerry Laycak, a state political operative for the Steelworkers union, stopped me in the hall.  “We went back to the Clairton Works this morning,” he said. “The reaction was totally different. The guys were much more supportive. They were even asking for yard signs and stuff.”

The calculation goes like this: If the union makes six contacts with a member during the course of a campaign, the member is likely to vote the right way. I figure we had these guys from the Clairton Works at about four contacts: two plant leaflets, a phone call and maybe a house visit.

***

The Steelworkers’ retiree organization is called SOAR, which stands for Steelworkers Organization of Active Retirees. Plant closings and a long history of union membership have created a large contingent of SOAR members in Allegheny County. 

Early one mid-October afternoon, we were working on “walk packets,” the compilation of maps, instructions and flyers we gave to volunteers who did the member-to-member neighborhood Labor Walks each Saturday. A slight, rather elderly man wearing a SOAR cap and blue windbreaker walked into our work area. “Can somebody help me?” he asked. We offered him a seat and asked what we could do.

“The nursing home dahn ‘ere offa Brahn’s Hill Road,” he said in the classic Pittsburgh manner of dropping the “th” in “there” and turning “o’s” in “ahs” as in “Brahn’s Hill” instead of “Brown’s Hill.”

“Someone needs to go dahn ‘ere,” he continued. “’ere’s lots of votes dahn ‘ere, but someone needs to go dahn ‘ere and talk to ‘em people. I used to do it, but I can’t no more, cuz I can’t drive. I’m 84 years old, and I can’t drive no more.”

We told him we would take care of it; did he have a name and address? He didn’t, but he was sure we’d know which nursing home it was. “Right ‘ere at the bottom of Brahn’s Hill Road, right ‘ere just below Squirrel Hill.”  (Yes, Virginia, there really is a Squirrel Hill in Pittsburgh.) 

I asked him if he lived near there. He said he didn’t live too far away. He said his name was Joe, and he was a retired Steelworker, hence the SOAR cap. I asked him if someone had driven him to the Steelworkers’ headquarters (a good 7 miles or so from where he said he lived). “No,” he said. “I took the bus.  I can ride the bus for free cuz I’m a senior citizen.”

Campaign coordinator Mike Harms, himself a bus driver by trade and a member of the Amalgamated Transit Union, offered Joe a button, “ATU for Obama/Biden.” 

“Can ya gi’me a few more?” Joe asked. “I’ll pass ‘em aht to the bus drivers.” Mike obliged.

A few days later, Joe was back. Still donning his SOAR cap, he reached in the pocket of his windbreaker and pulled out a yellow paper. “Here’s the name and address of ‘at nursing home,” he said. “By the way, got any more of ‘em buttons?  I’ve been givin’ ‘em aht to all the bus drivers. They love ‘em.”

Joe came back twice more to stock up on buttons. The last time he came by, I missed him, but I was told he was disappointed because we had run out of buttons to give him.

When John McCain made such a big deal about that phony “Joe the Plumber” in the third presidential debate, I couldn’t help but think of our Joe. Joe the Steelworker, we started to call him. I’d put our Joe the Steelworker up against McCain’s Joe the Plumber any day. Our Joe was real; our Joe was doing all he could to make life better in America, even though he couldn’t drive anymore.

***

By mid-October, the polls were looking good. Obama/Biden was 10 points or more ahead in Pennsylvania. After pulling out of Michigan, McCain decided to make Pennsylvania his last stand. And “our area” was where he apparently figured he could win it. He and running mate Sarah Palin held at least 10 events in Western Pa. during the last two weeks of the campaign. 

McCain never ventured into Pittsburgh proper; he stayed in suburbs like Moon Township (not be confused with Mars, Pa.) or in Beaver County. Palin did come into the city only once, for a fundraiser with big donors at the Westin Convention Hotel. We were ready for her.

About 100 of us gathered outside the Steelworkers headquarters with homemade signs and our Obama/Biden apparel and marched to the hotel, roughly 10 blocks away, through the heart of downtown Pittsburgh in the sunny late afternoon. We were chanting  “Obama, you betcha” and other catchy anti-Palin, pro-Obama slogans.

As we marched, Pittsburghers at bus stops, on corners, crossing streets and even working on construction projects were cheering us on.  Many gave us high fives as we passed by. Workers came out of shops and restaurants to wave at us. Some joined us, and our ranks grew.

By the time we reached the Westin Convention Hotel, the size of our group had doubled. And it continued to grow as we awaited Palin’s arrival. Someone brought a trumpet, and a bass drum. Cars were honking as rush hour began to pick up. Even the bus drivers (thanks to Joe, many of them wearing Obama/Biden buttons) honked their horns and waved. 

Bus drivers, construction workers, steelworkers, teachers, electricians, lawyers, secretaries, waitresses, teamsters, students, mothers, fathers, kids – all gathering impromptu at one of the busiest intersections in downtown Pittsburgh on a Friday afternoon during rush hour. Chanting, singing and reveling in their support for Barack Obama and change.

It was pretty festive and cheerful; the crowd even morphed a favorite Steeler fight song into a song for Barack. It was festive, that is, until Palin’s “Straight Talk Express” bus appeared. Once that happened, the singing, dancing throng turned into a screaming mob shouting all kinds of epitaphs at the bus’s blackened windows as it rounded the corner. 

Then it was over. “Do you think she saw us?” one native Pittsburgh union activist asked me. “I hope so. She needs to understand that this is Pittsburgh. And we’re for Obama. She needs to git aht and stay aht of Pittsburgh.”

It was then that I knew we were going to win Pennsylvania.

***

The weekend before, I realized why Pittsburghers supported Obama and what he stood for.

It was Pittsburgh’s 250th anniversary. The entire city celebrated on Oct. 4 with the largest fireworks display in its history. Zambelli Fireworks of nearby Lawrence County, Pa., produced the display, with the most launch points – 17 -- of any fireworks show held in the United States. We had to cancel our neighborhood Labor Walks for Obama that weekend due to so many road closures.

Like my Pittsburgh days of yore, we piled into my parents car and headed up to Mount Washington for the best view of this extravaganza. It was mobbed. People wrestled for parking spots and watching spots on the wharfs, bridges, roads and hillsides in around the city. 

We found a pretty good spot just behind a church on Mount Washington. And it was spectacular. Fireworks synchronized from the Point, the bridges, barges and even the tops of buildings. After every breathtaking array, you could hear the cheers of thousands of Pittsburghers bouncing off the hills and echoing through the three river valleys. 

It was like Light Up Night, only better. I looked down the Mon (Monongahela River) half-expecting to see the bright lights of those bygone blast furnaces, but they were dark. And yet, this city, that had changed so much and lost so much in the 30 years since I was a Pittsburgh girl, was as vibrant and as beautiful as it had ever been.

“I love this city,” my mother said half under her breath as the fireworks burst below us. She was talking to herself, but she was speaking for all Pittsburghers that night.

Bill Clinton is fond of saying he still believes in a place called Hope. Well, Mr. President, I believe in a place called Pittsburgh because it is a city that has celebrated hope for 250 years.

Hope that its past is prologue to its future. Hope that hard work pays off. Hope that we can rely on one another. Hope that “our area” stays as beautiful and as welcoming as it was for our grandparents. Hope that our city continues to be someplace special, and that our Steelers keep winning.

And finally hope that we could overcome the reservations we may have harbored to vote for a man, who’s African fatherleft him and his mother before he could talk, and who was raised by his white grandparents in Hawaii, of all places. We had hope that we could push back against whatever fears and anxieties we had about that man and ourselves, and we elected Barack Obama President of the United States. Hope won out. Hope has always won out (aht) in Pittsburgh, Pa.

Linda Foley is the former president of The Newspaper Guild-CWA.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

USW members in Wisconsin get active

November 04, 2008  |  BY USW Wisconsin

USW members in Wisconsin were among the 10,000 plus volunteer activists across the nation who phone banked, block walked, leafleted and did whatever they could to help elect Barack Obama and other pro-worker candiates. Check out this photo slideshow.

A Tightrope for the Uninsured: Tennessee Steelworkers rally for health care

October 27, 2008  |  BY Lynne Baker, USW Communications

Nashville Health Care RallyNashville union members and community activists are urging the presidential candidates to end the debate over national health care reform and guarantee affordable choice in health care for every American.

The statistics regarding the US health care system are grim: 47 million uninsured; 700,000 families each year face bankruptcy because of medical debt; 18,000 die each year because they do not have access to health care.

To get the attention of the media and the presidential candidates regarding the crisis, labor and community groups rallied Oct. 6 in downtown Nashville the night before the second presidential debate.

The rally drew several hundred people and featured musical entertainment, hip-hop poetry and national and local speakers. During many of the speeches, Steelworkers stood up in-between the two aisles of seats and held signs high with phrases like “We Are Health Care Voters” and “Health Care First.”

Stories of Inadequacy

Many USW Local 1055 members from Bridgestone-Firestone in La Vergne, Tenn., who attended the rally, had their own stories to tell about the inadequacy of the present health care system.

Stanford Murray, who spoke at the rally, said he has always “been blessed” to have insurance through his employer. He has two sons who have hemophilia, a blood disorder, and must have three shots a week. These shots cost over $300,000 per year. Since he has health insurance, he only has to pay $24 a month for prescriptions.

 “Every day I hear stories from fellow blood brothers and sisters who have lost everything from their homes to their life savings as well as their jobs. These are people without adequate health insurance who have to pay 20 percent of the cost of their medicines. It’s almost $50,000 per year for them,” Murray said.

Pre-existing Conditions

Another Local 1055 member who says he is blessed to have health insurance is Randall Norton, who has a six-and-a-half year old son with cerebral palsy.

“If I lose this job, I may go to another company and they may not accept my son because of his pre-existing condition,” Norton said.

 “I just think in this day in time each individual should have the opportunity to get health care. It should be a constitutional right in this great country. We shouldn’t let anyone fall through the cracks,” he added.

Norton likes Barrack Obama’s health care proposal because it will cover all children and helps those who are not quite old enough to get Medicare.

Life Without Insurance

While Carla Riley has health insurance, her son, a painter, and her daughter, a clerk, have jobs that do not offer it.

“We definitely need a better system than we’ve got,” Riley said. “My kids can’t go to the doctor unless I help them out. I’ve paid $100, $150 to get my son in to the doctor. It cost me $1,400 to have his wisdom teeth pulled. He couldn’t pay it.

“It’s hard to get a doctor to see you if you don’t have insurance,” she added.

Riley likes Obama’s health care plan because everyone has the right to have insurance. “I think under the McCain plan less people will go to the doctor and more people will have conditions they’ll have to let go because they’ll still not be able to go to a doctor.”

Inadequate Coverage

Al Fleming said he pitched in with the rest of his family to help his parents with their health care problems because they were under-insured. 

“Had there not been a large pool of family members to divide the cost, my parents never would have had the care, medicine and stuff they needed,” he said.  

Fleming’s teenage daughter, Taylor, also had a story to tell.

“A lot of people don’t have health care and they really need it,” she said. “I have a friend in that situation. She had a transplant and her health insurance didn’t cover it. Her parents paid out of pocket.”

Fleming said he likes Obama’s approach to health care.

“I think Obama has a better chance to fix this problem than any of his predecessors,” he said. “I really believe he’ll make it happen.”
 

Views from the trail: USW election volunteer shares reflections about racism

October 22, 2008  |  BY Jim Frederick

Jim Frederick

“I’m not going to vote for his kind,” a woman said to me very curtly as I knocked on her door this past Saturday.  I was knocking on doors as a volunteer supporting Barack Obama in Beaver County, Pennsylvania. 

Over the past several national election cycles, I have knocked on many doors, made countless phone calls, and passed out scores of flyers to encourage working families to vote.  I am one of the several thousands of volunteers from the United Steelworkers Union (USW). 

While talking to working families, we highlight the candidates’ positions on key union issues.  I hope to gain votes for my candidate with each contact.  In the past two presidential campaigns, our candidate did not win.  However, this year my candidate has a much better chance for success. 

Beaver County is filled with communities that have been drastically impacted by the economic tailspin of the rustbelt over the past quarter century.  The cities, towns and boroughs that dot the landscape of the picturesque county were a mix of quiet rural communities and thriving middle class cities during the boom times of the steel mills.  Many thousand steelworkers lived and worked throughout the county.  Today, most of the mills are shuttered and closed.  The industrial workplaces that remain are primarily small specialty shops employing handfuls of workers. Some are unionized, many are not.

In my mind, there should be no question about who my neighbors support in this election.  Barack Obama is the candidate who stands on the correct side of the issues facing workers, but a significant number of us talk to USW members and retirees who are hesitant to support or are adamantly opposed to Obama.  At the USW Constitutional Convention earlier this year, Rich Trumka of the AFL-CIO stated very aptly, “You see brothers and sisters, there’s not a single good reason for any worker -- especially any union member -- to vote against Barack Obama. There’s only one really bad reason to vote against him: because he’s not white.”  Sadly, Trumka’s quote accurately reflects the sentiments that many volunteers have found across this part of the country.

In some cases, like the woman who answered the door on Saturday, they express racial prejudice.  The prejudice is sometimes veiled with phony excuses like “he is a Muslim” or “he doesn’t hold his hand on his heart during the national anthem.”  Sometimes it is not veiled at all.

In other cases, working families express reasons that they won’t support Obama connected to the political party rather than the color of the Senator’s skin.  These are often based on religion – such as the ‘single issue voter’ concerns about abortion – or – right to life.  Certainly many of us recognize that right to life does not equate to anti-abortion nor does it equate to Republican value versus Democratic value, but that is another topic for another time. 

Other working families express that they are dyed in the wool Republicans regardless of the arguments otherwise. 

Four years ago, the overwhelming sentiment of working families that supported George W. Bush were guns, gays and God.  The spin at the time was that a John Kerry administration would:

  • send someone to each persons’ home and strip them of their hunting riffles, shotguns and handguns, 
  • shift the military from the don’t ask, don’t tell policy governing gays in the service to one of open admission of homosexuality somehow exposing military personnel to harm,
  • allow and encourage gay couples to be married, and
  • ignore God’s will by allowing abortions to continue.

The concerns about John Kerry were drastically and irrationally magnified by the extreme forces of the Republican Party, Fox News and talk radio persona.  The same fringe is fueling the fire of racism in this election.  They continue to shovel their fertilizer onto the political lies and half truths, but in this case they are feeding their manure onto the frenzy of racism – veiled or otherwise. 

I hope that Barack Obama wins the election to become the next President of the United States. I hope that we, the working class families of the United States of America, find a way to unify behind President Obama and that we can realize the dreams of equal rights that civil rights activists have been working for, fighting for and dying for in this country for centuries.  We have the opportunity to experience an historic Presidency. 

While we face incredible obstacles in the next few years, we also have an opportunity for the Labor Movement to be a driving force to take on and extinguish the remaining fires of racism in our country. 

If you agree that our country needs the historic change that an Obama administration will bring, there are several things we can do to help:

1. Encourage everyone you know to carefully consider the issues, not the rhetoric, before deciding how to vote. 
2. Make certain that every registered voter that you know votes on November 4th. 
3. Volunteer some time to work on the election for your union or your candidate. 
4. Denounce racism and the half-truths and lies that support the racist veil.

Jim Frederick is the assistant director of the USW's Health, Safety and Environment Department.

Congressman Jason Altmire Leaflets with USW Local 9305

October 10, 2008  |  BY Local 9305

Congressman Jason Altmire leaflets with USW Local 9305

This election year, around the country and the state of Pennsylvania, union activists are focusing on down-ticket races in addition to the presidential. Just as important as electing a president that focuses on working family issues is having a Senate and House of Representatives that will as well.

Monday, October 6th, 2008 President Rick Galiano, USW Local 9305 met Bernie Hall, USW Local 8183, and Mike Sabat, USW Local 9305 to leaflet workers at the Koppel Steel Plant in Beaver County. Also joining the group was AFL-CIO endorsed candidate Congressman Jason Altmire who helped pass out information on Barack Obama’s support for working families as well as for his own campaign.

“We are out talking to our fellow union members about the importance of the upcoming election,” said President Galiano to USW Local 9305 member Ray Reheer. “As union members Barack Obama is the best candidate for us and our future.”

“I agree,” said Reheer. “He supports healthcare for every one and he wants to preserve my social security. With the economy going the way it is right now I can’t understand how any union member wouldn’t vote for him.”

“I think this election is the most important one of my life time,” said Ed Lackner, USW Local 305. “it’s time for a change and it’s time for us to start moving in the right direction again. With the price of groceries and the price of gas these days it’s very difficult for working people. Every thing that Obama stands for is going to help change that. He is the best candidate for the middle-class.”

“It is important for union members to be having these conversations,” said Congressman Altmire. “Union members trust each other, work together, and have relationships. No one better understands where one union member is coming from than another union member. So it is crucial that union members talk to each other about the upcoming election and the issues.”

“We are going to be out leafleting another plant on Thursday,” said Mike Sabat, USW Local 9305. “We are going to keep reaching out to members from now until the election. We nee to make sure our members are educated and the face-to-face conversations that these leaflets facilitate are the best way to do that.”

 

Thomson on why he's supporting Kentucky candidate Bruce Lunsford for U.S. Senate

October 07, 2008  |  BY Billy Thompson, USW District 8 Director

In this video, USW District 8 Director Billy Thompson discusses why he's supporting Kentucky's Bruce Lunsford for U.S. Senate.

 

Hundreds of USW members turn out for Obama debate rally

September 29, 2008  |  BY USW Alabama Members

Hundreds of USW members gathered in Oxford, Mississippi, on Friday to rally in support of Barack Obama and to watch the first debate of the presidential campaign. Here are some photos.

Oxford rally

Oxford rally

Oxford rally

 

USW Brother: 'Think of our kids' future'

September 25, 2008  |  BY Bobby W. Long, USW Local 12

Bobby W. Long

Hello, my fellow brothers and sisters. I'm voting because we need change in this country. Our present government has failed us badly here and around the world.

We need to cancel NAFTA and redo it with sincerity - only deal with countries that are willing to upgrade their people's standard of living so we can compete with them equallly. As NAFTA stands now, rich companies go for cheap labor, which hurts our economy.

Let's stop CAFTA before it gets off the ground for some of the same reasons that I've stated above.

In Obama, I see a world ready to open doors up to possiblities that McCain can't. The Republican's cowboy image is deterring our trade partners. They only represent corporate greed and this can only mean nothing good for middle class in any country.

I have seen as you have that corporations are creating two classes of people - haves and have nots. It's a stupid plan. Have they not thought, "What if the middle class diappears?" Who wil have money to buy their goods and services? This is a formula that will surely ruin this country. 

I could go on and on, but let's not be foolish because there is more that binds us than seperates us. Think of our kids' future, if even some of us don't think about ourselves.

May God grant us peace, love and understanding. God bless America.

Bobby W. Long
USW Local 12
Gadsden, Alabama

Nationwide, USW members seized the moment

September 19, 2008  |  BY USW

Across the country, USW sisters and brothers seized the moment when Barack Obama made history by accepting the nomination for president of the United States. Check out a photo slideshow of Obama Watch parties here.

Congressman's support of NewPage workers during shutdown example of why elections matter

September 12, 2008  |  BY USW Local 2-9

This is why it matters who we get elected. Check out this  video of U.S. Congressman Steve Kagen supporting USW brothers and sisters at a rally for NewPage paper workers in Wisconsin.  You can read more about the Kimberly workers' battle here.

 

USW brother: Working for Obama because 'McCain doesn't understand working families'

September 12, 2008  |  BY Andy Voelzke, USW Local 2-209

Andy Voelzke

In this photo, a soaked Andy Voelzke has just returned from a block walk Obama. Here's a diary entry from him on why he's working so hard for Obama-Biden:

"Obama has a 98 percent 'Lifetime Right' voting record ranking by the AFL-CIO and John McCain has a dismal 16 percent 'Lifetime Right' record out of the over 200 votes he’s made over the years. No hype or spin can change those statistics. They show that John McCain does not understand America’s middle class working families’ issues and has little regard for them except as campaign propaganda. Obama, on the other hand, is an activist on a mission to restore the diminishing American dream to the middle class. He recognizes that unions share the same goal, and his voting record reflects that."

Andy Voelzke is a member at Local 2-209, which represents employees at Harley-Davidson Motor Co. in Milwaukee.

USW members at Minntac leaflet for Obama, Franken, Oberstar

August 26, 2008  |  BY USW Locals 1938 and 9115.

The Road to Victory ran through Minnesota, where a group of USW members leafleted and showed support for Obama, Senate candidate Al Franken and U.S. Rep. James Oberstar. signs

Members handed out leaflets at the U.S. Steel Minntac plant on Sunday, Aug. 31st. Al Franken was there at the gate, as well as several of the Iron Range delegation. Check out a photo slide show here.

 

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