Further highlighting the widening rift between various union
factions, current AFSCME President Gerald McEntee
told reporters that Republicans cleaned Democrats’ clocks in
general in the 2004 election cycle, and labor-financed campaign
efforts specifically.
McEntee made the comments as he also discussed the AFL-CIO’s
political plans for the 2006 cycle. Not surprisingly, it involves
throwing millions, no, tens of millions of dollars at candidates
across the country. Right now, the budget is $40 million
nationally, with a focus on those states that are in major
political play with gubernatorial and Senate races in the
balance.
McEntee’s comments about Democratic and labor failures were seen
as a slap at former AFL-CIO political leader Steve
Rosenthal, whose 527 brainchild, America Coming Together,
was the highest profile political tool labor set up last go round.
Rosenthal staked his reputation on labor’s Ohio operation in ‘04,
and the expectation is that once again labor is going to focus on
Ohio, Pennsylvania, and Florida, among others, in the coming
year.
In speaking with labor politicos in San Diego for their winter
meeting, it was clear they refuse to see the folly of once again
lashing all of their political hopes to the listing ship that is
the Democratic Party. Almost all of the $40 million will be spent
on behalf of Democratic candidates, their party and their
issues.
On some, level, though, you can’t blame the AFL-CIO for doing
what it’s doing. What other choice does it have? It is hemorrhaging
membership and cash, and watching support for union issues
cratering around the country. There is a desperation to its
activities that confirms what many union lobbyists have been saying
throughout the Bush Administration’s time in power: that a
Republican-led Congress and White House is making life very
difficult for organized labor, and by extension the Democratic
Party.