Dissent From Labor
SEIU Chief Says the Democrats Lack Fresh Ideas
Stern Asserts That a Kerry Win Could Set Back Efforts to Reform the Party
By David S. Broder
Washington Post Staff Writer
Tuesday, July 27, 2004; Page A13

BOSTON, July 26 -- Breaking sharply with the enforced harmony of the
Democratic National Convention, the president of the largest AFL-CIO
union said Monday that both organized labor and the Democratic Party
might be better off in the long run if Sen. John F. Kerry loses the
election.

Andrew L. Stern, the head of the 1.6 million-member Service Employees
International Union (SEIU), said in an interview with The Washington
Post that both the party and its longtime ally, the labor movement, are
"in deep crisis," devoid of new ideas and working with archaic structures.

Stern argued that Kerry's election might stifle needed reform within the
party and the labor movement. He said he still believes that Kerry
overall would make a better president than President Bush, and his union
has poured huge resources into that effort. But he contends that Kerry's
election would have the effect of slowing the "evolution" of the
dialogue within the party.

Asked whether if Kerry became president it would help or hurt those
internal party deliberations, Stern said, "I think it hurts."

Stern's dissatisfaction with the AFL-CIO and the Democratic Party is not
new, but his decision to voice his frustration on the opening day of a
carefully scripted convention was an unwelcome surprise to Kerry's
convention managers, who had been proclaiming their delight at the
absence of any internal conflicts.

Speaking of the effort to create new political and union organizations,
Stern said, "I don't know if it would survive with a Democratic
president," because Kerry, like former president Bill Clinton, would use
the party for his own political benefit and labor leaders would become
partners of the new establishment.

"It is a hollow party," Stern said, adding that "if John Kerry becomes
president, it hurts" chances of reforming the Democrats and organized
labor.

Stern is perhaps the most outspoken of the leaders of four or five
unions that have been talking about breaking away from the AFL-CIO to
form some kind of new workers movement. In the struggle for the
Democratic nomination last winter, Stern's union, along with the
American Federation of State, County and Municipal Employees (AFSCME),
delivered an early endorsement to former Vermont governor Howard H. Dean
-- a step that solidified Dean's status as the early favorite for the
nomination.

Later in the day, AFL-CIO President John J. Sweeney told The Post that
Stern's attitude "is not justified." Sweeney, also a product of the
SEIU, the largest and fastest-growing union in the AFL-CIO, said the
process of change is already underway within labor, adding that he is
impressed with "the unity and solidarity" of Democratic support for
Kerry. "I'm optimistic about the future of the Democratic Party," he said.

Stern made it clear that his complaints long preceded Kerry's
nomination. He said that when Clinton was president, he demonstrated how
little he cared for the Democratic Party. Calling the former president
"the greatest fundraiser of his time," Stern asked: "If you think the
Democratic Party is valuable, why would you leave it bankrupt?" Other
elected officials are equally indifferent to the party, he said, adding
that if Kerry is elected "he would smother" any effort to give it more
intellectual heft and organizational muscle.

The SEIU, representing health care and nursing home workers, state and
local employees and janitors among its 1.6 million members, is part of a
coalition of liberal, feminist and environmental organizations working
in an alliance called Americans Coming Together. ACT has raised more
than $85 million, according to fundraiser Harold Ickes, and hopes to
reach $130 million by November. Most of the money is being spent in
targeted areas to register and turn out the vote of people believed to
be likely to support Kerry.

Stern said the SEIU has put about $65 million in union resources into
efforts to elect Kerry and other worker-friendly Democrats, the bulk of
it directly aimed at labor efforts in behalf of the senator from
Massachusetts.

But Stern complained that motivating blue-collar families who have not
voted in the past is being impeded because Kerry and the Democrats have
declined to address what he calls "the Wal-Mart economy," a system in
which he says employers deliberately keep wages so low and hours so
short that workers are forced to turn to state Medicaid programs for
their families' health care.

He also criticized what he called the vagueness of the Democratic
platform on trade issues.

Sweeney said he thinks both complaints are off base. He said Kerry has
offered a very specific health plan with real benefits for working
families. And he said he is confident that, despite his history as a
supporter of liberal trade agreements, Kerry is sincere in promising to
include "core labor standards" in future negotiations.

Stern also said he is not interested in trying to succeed Sweeney as the
head of the AFL-CIO but left the door open to leading a breakaway effort.

He said he is convinced from his experience in the civil rights movement
that "pressure is needed" to bring about real change. "It was not enough
to have Martin Luther King Jr.," Stern said. "You needed Stokely
Carmichael" to raise the threat of disruption unless demands were met.
Carmichael was the flamboyant civil rights activist known for coining
the term "black power."

Stern is perhaps the most outspoken member of the New Unity Partnership,
an alliance of the SEIU, the Laborers' International Union of North
America, the Hotel Employees and Restaurant Employees International
Union, UNITE, and the United Brotherhood of Carpenters. All but the
carpenters union are part of the AFL-CIO. The partnership has repeatedly
warned that declining union membership threatens the viability of
organized labor, especially in the private sector, which has seen a
steady decline in union workers.

On June 21, during the SEIU's convention in San Francisco , Stern caused
a stir throughout organized labor by declaring: "Our employers have
changed, our industries have changed, and the world has certainly
changed, but the labor movement's structure and culture have sadly
stayed the same."

Union activists must "either transform the AFL-CIO or build something
stronger that can really change workers' lives," he said.


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