Unions and Card-check M.I.A. at Dem's First Debate
Notwithstanding the previous enthusiastic stumping done by the Democratic front-runners for the party's Presidential nomination, there was not a single question at last night's televised debate regarding the state of labor relations in the American economy. Not one question about the Employee Free Choice Act -- the AFL-CIO's "No. 1 priority" -- or about the significance of organized labor to our economy.
Only former Senator John Edwards (D-NC) even made reference to labor unions, a primary Democratic electoral constituency:I am proud of what I've been doing for the last few years. You know, I've been all over the country, organizing workers into unions and raising the minimum wage, and also working at a poverty center at the University of North Carolina.
And that was in response to a question about his personal lucrative legal representation of hedge funds, not regarding national economic or labor policy.
Indeed, Sen. Hillary Clinton (D-NY) declined to take a pro-union swing at a softball opportunity on Wal-Mart:
Nothing about the oft-peddled accusations of anti-union behavior by the retail giant. Nothing about the frequently repeated, but rarely supported, plain statement that union organizing is the key to empowering the middle class. Nothing about the horrendous special-interest payback bill they are all hoping becomes law without any debate.






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