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Public Employee Press
AFSCME conference: organizing
for victory in 08
|  DC 37 members
at a demonstration for the Employee Free Choice Act, a bill that would allow workers
to organize and join unions without harassment.
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By DIANE S. WILLIAMS
|  AFSCME President
Gerald W. McEntee addresses 2,000 activists at a leadership conference in Washington,
D.C.
| With the goals
to set the national agenda and choose a winning White House candidate in 2008,
the American Federation of State, County and Municipal Employees held its Take
Back America leadership conference in Washington, June 18 through 20, and
2,000 activists from across the nation participated. We are ready
to change America and stand up for whats best for this country, said
AFSCME President Gerald W. McEntee. We Make America Happen is the
unions new slogan, because we are the American workers who have dedicated
our lives to making our nation live up to its promises, he boomed.
AFSCME, DC 37s 1.4 million-member national union, is asserting labors
voice in the national dialogue setting as top concerns for American voters
in 2008 such issues as public sector jobs, a swift end to the war and a safe return
of troops from Iraq, protecting Social Security and pensions, universal health
care and the right to organize.
|  Leading
the pledge is Judith Arroyo of L. 436.
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The three-day conference featured a forum with five presidential
candidates: U.S. Sens. Hillary Clinton, John Edwards and Barak Obama, Congress
member Dennis Kucinich, and New Mexico Gov. BillRichardson. MSNBC anchor Chris
Matthews moderated the forum, which MSNBC broadcast. AFSCMEs invitation
to the Republican candidates went unanswered. AFSCMEs
multi-pronged agenda also includes raising $35 million for PEOPLE, the unions
grass roots political fundraising program through its Most Valuable Participant,
or MVP, program. This new PEOPLE initiative asks members to give $2 a week, or
about $100 annually. Nurse Judith Arroyo, president of Local 436, pledged
$100 a week to PEOPLE. In my work I see firsthand the impact budget cuts
have: I see seniors who have to decide between food and medicine, and it hurts,
she said. I believe in leading by example and that the cause is worth it.
Several DC 37 members pledged to sign up co-workers and friends as PEOPLE MVPs.
|  Veronica Montgomery-Costa,
DC 37 and Local 372 president, with House Speaker Nancy Pelosi on day three of
the conference, where Pelosi was guest speaker.  AFSCME Secretary-Treasurer
Bill Lucy, center, with Local 1549 President Eddie Rodriguez, right, who is also
an AFSCME International Vice President.
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Nancy Pelosi, the new speaker of the House of Representatives,
recounted labors 2006 political successes, included electing labor-friendly
candidates, gaining a Democratic majority in Congress and realizing the first
minimum wage hike in a decade. On June 19, about 1,500 conference attendees
braved 102-degree heat to rally on the Washington Mall for the Employee Free Choice
Act, which would allow workers to organize and join unions without fear of intimidation
or harassment from the employer. The bill passed in the House of Representatives,
but as PEP went to press, President Bush threatened to veto it. In
a wrap-up session, McEntee and AFSCME Secretary-Treasurer Bill Lucy took questions
from the audience. McEntee said unions have the people power to take back America.
We are going to do what it takes to win, he said, so no court
in America can take our victory away.
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