Labor not reuniting?

Contrary to earlier reports, it seems that the labor movement might not be partnering with outside unions to form a new federation. Ezra Klein got his hands on an AFL-CIO memo suggesting the coalition is not interested in a merger with Change to Win, a break-off federation led by the Service Employees International Union. From the memo:

Contrary to suggestions in certain press reports, I can assure you that neither these discussions nor the National Labor Coordinating Committee that was announced yesterday as a very short-term vehicle to continue the reunification discussions and to facilitate coordination activities with the non-AFL-CIO unions on some of the major, pending legislative matters, reflect any intention whatsoever for the AFL-CIO to relinquish its responsibilities to an umbrella organization of any kind. The AFL-CIO is America’s Labor Federation and it simply will not yield its role to a coordinating committee of any kind…the AFL-CIO will not be disbanding to start anew [and] it will not be subordinating itself to or merging itself into any other organization.

You can read the whole memo here. Re-unification would give the labor movement a single, louder voice to push for legislative priorities, most notably the Employee Free Choice Act. Change to Win seceded from AFL-CIO in late 2005, arguing that the labor movement should focus more on organizing workers.

The memo seems to leave the door open to Change to Win re-joining AFL-CIO as an affiliate, but only if AFL-CIO remains the parent organization. No “equal partnership,” in other words.

Tags AFL–CIO American studies Change to Win Federation Congress of Industrial Organizations Economy of the United States John Sweeney Labor Trade unions in the United States United States

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