A tight Clinton-Obama contest has raised the costs and stakes for organized labor. And no place higher than in Nevada.
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LAS
VEGAS
(By
Tom
Hamburger
and
Maura
Reynolds,
LA
Times)
January
14,
2008
—
The
tight
race
between
Hillary
Rodham
Clinton
and
Barack
Obama
has
opened
surprisingly
deep
and
bitter
divisions
in
the
ranks
of
organized
labor,
as
rival
union
leaders
fly
planeloads
of
last-minute
volunteers
into
key
states,
accuse
each
other
of
trying
to
disenfranchise
members,
and
even
launch
open
attacks
on
rival
Democratic
candidates.
In
Nevada,
which
holds
its
caucuses
Saturday,
unions
backing
Clinton
are
crying
foul
because
some
caucuses
will
be
in
casinos
and
hotels
where
a
pro-Obama
union's
members
predominate
—
helping
that
union's
members
and
potentially
discouraging
others.
Meanwhile,
inside
the
American
Federation
of
State,
County
and
Municipal
Employees,
which
has
endorsed
the
New
York
senator
and
is
leading
the
charge
for
her
in
Nevada,
several
officers
are
protesting
the
union's
decision
to
run
negative
ads
against
the
Illinois
senator.
"This
race
has
taken
on
more
intensity
than
we
have
seen
in
the
past,"
said
Karen
Ackerman,
AFL-CIO
political
director
and
a
veteran
of
numerous
presidential
campaigns.
Other
union
leaders
lament
the
vitriolic
conflicts
they
say
are
developing
between
unions
and
worry
that
the
effects
could
linger
into
the
November
campaign.
Organized
labor
is
probably
the
single-most
important
part
of
the
Democratic
Party's
election
machinery,
providing
thousand
of
campaign
workers
and
millions
of
dollars
for
sophisticated
get-out-the-vote
efforts
and
others.
Though
unions
have
divided
over
presidential
candidates
in
the
past,
labor
insiders
say
the
closeness
of
the
Clinton-Obama
race
has
made
this
year's
divisions
unusually
bitter.
It
has
also
made
the
process
much
more
expensive
and
thus
raised
the
stakes
for
union
leaders
and
their
members.
Many
labor
leaders,
including
Ackerman,
say
this
year's
competition
is
healthy,
a
sign
of
how
badly
Democrats
want
to
retake
the
White
House.
They
predict
unions'
support
for
the
Democratic
nominee
will
be
all
the
stronger
in
November.
That
may
prove
true.
Democrats'
hostility
toward
the
Bush
administration
is a
powerful
force
for
unity.
But
pre-nomination
splits
have
not
always
healed.
In
2080,
when
Sen.
Edward
M.
Kennedy
of
Massachusetts
challenged
President
Carter
for
the
party's
nomination,
the
split
contributed
to
Ronald
Reagan's
victory.
And
Richard
Nixon
defeated
Hubert
Humphrey
after
Democrats
split
over
the
Vietnam
War.
If
Obama
becomes
the
nominee,
"it
could
dampen
enthusiasm"
among
Clinton's
union
backers
because
of
gnawing
public
disagreements,
said
Lawrence
R.
Scanlon
Jr.,
the
political
director
of
AFSCME,
which
had
already
flown
100
paid
organizers
to
Nevada
and
planned
to
add
100
more.
Despite
his
concern,
Scanlon
was
optimistic
about
November.
"Time
heals
wounds,"
he
said.
"There
is
no
choice
for
us
among
the
Republicans."
Still,
as
rival
union
groups
jockey
to
help
their
chosen
candidates,
elbows
can
fly.
Inter-union
tension
may
be
most
visible
in
Nevada,
where
Clinton
and
Obama
hope
for
gains
after
splitting
Iowa
and
New
Hampshire.
And
Nevada,
which
this
year
will
be
the
third
state
to
select
Democratic
delegates,
ranks
among
the
most
unionized
Western
states
with
more
than
13%
of
all
workers
belonging
to
labor
organizations.
That's
why
AFSCME
is
pulling
out
all
the
stops
for
Clinton,
and
Obama
hopes
for
a
major
lift
from
the
endorsement
last
week
of
the
Culinary
Workers
of
America,
which
has
a
substantially
larger
presence
in
Nevada
than
any
other
union.
It
represents
about
60,000
hotel,
casino
and
other
service
workers.
Nevada
has
only
500,000
registered
Democrats.
The
Culinary
Workers'
ability
to
organize
and
deliver
votes
has
been
legendary
in
the
labor
movement.
Under
their
contract,
its
members
are
eligible
for
as
long
as
six
months
of
leave
from
their
jobs
to
do
political
work;
the
union
pays
their
salaries
during
that
time.
As
of
this
weekend,
about
200
members
were
working
as
paid
organizers
for
Obama
—
close
to
the
number
AFSCME
will
have
working
for
Clinton.
The
most
vivid
example
of
the
Culinary
Workers'
potential
impact
may
turn
out
to
be
in
the
nine
caucus
sessions
held
in
casinos.
The
arrangement
was
approved
publicly
by
the
state
Democratic
Party
months
before
the
union
endorsed
Obama.
But
opponents
are
now
raising
concerns
because
nearly
all
unionized
casino
workers
are
Culinary
Workers
members.
Members
of
the
union
will
get
time
off
—
some
with
pay
— to
take
part
in
the
caucuses.
The
reaction
of
unions
that
don't
support
Obama
has
been
sharp.
The
Nevada
State
Education
Assn.,
which
has
not
endorsed
a
candidate,
filed
suit
late
Friday,
saying
the
casino
caucuses
provided
an
unfair
advantage
to
the
Culinary
Workers.
Officials
in
other
unions,
while
not
joining
in
the
suit,
denounced
the
process
—
some
in
virulent
terms.
"The
deck
is
stacked
in
Vegas.
The
fix
is
in,"
said
Rick
Sloan,
communications
director
for
the
International
Assn.
of
Machinists
and
Aerospace
Workers,
which
has
endorsed
Clinton.
By
holding
caucuses
in
hotel
casinos,
"they
specially
invite
all
the
casino
workers
to
participate.
They
didn't
mention
the
workers
at
McCarren,"
Las
Vegas'
airport
where
the
machinists
union
dominates.
"They
didn't
mention
the
post
office.
Or
the
workers
at
other
sites"
where
unions
have
backed
Clinton.
"I
have
never
seen
a
situation
so
tilted,
so
one-sided,"
toward
one
union
and
one
candidate,
said
Sloan,
who
has
worked
in
presidential
campaigns
since
2072.
Obama's
backers
rejected
such
charges.
They
noted
that
the
nine
on-site
caucuses
were
designed
to
help
shift
workers
—
union
and
nonunion
—
participate
in
the
presidential
selection
process.
And
they
pointed
out
that
any
shift
worker
within
a 2
1/2
-mile
radius
of
the
casino
caucuses
could
participate.
Obama's
supporters
said
any
effort
to
eliminate
the
casino
caucuses
would
prevent
workers
from
participating.
"This
is
despicable,"
said
D.
Taylor,
secretary-treasurer
of
the
Culinary
Workers,
denouncing
the
lawsuit.
He
accused
the
teachers
union
of
"tactics
that
are
like
those
the
Republicans
used
to
suppress
minority
votes
in
Florida."
At a
campaign
stop
in
Reno,
Clinton
told
reporters
she
hoped
the
suit
would
be
resolved
quickly.
Meantime,
she
said,
"I'm
just
going
to
campaign
as
hard
as I
can
here
in
Nevada."
On
Saturday,
the
Culinary
Workers
held
the
first
in a
series
of
"mock
caucus"
events
in
Spanish
for
the
40%
of
its
members
who
are
Latino.
At
the
same
time,
pro-Clinton
forces
rallied
at
the
painters
union
hall
where
breakfast
speakers
were
lined
up
to
exhort
workers
to
go
door-to-door
in
every
Nevada
county
on
her
behalf.
The
divisions
were
visible
Friday
too.
Hours
before
hundreds
of
Culinary
Workers
workers
joined
Obama
in
chanting
"Sí,
se
puede"
—
"Yes,
we
can"
in
Spanish
— a
small
group
of
members
waving
Clinton
signs
protested
the
endorsement
outside
the
union
hall.
The
intensity
of
the
struggle
between
the
Culinary
Workers
and
AFSCME
is
matched
by
controversies
inside
AFSCME.
Seven
board
members
have
protested
the
degree
to
which
their
union
is
backing
Clinton,
including
running
what
they
described
as
negative
ads
in
Iowa
and
New
Hampshire
about
Obama's
healthcare
proposal.
The
seven
wrote
union
President
Gerald
W.
McEntee
on
Jan.
4
saying
they
were
"shocked
and
appalled
to
learn
that
our
union
. .
. is
squandering
precious
resources
to
wage
a
costly
and
deceptive
campaign
to
oppose
Barack
Obama."
They
said
the
ads
threatened
unity
among
labor
needed
to
defeat
Republicans
in
November
and
undermined
the
union's
reputation.
Obama's
supporters
say
his
position
on
healthcare
is
closer
than
Clinton's
to
the
union's
own
position,
which
opposes
a
universal
mandate
such
as
she
has
endorsed.
AFSCME,
which
has
only
a
few
thousand
members
in
Nevada,
is
relying
heavily
on
paid
workers
from
outside
the
state,
a
practice
virtually
all
national
unions
employ
when
they
need
reinforcements.
But
the
Culinary
Workers'
Taylor
criticized
the
scale
of
the
effort:
"I
have
never
heard
of
such
an
intensive
member
education
movement
in
my
life."
Scanlon
said
his
members
were
reaching
out
to
current
and
retired
AFSCME
members,
contacting
them
at
their
homes
in
all
parts
of
the
state.
While
top
officials
attack
other
unions
and
candidates,
the
rank
and
file
often
adopt
the
demeanor
of
Nelda
Hoover,
a
retired
social
worker
living
in
Las
Vegas
and
helping
AFSCME
drum
up
support
for
Clinton.
The
people
on
her
call
list
are
all
members
of
AFSCME
or
its
union
allies
who
support
Clinton.
She
tells
them
the
location
of
their
precinct
and
gives
some
guidance
about
how
the
Nevada
caucus
works.
If
the
person
on
the
other
end
of
the
line
gives
her
a
chance,
she'll
add
that
AFSCME
"is
encouraging
its
members
to
vote
for
Hillary."





