Just in:
Most UAE expats under-insured, reveals survey // PRHK 2026 Benchmark Report highlights how Hong Kong’s IPO revival, AI, and the GBA are reshaping the SAR’s PR industry // Cheap RAT spreads through Telegram channels // Payments giants back shared Open USD stablecoin // Taiwan International Plant-Based Festival Launches in Singapore: High-End Culinary Partnerships and Diplomatic Exhibitions Shape Premium Agri-Product Branding // Bracell Welcomes Fernando Branco’s Appointment to Lead ABAF and Reinforces Commitment to Sustainable Forestry Development in Bahia // Bid To Rebuild Bengal To Its Old Glory Is Welcome, Though Difficult // Abu Dhabi starts new Saadiyat arts landmark // DSQ Real Estate Highlights Post-Purchase Advisory as a Growing Need for Overseas Dubai Property Owners // Binzhou’s Leap from Manufacturing to Intelligent Manufacturing // Alibaba Cloud gains edge in agentic AI race // World’s First Commercial Multimodal LLM for Cultural Tourism Enters Broad Application // Tehran blocks French role in Hormuz clearance // Afogreen Build Highlights Growing Adoption of Building Performance Modelling in Australia’s Sustainability-Driven Construction Sector // Why your AI transformation can fail — and it’s not the technology // OpenAI limits Sol launch amid cyber risks // China’s digital hub Hangzhou hosts conference on AI, OPC // Dubai advances Gold Line contractor race // Bangladesh-China Joint Statement On Teesta Cooperation Poses A Big Challenge To India // Hawaii tests plastic waste in roads //

Clinton got union money, but Trump won many workers’ hearts and minds

AP 16127002730625

Several union leaders in recent days said the signs of many members’ reluctance to support Clinton were visible before the election, and the Democratic Party must reconsider its approach to working-class voters.

Harold Schaitberger, the general president of the International Association of Fire Fighters, said its politically active union didn’t endorse either Clinton or Trump because internal polling showed its members were too divided. It was the first time since 1976 that the union has failed to endorse in a presidential election.

ADVERTISEMENT

“We were going to do significant harm to our union” by endorsing a presidential candidate, he told the Center for Public Integrity.

Instead, the International Association of Fire Fighters gave to committees supporting Democratic congressional candidates. Since the election, Schaitberger said he’s had “candid” discussions with other members of the AFL-CIO’s executive council.

“I’m not going to speak for anybody else, but I can tell you this: It wasn’t just my members that were part of a number of the votes behind Trump,” he said.

Schaitberger also said he found it “disturbing” that “some of the Democratic voices speak about blue-collar workers, white working-class non-college educated whites, almost in a disparaging way.”

The reality now, Schaitberger said, is a Democratic party that lost the White House, both houses of Congress, hundreds of state legislative seats and governorships.

“There needs to be a lot of soul searching,” he said, and discussions about how to maintain a progressive, diverse coalition without ignoring “blue-collar white union members who have felt disenfranchised and angry and in many ways left on the sidelines.”

The International Longshoremen’s Association endorsed Clinton’s bid early, in October 2015.

Nonetheless, James McNamara, a spokesman for the union, said the membership was probably evenly divided between Trump and Clinton.

“If we posted something up on Facebook … you had comments that were calling our endorsement into question. You had just as many supporting our endorsement,” he said.

At the rally in Upper Senate Park Wednesday, other union officials, too, acknowledged some of their members had found Trump’s message appealing.

“As I traveled around the country campaigning for Hillary Clinton, no doubt, many of our members voted for Donald Trump,” said Oscar Owens, the international secretary-treasurer for the Amalgamated Transit Union. “Based on what he was saying he is going to do for America, to do for working people.”

John Costa, an international vice president for the Amalgamated Transit Union, agreed, and said he had sensed a lack of excitement for Clinton.

“The Democratic party needs to do a better job in their process,” he said. “They have to listen to the people. They have to listen to the young people and the workers, not the lobbyists.”

One prominent Democrat who agrees? Vice President Joseph Biden.

In October, he sounded a warning note about working-class voters, saying on MSNBC that “we don’t associate with their difficulty anymore.”

Source link



Notice an issue?

Arabian Post strives to deliver the most accurate and reliable information to its readers. If you believe you have identified an error or inconsistency in this article, please don't hesitate to contact our editorial team at editor[at]thearabianpost[dot]com. We are committed to promptly addressing any concerns and ensuring the highest level of journalistic integrity.


ADVERTISEMENT
Social Media Auto Publish Powered By : XYZScripts.com