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View Full Version : Ohioans Elect Two Dozen City Councilors on Independent Labor Ticket



Le Socialiste
16th December 2013, 08:36
I don't think the political ramifications of this should be overstated, but we should take note of it nevertheless:


Union-dense Lorain County, Ohio, is now home to an independent labor slate of two dozen newly elected city councilors—recruited and run by the central labor council there. All labor’s candidates had strong showings last month, and all but two were elected.

“This was a step we took reluctantly,” said Lorain County AFL-CIO President Harry Williamson. “When the leaders of the [Democratic] Party just took us for granted and tried to roll over the rights of working people here, we had to stand up.”

A series of disputes between organized labor and the Democratic leadership led the labor council and its allies to recruit and run their own slate in this Democratic stronghold, home of Ohio’s largest steel and auto facilities.

‘The Final Straw’

The unions had worked for years to build a labor-community partnership that resulted in a Lorain city Project Labor Agreement (PLA), which required that city contracts be staffed by at least 75 percent local and 9 percent minority workers, and unionized during the period of the project.

But Mayor Chase Ritenauer pushed the city council to repeal it.

“It took us three years to negotiate this historic agreement,” said Joe Thayer, marketing director of the Sheet Metal Workers Union, “and it took them three days to kill it!”

The city council voted 8-2 in favor of the repeal. It was reported that an estimated $29.6 million in city road and water projects were soon to be awarded.

“Before we had the PLA, Lorain regularly hired contractors from outside the city and county,” said Rick Lucente, councilman and Steelworkers member, who voted no on repeal. “Repealing the PLA is taking work away from people here and revenue away from our city.”

Another big fight was over a contract dispute involving the Teamsters and the city. Mayor Ritenauer, with some of the council members, borrowed city trucks from nearby Elyria—another Democratic stronghold—and actually worked on the trucks to try to break the sanitation workers’ strike.

“That was the final straw,” according to Williamson. “You just plain do not cross a picket line and scab! There has to be a line in the sand.”

Teacher Beats Commerce Captain

So the labor council decided to run its own slate of two dozen candidates, mostly union members, for city council seats in the towns of Lorain, Amherst, Avon, and Avon Lake.

Union teacher and newly elected Eighth Ward Council member Josh Thornsberry triumphed over incumbent Frank DeTillio, who is also president of the Lorain County Chamber of Commerce. “This is just a first step,” Thornsberry told the labpr council, “but we will be taking many together in the future.”

The union crowd at the labor council meeting, some in “Independent Labor Party” shirts the council had ordered for the campaign, greeted the victorious candidates with loud cheers and optimism. The council has ordered more shirts to supplement the 500 used during the campaign.

“We didn’t pick this fight, but we had to finish it,” said Thayer. “We need to build stronger alliances, work with more friends. Even if we put our issues on a back burner to help and fight for our friends in the communities, we need to keep reaching out and show that our interests are the same as others’. If we do that, then we’ll grow.”

The Lorain central labor council is a wide federation, including unions both in and out of the AFL-CIO. A local immigrant rights organization is slated to affiliate, and a student-labor group at nearby Oberlin College will be brought on board, too. Over the years the council has often fought alongside community forces—including defeating a Walmart coming in, working against racist attacks, and working for minority hiring.

‘We Can Elect Our Own’

In an angry letter, Lorain County Democratic Party Chair Tony Giardini called for Democratic union leaders to resign from their party posts as precinct captains.

The meeting decided not to publicly reply, but to offer to buy a table at the upcoming Party dinner and give all proceeds to Matt Lundy, a progressive Democratic state representative now running for the only GOP-held county commissioner position.

“Running independent wasn’t our first choice, but hopefully this can help bring the Democratic leaders to their senses,” said Machinist Art Thomas. “If not, we’ve shown them that we can work with our friends and elect our own!”

http://labornotes.org/2013/12/ohioans-elect-two-dozen-city-councilors-independent-labor-ticket

Ocean Seal
16th December 2013, 08:45
Despite the fact that the AFL-CIO is a brown union, and prefers to have written up negotiations with the bourgeoisie, they are still considerably better than the democrats and them breaking ties with the democrats is a good thing for ideology if nothing else.

erupt
16th December 2013, 19:05
Could be a foothold, in the States that is, on the way toward more militant labor organization.

Working class Democrats are extremely loyal, so if they did this, and others notice this, maybe they'll finally wean themselves off the Democrat's teat.

Any information on this party? And please don't bombard me saying "reformist bourgeois parliamentarians"; I know this already...even the Bolsheviks had to start somewhere and debate, and we know much of this was opposition to the Mensheviks, Social-Revolutionaries, and Anarchists.

Ethics Gradient, Traitor For All Ages
16th December 2013, 20:48
The county seat is Elyria which is almost a mini Detroit. You walk around their downtown area at noon and there's literally no one to be seen on the street, it's fucking creepy. It's cool that they ditched their current crop of bureaucrats but union bureaucrats doesn't seem like a big step up.

Le Socialiste
16th December 2013, 20:49
I don't know much about the 'party', I would expect you could find more via the link I provided. Simply googling the subject could yield some answers, too, though a cursory search only showed articles with the same-ish title as the one I posted.

I should also say I agree with you in part (erupt). What matters is where things go from here. Are they going to simply use this as a means of pressuring Democrats in the area 'to do the right thing', or something else? I'll hold out hope for the latter, but we'll have to watch what happens in the coming months.

Red Commissar
16th December 2013, 23:23
I remember awhile ago AFL-CIO's leader Trumka made statements to the effect that the labor movement needed their own party owing to the Democrats' failure to pass the Employee Free Choice Act (this being back when the Dems controlled both houses of Congress), but nothing came of that then.

I suppose what's good here though is that this was independently organized, rather than being co-opted by a Republican as has been happening in the midwest. That being said the article points out that the group did end up contributing to the fundraiser (by buying a table at a campaign dinner) to a "progressive" Democrat running for a state-level office. So they might just try to be pressuring the state leadership by controlling local municipal positions currently.

That being said, it does present a different way of going about things that came out to produce some sort of result, as opposed to the way the Democrats tried to co-opt the Wisconsin protests against Governor Walker that were fizzled out into a recall campaign.