Labor Leader Joins Bernie Sanders' Campaign, Citing Clinton's 'Silence' On Fast Track
Bernie Sanders' Campaign Just Got A Big Boost
WASHINGTON -- The longtime leader of one of the countrys most powerful labor unions is joining the Democratic presidential campaign of Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-Vt.), and he says presumed frontrunner Hillary Clinton made it an easy call.
Larry Cohen, outgoing president of the Communications Workers of America, told The Huffington Post
he will serve as an unpaid volunteer stumping for Sanders as the Vermont senator seeks the Democratic nomination. One of the main factors in his decision, Cohen said, was Clintons equivocation on granting President Barack Obama so-called fast-track authority on his mammoth trade deal.
I did everything I knew how to do to get Clinton to speak out on fast track, and she wouldnt, said Cohen, whose 10 years leading CWA came to an end in June. "We begged her to speak out.
There was a million ways she could have done it. ... Why was she silent on this?"
Labor unions, environmental groups and most Democrats rallied against giving Obama fast-track authority on the Trans-Pacific Partnership. TPP, as it's known, is a multinational trade pact that the White House and Republicans say will boost trade between the U.S. and 11 Pacific Rim countries. Progressive groups worry it will send more jobs overseas, worsen income inequality and include weak protections for workers in developing countries. The approval of fast track last week prevents Congress from amending or filibustering the deal that the White House is negotiating.
TPP has put Clinton, Obama's former secretary of state, in an uncomfortable position with progressives. Though she once referred to TPP as a possible "gold standard" as a trade deal, she has avoided staking out a firm position on the trade pact as a candidate and hesitated on the question of fast track. In an interview in June, she said she would "probably not" grant fast track, "because thats a process vote, and I dont want to say thats the same as TPP."
Cohen, a staunch progressive, said Clinton's handling of the trade issue helped clarify why he wanted to get behind Sanders, whose candidacy is still considered a long shot despite standing-room-only crowds he's been drawing early on the trail. Sanders has been a vocal critic of giving Obama fast-track trade authority.
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