WASHINGTON(AP)
Organized labor is paying more attention to Republican John
McCain as Democrat Barack Obama solidifies his status as the
front-runner in the Democratic contest against Hillary Rodham
Clinton.
The AFL-CIO, which has not endorsed anyone in the Democratic
primary, announced Wednesday that it is sending more than 6,000 of
its people to more than 22 states during the next two weekends to
talk to more than 200,000 union voters about McCain.
"Senator McCain's economic path would lead to disaster
for America's working families," said John Sweeney,
president of the AFL-CIO, the nation's largest labor
organization.
Meanwhile, the nation's largest union, the Service Employees
International Union, is increasing its focus on the likely
Republican presidential nominee. The union's political action
committee is already running commercials critical of McCain's
health care plan.
The SEIU, which endorsed Obama, has called the Illinois senator
"the presumptive nominee."
"We've had a long process and the outcome is now
clear," said Anna Burger, the SEIU's secretary treasurer.
"The Democratic Party should come together to focus on winning
in November."
But Clinton's union supporters say they're solidly
behind her.
If the New York senator can win in West Virginia, Kentucky,
Oregon and Puerto Rico _ the next four of the six remaining
primaries _ then she can make a case to the Democratic
superdelegates that she's the best candidate, said Gerald
McEntee, president of the American Federation of State, County and
Municipal Employees.
"The end of the road is not winning the nomination,"
McEntee said. "The end of the road is getting the victory in
November ... We just believe Obama has a higher mountain to climb
than Clinton to beat McCain."
Some of Clinton's most powerful union supporters _ AFSCME,
the American Federation of Teachers and the International
Association of Machinists and Aerospace Workers _ have re-declared
their allegiance to Clinton and said they would continue to work
for her.
"The answer is that the fighting Machinists are still
fighting," IAM spokesman Rick Sloan said. "Full speed
ahead!"
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