|
Drill here, drill now |
The left is not one big happy family, as
The Hill explains:
Harold Schaitberger, president of the International Association of Fire Fighters (IAFF), said he sees "great value" in labor finding different groups to align with politically. But the federation needs to stick to representing workers rather than become a social movement itself, according to the union chief.
"However, to say that we are going to grow this labor movement by some kind of formal partnership, membership, status, place in this federation, I am against. This is the American Federation of Labor. We are supposed to be representing workers and workers; interests," Schaitberger said. "We are not going to be the American Federation of Progressive and Liberal Organizations."
Others in labor, especially in the building and construction sectors, have aggressively pushed back against the proposal. Those unions have clashed repeatedly with environmental groups over building the Keystone XL pipeline.
"Does that mean we are going to turn energy policy of the AFL-CIO over to the Sierra Club? I have concern about that, as well as I should," said Terry O’Sullivan, president of the Laborers’ International Union of North America (LIUNA).
Technorati tags: politics economy government energy keystone xl news Canada current affairs Obama Barack Obama jobs
No comments:
Post a Comment