How much egg is on Randi's face as Trumpka doesn't play ball for Hillary? They may still end up endorsing Hillary, but unlike Randi and the AFT they playing a waiting game.
The largest union federation in America won't be backing Hillary Clinton for now.
Dave Jamieson Labor Reporter, The Huffington Post
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Evan Vucci/ASSOCIATED PRESS
AFL-CIO President Richard Trumka testifies in Washington on April 21, 2015. Trumka told the body's executive council that they wouldn't be holding a vote right away on who to endorse for president.
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The biggest prize in labor endorsements won't be doled out next week
as many people expected, according to an email from the president of the
AFL-CIO labor federation obtained by The Huffington Post.
In his email, Richard Trumka told members of the AFL-CIO executive
council that the body won't be holding a vote on whether to endorse
Democratic presidential candidates Hillary Clinton or Bernie Sanders at
its annual winter meeting in San Diego.
"Following recent discussion at the AFL-CIO’s Executive Committee
meeting and subsequent conversations with many of you, I have concluded
that there is broad consensus for the AFL-CIO to remain neutral in the
presidential primaries for the time being and refrain from endorsing any
candidate at this moment," Trumka said.
The decision is a coup for Sanders' backers within organized labor. Clinton has managed to lock down endorsements from
unions representing a majority of unionized workers in this country.
But the AFL-CIO endorsement is the most potent of all, and it won't be
going to Clinton -- at least, not yet.
Under AFL-CIO procedures, an endorsement by the executive council
needs to be ratified by leaders of the federation's member unions. It's
likely that Clinton doesn't yet have the required votes for an
endorsement to be ratified.
"We're extremely happy" about the decision, said RoseAnn DeMoro, executive director of National Nurses United, a union that has broken away from many other labor groups and endorsed Sanders.
In his email to members, Trumka said the council would "continue its ongoing discussion" about the 2016 campaign.
"[W]e encourage affiliated unions to pursue their own deliberations
with their members and come to their own endorsement decisions, if any,
through open and rigorous debate," he said.
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