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- THE WEEK, Page 14NATIONBush Plays His Antiunion Card
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- Big Labor backs Clinton, and the President smacks Big Labor
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- George Bush developed a sudden interest in labor law last
- Monday, the very day that the AFL-CIO leadership endorsed Bill
- Clinton for the Democratic presidential nomination. Bush issued
- a directive ordering all federal contractors to notify their
- non-union employees in union shops that they may decline to have
- their dues diverted to political candidates they do not support.
- Bush broke no new ground here -- the Supreme Court established
- that principle in a 1988 ruling. That is why the Bush
- pronouncement had the sound of an election-year effort to
- placate the restless right wing of the Republican Party. Bush
- will need conservative support in the South especially, where
- right-to-work states will be crucial battlegrounds. Clinton's
- home state of Arkansas is one.
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- The Bush order does not carry much throw weight. While the
- White House declares it will affect as many as 3 million
- workers, the AFL-CIO claims it will involve fewer than 1
- million. And though it will not greatly diminish the potency of
- union political activities, it does send a message. Asked if he
- was engaging in union busting, Bush responded with a straight
- face, "We enforce individual rights." Bush, countered AFL-CIO
- president Lane Kirkland, "has given hypocrisy a bad name."
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