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- BUSINESS, Page 56LABOR UNIONSThe Good Guy Finally Won
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- In a historic upset, the Teamsters elect a reforming president
- who promises that the days of Mob ties are over
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- When Ronald Carey declared that he would run for the
- presidency of the Teamsters Union two years ago, most labor
- experts considered the reform candidate a do-gooder with little
- chance of winning. A virtual unknown outside the New York City
- borough of Queens, where he heads a local chapter representing
- 6,600 truck drivers, Carey did not have the support of regional
- union officials. Moreover, his rivals outspent him 5 to 1.
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- Against all odds, Carey emerged victorious last week in
- the biggest election in U.S. labor history. Carey, 55, rolled
- up 49% of the vote to beat two insiders, including R.V. Durham,
- the front runner, who had been hand picked by the union's
- bosses and backed by a campaign war chest of $2 million.
- Although only a quarter of the Teamsters' 1.6 million members
- participated in the vote, the first in which the rank and file
- was allowed to vote directly for the president, many observupset
- victory as a solid mandate to clean house.
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- Besides being the largest private-sector union in the
- U.S., the International Brotherhood of Teamsters has also been
- the most Mob influenced. Three of its past five presidents were
- sentenced to prison. In 1988 the Justice Department hit the
- union with a racketeering lawsuit. To settle the case, the
- union agreed to let the government monitor day-to-day operations
- and organize a secret-ballot election. In the past, a small
- group of union insiders had chosen the Teamster president.
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- Carey vowed to rid the union of Mob influence. His most
- effective campaign poster showed three pigs with their snouts
- buried in a trough of dollar bills. It read, THEY'RE FEASTING
- ON YOUR DUES. Carey painted his opponents as part of "the Old
- Guard" that was controlled by mobsters. In his victory speech
- he reiterated his promise: "To those who think that the Mafia
- is in charge, the party's over." Carey's first order as union
- president was to cut the job's $225,000 annual salary to
- $175,000.
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- The Carey victory may signal a new round of union
- militancy. During his campaign, the former delivery driver for
- United Parcel Service tapped growing rank-and-file resentment
- by railing against union concessions to employers. The union,
- which has seen the real wages of its members decline during the
- 1980s, has been alone among big unions in endorsing Republican
- Presidents. Carey says that policy will change.
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