home *** CD-ROM | disk | FTP | other *** search
- Newsgroups: misc.activism.progressive
- Path: sparky!uunet!zaphod.mps.ohio-state.edu!wupost!mont!pencil.cs.missouri.edu!daemon
- From: harelb@math.cornell.edu (Harel Barzilai)
- Subject: LABOR & the Dem. Convention
- Message-ID: <1992Jul30.221416.15627@mont.cs.missouri.edu>
- Followup-To: alt.activism.d
- Originator: daemon@pencil.cs.missouri.edu
- Sender: news@mont.cs.missouri.edu
- Nntp-Posting-Host: pencil.cs.missouri.edu
- Organization: ?
- Date: Thu, 30 Jul 1992 22:14:16 GMT
- Approved: map@pencil.cs.missouri.edu
- Lines: 123
-
- From PeaceNet's "labor.newsline"
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
- ''we who stand with working people and poor have a special burden.
- We must stand for what is right...grounded in the faith that that
- which is morally wrong will never be politically right. But if it
- is morally sound, it will eventually be politically right''
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
- Topic 240 NEWS: Labor and U.S. Democrats
- mstein Labor News & Notes 10:49 am Jul 20, 1992
- From: Michael Stein <mstein@igc.org>
- Subject: NEWS: Labor and U.S. Democrats
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
- /* Written 12:10 am Jul 18, 1992 by newsdesk in cdp:ips.englibrary */
- /* ---------- "UNITED STATES: Labour activists fol" ---------- */
- Copyright Inter Press Service 1992, all rights reserved. Permission to re-
- print within 7 days of original date only with permission from 'newsdesk'.
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
-
- Title: UNITED STATES: Labour activists follow convention closely
-
-
- new york, jul 15 (ips/gin) -- many people in the labour movement
- here have been looking on with interest at the democratic national
- convention, and questioning whether in fact the democrats were
- moving to the right as some observers have suggested think.
-
- phil kwik, a writer for 'labour notes', a michigan-based labour
- newspaper, told ips the democrats have been moving to the right
- because of defeat in the last three presidential elections.
-
- ''labour chiefs are going to realise that the party is moving
- to the right and doesn't care about labour,'' kwik told ips at the
- convention which is nominating arkansas governor bill clinton and
- his running-mate, senator al gore, as the challengers to president
- george bush and vice-president dan quayle.
-
- clinton, according to kwik, is ''the most 'right-wing'
- candidate this party has seen in 20 years and with the choice of
- gore, and the whole tone of the convention, they're not hiding the
- fact they are targeting the white, more affluent, middle class,
- voters''.
-
- kwik viewed two-time presidential candidate jesse jackson's
- speech to the jul. 13-16 convention in a positive light. he called
- jackson's appearance ''an attempt to keep the party together and
- to 'throw a bone' to the left-half of the party''.
-
- jackson, well-known for his roof-raising orations, received
- roars of approval for an emotional address.
-
- rex hardesty, spokesman for the american federation of labour
- and congress of industrial organisations (afl-cio), described the
- jackson speech as ''one of the most powerful messages i've ever
- heard''.
-
- in recent weeks, however, some distance had been created
- between jackson and the more moderate clinton camp. in fact,
- jackson had been told he would not have been allowed to speak at
- the convention if he had not endorsed the clinton, who has been
- dubbed as a ''moderate southern democrat''.
-
- but kwik commented that jackson's typically liberal rhetoric
- had been toned down by the changes in the party.
-
- ''just the very fact that he has decided to back clinton, who
- is moving the whole party to the right, shows jackson is appeasing
- the moderates,'' kwik told ips.
-
- but hardesty called the labels of clinton as a ''moderate'', a
- media invention. (more/ips)
-
- united states: labour activists follow convention closely(2-e)
-
- united states: labour (2)
-
- ''we're quite happy with the platform and are backing the
- democrats 100 percent,'' said the spokesman of one of the
- country's most powerful labour unions.
-
- clinton strategists believe that the defeat of democratic
- candidate michael dukakis in the 1988 presidential election was
- due in part to dukakis' ties to jackson, who is viewed
- suspiciously by the white middle class voters whom the clinton
- campaign is trying to capture.
-
- jackson tuesday night urged the democratic party not to abandon
- the working people and the poor in the party's efforts to appeal
- to more ''centrist'' voters in the november presidential
- elections.
-
- ''we will win only...if we reach out to those in despair and
- those who care; reach across the lines that divide by race, region
- or religion,'' said jackson.
-
- a long-time advocate for the urban poor and working class, he
- proclaimed, ''we must reach out and touch our children. our
- children are embittered and hurt. they live amidst violence and
- rejection, in broken streets, broken glass, broken sidewalks,
- broken families, broken hearts''.
-
- the democrats' new, moderate political stance, away from the
- liberal social spending of past democratic presidencies, is
- particularly noted in their official platform, presented tuesday
- night as 'a new covenant with the american people'.
-
- the platform states: ''we can no longer afford business as
- usual -- neither the policies of the last 12 years of tax breaks
- for the rich, mismanagement, lack of leadership and cuts in
- services for the middle class and the poor, nor the adoption of
- new programs and new spending without new think''.
-
- but jackson tried to revive some of the liberal heart of the
- old-style democratic party. ''history will remember us not for our
- positioning, but for our principles -- not by our move to the
- political centre, left or right, but rather by our grasp on the
- moral and ethical centre of wrong and right,'' he stated to his
- cheering audience.
-
- ''we who stand with working people and poor have a special
- burden. we must stand for what is right...grounded in the faith
- that that which is morally wrong will never be politically right.
- but if it is morally sound, it will eventually be politically
- right,'' he said. (end/ips/np/ll/yjc/92)
-