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About Northwest labor press. (Portland , Ore.) 1987-current | View Entire Issue (Aug. 7, 2015)
PAGE 8 | August 7, 2015 | NORTHWEST LABOR PRESS First union out of the box: American Federation of Teachers endorses Clinton WASHINGTON, D.C.—The executive council of the Ameri- can Federation of Teachers (AFT) voted overwhelmingly July 11 to endorse Hillary Clin- ton in the Democratic primary for president of the United States. The AFT is the first na- tional union to endorse a candi- date in the 2016 Democratic presidential primary. “Hillary Clinton is a tested leader who shares our values, is supported by our members, and is prepared for a tough fight on behalf of students, families and communities,” said AFT Presi- dent Randi Weingarten. The AFT’s endorsement comes a month after Clinton at- tended an executive council meeting in Washington, D.C. At that meeting, she said, “It is just dead wrong to make teachers the scapegoats for all of soci- ety’s problems. Where I come from, teachers are the solution. And I strongly believe that unions are part of the solution, too.” The AFT said all potential and announced candidates were invited to complete a question- naire, and those who returned the questionnaire were invited to meet with the council. That in- cluded Democratic candidates Bernie Sanders and Martin O’- Malley. No Republican candi- dates responded to the invita- tion. The union said it polled its members twice, took multiple surveys, and conducted two telephone town halls before de- ciding which primary candidate to support. The top issues mem- bers raised were jobs and the economy and public education. “Seventy-nine percent of our members who vote in Demo- cratic primaries said we should endorse a candidate. And by more than a 3-to-1 margin, these members said the AFT should endorse Clinton,” the union said in a press release. The AFT’s 1.6 million mem- bers will be a powerful force for Clinton. Leading up to Novem- ber 2016, AFT members are ex- pected to make more than 1 mil- lion phone calls and knock on more than 500,000 doors. Wu named director of Portland Jobs with Justice Portland Jobs with Justice has a new leader. In April, Diana Pei Wu became executive director of the faith-labor-community coalition, which is known for its frequent labor solidarity demon- strations. Wu, 41, has a bachelor’s de- gree from Duke University, a master’s from Princeton, and doctorate from University of California, Berkeley. She also has a lengthy movement résumé and has been an activist since her teens. Wu grew up in Stamford, Connecticut, as the daughter of Chinese immigrants, and at the age of 15 organized fellow Chi- nese students to march in protest of the 1989 massacre at Tianan- men Square. In November 1999, she protested the World Trade Or- ganization summit in the streets of Seattle—wearing a superhero costume as part of an ad hoc group called the Hall of Justice. That was her first real contact with the labor movement, and she calls it a formative moment. In 2009, she was among dozens arrested in Emeryville, California, for blocking the street in front of a hotel where hotel workers with UNITE HERE were fighting for a living wage ordinance. As an instructor at Antioch College, she was part of an unsuccessful unionizing effort. As co-director of the ac- tivist training group Ruckus So- ciety, she led trainings for the California Faculty Association, a union affiliated of the Ameri- can Association of University Professors (AAUP). Wu also worked on af- fordable housing, im- migrant rights, and many other causes. She moved to Portland in Diana Pei Wu 2013 to be the organizing director with the Asian Pacific American Net- work of Oregon (APANO). Now she’ll head one of the largest and oldest chapters of Jobs with Justice, overseeing a staff of three and a coalition made up of over 100 member faith, labor, and community or- ganizations. “As a queer woman of color I’m really thankful for the chance to lead an important coalition of faith labor and com- munity,” Wu told the Labor Press. Wu succeeds Karly Edwards, who served as executive director from October 2013 until May 2014, when she left to become state director of the Oregon Working Families Party. And Edwards followed Margaret Butler, who helped found the group and then served as the group’s executive director for 16 years. Butler, a member of Com- munications Workers of Amer- ica Local 7901, is now executive coordinator at AAUP-Oregon. AFT supported Clinton dur- ing her 2008 campaign for pres- ident as well. UA gives $1 million to Hillary PAC The American Federation of Teachers was the first labor union to endorse Hillary Clinton in her current run for president, but not the first to contribute to her 2016 campaign. Two other unions have donated to Priorities USA Action, a super PAC that’s backing Clinton: The United As- sociation of Plumbers and Fitters Political Action Committee con- tributed $1 million on June 30, and the International Association of Fire Fighters contributed $50,000 on May 5. 140