A Union Member Voter Guide


WORKING FAMILIES VOTE 2008 is the online center for union members and all working women and men to get involved in selecting America's next president. More >

 
 

 

 

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Issues

Employee Free Choice Act

The best opportunity working people have to get ahead economically is by uniting to bargain with their employers for better wages and benefits - what the union movement calls "the union difference." But the current system for forming unions and bargaining is broken. The Employee Free Choice Act would level the playing field for workers and employers and help rebuild America's middle class.

Check out the presidential candidates' positions on the Employee Free Choice Act and the importance of unions.

John McCain

 

Barack Obama    
 

Current Members of Congress in the 2008 Presidential Race:
Positions on the Employee Free Choice Act

Co-SponsorNot Co-Sponsor

Barack Obama (D)

 

John McCain (R) 

 

John McCain (R)

 McCain is not a co-sponsor of the Employee Free Choice Act. On June 26, 2007, he voted to block a Senate vote on the bill.


Barack Obama (D)

Obama told the 2007 AFSCME Leadership Forum and the Take Back America conference that as president, he would sign the Employee Free Choice Act.

"It's time to turn the page for all those Americans who want nothing more than to have a job that can pay the bills and raise a family...let's finally allow our unions to do what they do best and lift up the middle-class in this country once more. And when you head to Capitol Hill in a little bit to rally for the Employee Free Choice Act, say it loud enough so that the folks on the other end of Pennsylvania Avenue can hear you - in this country, we believe that if the majority of workers in a company want a union, they should get a union. We can do this." (Take Back America Conference, 6/19/07)

Obama, who is an Employee Free Choice Act co-sponsor, says workers are victimized by the current system for forming unions and bargaining:

"A Senate panel convened Tuesday to discuss new legislation to make union organizing radically easier. Sens. Hillary Clinton, D-N.Y., and Barack Obama, D-Ill., were right there for it. Both eagerly backed the legislation, called the Employee Free Choice Act...In fact, the two senators seemed to be in a contest over who could offer the strongest words for the bill, also called 'card check.' Obama went further than Clinton, saying workers were being victimized by the current organizing laws. 'The employers are abiding by the letter of the law...but it turns out we (still) have an overwhelming number of voters who would want to join a union...It would seem to me that we should change the law.'" (Investor Business Daily, 3/30/07)

Obama has promised he'll sign the legislation into law if he's elected president.

"'We will pass the Employee Free Choice Act. It's not a matter of if, it's a matter of when,' said Sen. Barack Obama (D-Ill.). 'We may have to wait for the next president to sign it, but we will get this thing done.'" (Chicago Tribune, 3/4/07)

Obama charged up a March 3 rally in Chicago supporting the Employee Free Choice Act and the 10,000 health care and support service workers at Resurrection Health Care who are struggling to form a union with AFSCME.

"Keep marching for justice. Where there is injustice anywhere, it suppresses justice everywhere. And organized labor has a history of bringing about justice." (AFSCME Council 31 website, 3/3/07)

 

 

 

 

 

 



15.3 percent of people in the United States don't have health insurance.

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