Tagged as UFCW and Barack Obama

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America Doesn’t Stand Still. We Move Forward.

 

UFCW stewards from coast to coast were a critical component of the incredible grassroots movement that united to elect Barack Obama in 2008 and bring a worker-friendly majority in to power in both houses of Congress. We walked countless blocks, registered thousands of first-time voters and brought uncounted new voices into the political process. Record numbers of people in every city and town, men, women, young people and retirees of every background were engaged and committed to shaping our country’s future for the better.
When President Obama took office, he inherited overwhelming challenges: irresponsible leadership for the previous eight years had given our country two wars, an economy in crisis, a broken health care system and record deficits.
Together with the President and Democrats in Congress, we didn’t hesitate to tackle the Bush mess. We pushed for laws to make banks more accountable, ensure women receive equal pay and provide for good jobs to get the American economy moving again. Most importantly, UFCW stewards were leaders in the effort to make affordable health care available to everyone—and we stuck to our ideals: everyone should have access, nobody should be denied because they’re sick and nobody should go bankrupt because they’re sick.
“We have achieved so much in the last two years,” said Local 227 Steward Estella Galarza. “By working together and standing up for change, we’ve made a real difference for the future of this country.”
Without a doubt, this is a tough time for Americans: a struggling economy, a negative political environment and corporate greed sapping our economy and destroying our middle class. The challenges facing us have gotten only larger and tougher and can’t be solved by a 30 second sound bite on cable news. We must find real solutions to make America work again, and we must continue to progress we have made in the last few years.
But since the day President Obama took office, Republicans have tried to block progress at every turn. Every advancement we made was over the howls of their protest as the sought to protect tax cuts and giveaways for the wealthy and massive corporations. Rather than offering a real alternative to the problems we face, Republicans became the “Party of No.”
So this election has become a critical one for UFCW members across the country and, as leaders in the UFCW, for the stewards as well. The choice is simple, do we want to continue progress and continue building a brighter and better future for America? Or do we want reward obstructionism and root for the failure of a government that works for working families?
“In my state, Kentucky, it’s a simple choice between Jack Conway and Rand Paul,” said Garza. “With Conway, we vote to continue to try and make things better in America and Kentucky. With Paul we vote not only to stop all progress, but actually destroy the gains we’ve made.”
This simple choice is playing out across the country and in every state as we approach fall and this critical election season. As stewards, as leaders in the UFCW we have a responsibility to get involved. If we care about building a better America, we need to talk to our neighbors, our family, and our co-workers. We need to knock on doors and make phone calls for the worker-friendly candidates our states who are ready to move our country forward. We’ve come too far to turn back now.

UFCW Members Keep Momentum Alive

Manuel Salazar took a week off his job at a meatpacking plant in Sioux Falls, S.D., packed his bags, and departed to Minneapolis. He had a clear objective in his mind: to be part of history and bring change to working families by volunteering to get out the union vote for Obama.
“I knew Barack Obama was the right person for the job,” said Salazar, who has been a Local 304A member for over nine years. “My local helped me to get time off from my job to go to Minneapolis and get out the vote for Barack Obama.”
Thousands of UFCWmembers across the nation volunteered to get out the vote for Barack Obama because they knew what was at stake in this election.
“There were many of us in Minneapolis. We helped with everything we could,” said Salazar. “I went canvassing and made phone calls to fellow UFCW members.”
The efforts made by volunteers like Salazar were not in vain. Millions of working families in America woke up on November 5 to see a dream fulfilled and the prospect of a better future.
After eight years of failed policies from an administration that supported corporations and left middle class families behind, finally the time has come to fight back for better wages, quality and affordable health care, and securing better benefits.

 

But electing Barack Obama is just the first step to strengthen the middle class, said Dan Nichols, a steward from Local 304A.
“As stewards we have to encourage workers to keep fighting for policies that would raise their standards of living,” said Nichols. “Working families need to unite and contact legislators in Congress and push for the issues that matter most to workers.”

 

Nichols said that workers should stand together behind the Employee Free Choice Act, to make sure the next Congress approves this important legislation that would restore the American Dream.
“This bill, if it’s approved by Congress, will help a lot of working families and will be great for the middle class,” Nichols said. “I’ve spoken to a lot of people who would like to join a union, but are afraid of their supervisors.”

 

The Employee Free Choice Act will put more workers on the union side of the bargaining table, which will ultimately expand and strengthen the middle
class by protecting jobs, raising wages, and improving benefits.
As a steward, Nichols has actively encouraged his coworkers to sign a pledge card in support of the Employee Free Choice Act.

 

Thanks to hard work and efforts of stewards like Nichols, more than 250,000 UFCW members have signed the petition urging elected leaders to pass the Employee Free Choice Act. There is still more to be done to get this important piece of legislation passed.
All stewards can mobilize members around the Employee Free Choice Act by telling them to call, write or e-mail their elected representatives and urging them to strengthen the middle class by passing this bill.

 

Manuel Salazar believes that workers should hold Congressional leaders accountable to reform health care and to pass the Employee Free Choice Act.
“All workers have to continue fighting for what is best for their families. Workers all around the nation need to mobilize to get the Employee Free Choice Act passed and to reform health care,” Salazar said.

America’s Workers Support Barack Obama for President

 

Albert Carroll has been a registered Republican for as long as he can remember. But on Tuesday, November 7, he will go to the polls to vote for a Democrat, Sen. Barack Obama, for President of the United States.

Carroll, a steward from Lewisburg, Pa., is a member of UFCW Local 38. He has been a registered voter for years and knows that, on November 4, America’s workers have the opportunity to decide whether they want four more years of the same or change towards a better future.

“We had enough with 8 years of the Bush administration. We need change and I believe Obama has the plan to get the country back on track,” he said.

The choice for America’s workers is clear. Barack Obama stands on the side of working families.

“Obama will revive the economy by supporting working families and keeping jobs in America,” said Carroll.

In fact, Obama will cut taxes for 95 percent of workers and their families and will end breaks for companies that send jobs overseas. John McCain, in contrast, proposes reducing the tax rate for corporations from 35 percent to 25 percent and wants to maintain the Bush tax cuts that only favor the richest Americans.

Joel Elder, who also is a member of Local 38, said Obama is the best choice for America’s workers because he proposes a health care reform that would benefit middle class families and their children.

“People can no longer afford health care in this country,” he said. “We need quality and affordable health care for all Americans.”

Obama proposes a comprehensive health care plan that would provide coverage for all families and would modernize the current system to lower costs.

McCain’s health care plan would tax health care premiums and establish health savings accounts that would shift up to $8,000 in health care costs to working families. He wants to eliminate employer-provided health care, leaving individuals on their own.

With skyrocketing fuel prices affecting working families, Joel Elder knows Obama has the right solutions to the energy crisis.

“Sen. Obama has the right ideas to reduce our dependency on foreign oil and switch to renewable energy,” he said.

For McCain there is only one solution: to increase off-shore drilling and U.S. addiction to oil.

Albert Carroll believes that if Obama is elected, he will support the Employee Free Choice Act and restore the American Dream to millions of middle class families across the country.

“He is backing the Employee Free Choice Act,” said Carroll. “This is our opportunity to vote for a candidate that cares for working families.”

Carroll knows that that Obama will need the support of all workers in the whole nation, especially in states such as Pennsylvania, Ohio, Michigan, Colorado and Florida, where Obama needs a clear lead on Election Day.

“We are the people and we need to voice our opinions,” said Carroll. “It is important to get out and vote.”