SEIU Chief says the Democrats Lack Fresh Ideas
/Stern Asserts That a Kerry Win Could Set Back Efforts to Reform the Party
Breaking sharply with
the enforced harmony of the Democratic National Convention, the
president of the largest AFL-CIO union said Monday that both organized
labor and the Democratic Party might be better off in the long run if
Sen. John F. Kerry loses the election. Andrew L. Stern, the head of the
1.6 million-member Service Employees International Union (SEIU), said
in an interview with The Washington Post that both the party and its
longtime ally, the labor movement, are "in deep crisis," devoid of new
ideas and working with archaic structures. Stern argued that Kerry's
election might stifle needed reform within the party and the labor
movement. He said he still believes that Kerry overall would make a
better president than President Bush, and his union has poured huge
resources into that effort. But he contends that Kerry's election would
have the effect of slowing the "evolution" of the dialogue within the
party. Asked whether if Kerry became president it would help or hurt
those internal party deliberations, Stern said, "I think it hurts." [more]
- The 1.6 million-member SEIU is the largest and fastest growing union in the AFL-CIO, and the largest union of health care workers in North America.