Nurses'
union endorses Sanders for 2016 U.S. presidency
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[August 11, 2015]
By Luciana Lopez
NEW YORK (Reuters) - National Nurses
United, the nation’s largest organization of nurses, endorsed Vermont
Senator Bernie Sanders on Monday for the 2016 presidential race, a blow
to Hillary Clinton as the Democratic front-runner seeks to court key
labor voters.
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Sanders "aligns completely with the nurses' values," said RoseAnn
DeMoro, the group's executive director, citing issues such as
healthcare and trade.
The NNU is the first national union to endorse Sanders, who has been
building momentum among more progressive Democrats.
Last month Clinton picked up an endorsement from the American
Federation of Teachers.
The split between the two unions - both part of the larger AFL-CIO -
underscores the uphill battle facing Clinton as she looks to build a
broad coalition within her party to avoid a bloody primary battle.
The AFL-CIO did not endorse anyone for the November 2016
presidential race after its executive council met recently.
The nurses' union polled its members three times to ensure a large
number of responses, said DeMoro, who said the support for Sanders
was "overwhelming."
On a questionnaire sent to the candidates, she added, "he scored
perfectly."
Labor is a key source of funds and manpower for political campaigns.
Clinton is particularly under pressure by unions over the
Trans-Pacific Partnership, a proposed free trade deal backed by
President Barack Obama but opposed by unions which see it as bad for
U.S. jobs and wages.
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But Clinton has been reluctant to come out against the TPP; she was
secretary of state in Obama's first term and an influential player
in the administration's effort to build stronger ties with Asia.
Obama administration officials view the TPP as a crucial part of its
"pivot" to Asia.
In a questionnaire Clinton filled out and submitted to the AFL-CIO
earlier this year and obtained by Reuters, Clinton laid out a broad
litmus test for the pact, but did not say whether she was for or
against it yet.
The agreement must protect American workers and strengthen national
security, she wrote in the questionnaire.
"My focus is on what is in the final trade agreement because that
will directly impact the American people," she wrote. "The goal is
greater prosperity and security for American families, not trade for
trade's sake."
(Reporting by Luciana Lopez)
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