Clinton
secures another union endorsement, bringing total to 16
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[December 03, 2015]
By Amanda Becker
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The insulators
union has endorsed U.S. presidential candidate Hillary Clinton, raising
the Democratic front-runner's tally of national labor endorsements to 16
unions representing 11 million workers.
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International Heat and Frost Insulators and Allied Workers
President James McCourt said in a letter to Clinton, reviewed by
Reuters, that the union recognized her "strong support for
fundamental labor standards" and "recognition of the significant
contributions of our members to energy efficiency."
Clinton said in a statement to Reuters: "I am honored to receive the
endorsement of the Insulators Union, whose leadership in energy
efficiency is essential to making America a clean energy
superpower."
She now has the backing of 16 unions that collectively represent
some 11 million workers. Roughly 14.6 million workers - about 11.1
percent of the workforce - are union members, according to U.S.
government data.
Some of Clinton's endorsements include influential unions such as
the AFSCME, a public employees union with 1.6 million members, and
the Service Employees International Union, or SEIU, which has about
2 million members in a variety of professions that range from
nursing to janitorial services.
The 30,000-member insulators union is a member of the AFL-CIO, a
federation of 56 labor unions that collectively represent more than
12 million workers.
The AFL-CIO itself has not yet endorsed a candidate and has not
traditionally done so in recent presidential elections until the
party-nominating contests are nearly decided.
Endorsements by national unions do not prevent their rank-and-file
members from supporting a different candidate, such as Clinton's
chief rival for the Democratic presidential nomination, U.S. Senator
Bernie Sanders of Vermont.
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But the fact that Clinton has secured such a large portion of
organized labor's support ahead of the first nominating contests in
February shows the momentum she is gaining ahead of the general
election in November 2016, when union workers are traditionally key
on-the-ground foot soldiers for Democratic candidates.
Clinton has said job creation will be the focus of her campaign over
the next month, beginning with a $275 billion infrastructure plan
she announced this week.
Her emphasis on jobs, and infrastructure in particular, is a move to
woo working-class voters, who will be critical to winning the
general election.
(Reporting By Amanda Becker; Editing by Paul Tait)
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