Unions face a moment of truth in Michigan in this year's presidential
race
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[October 16, 2024]
By JOEY CAPPELLETTI and MATT BROWN
GRAND RAPIDS, Mich. (AP) — Vice President Kamala Harris rallies in
Michigan’s union halls, standing alongside the state’s most powerful
labor leader, while former President Donald Trump fires back from rural
steel factories, urging middle-class workers to trust him as the true
champion of their interests.
As they compete for blue wall states with deep union roots, the
presidential candidates are making their case to workers in starkly
different terms. And nowhere is that contrast more significant than in
Michigan, where both candidates are vying for workers’ support in a race
that could mark a pivotal moment for organized labor.
“The American dream was really born here in Michigan,” United Auto
Workers President Shawn Fain told a crowd of several hundred while
campaigning for Harris in Grand Rapids. Fain, who described Michigan as
“sacred ground” for his union at the early October rally, warned that
the dream was on “life support" and that unions like his were key to
protecting it for American workers.
Harris, who is planning to meet with union workers again in Michigan on
Friday, hopes her message — amplified by supporters such as Fain — will
resonate beyond the union families that once formed a rock-solid base
for the Democratic Party. Her campaign has grown increasingly concerned
about her standing with men in the blue wall states of Michigan,
Wisconsin and Pennsylvania, where they are looking to union leaders to
help mobilize voters in a political landscape that has shifted in the
winds of a rapidly changing economy.
These concerns intensified recently when Harris failed to secure two key
union endorsements that in 2020 went to President Joe Biden, who has
touted himself as the most labor-friendly president in U.S. history. The
International Association of Firefighters and the International
Brotherhood of Teamsters both declined to endorse anyone, with the
Teamsters citing a lack of majority support for Harris among their
million-plus members.
The Teamsters have traditionally been less reliably Democratic than
other unions, having endorsed Republican Presidents Richard Nixon and
Ronald Reagan in the past. Some state-level unions have also diverged
from their national leadership, with Michigan’s Teamsters and
California’s main firefighters’ union backing Harris.
Still, any break in unity within the labor movement could strike a blow
against a party that has worked hard to restore unions as a central
source of its power at the ballot box.
“When you talk about unions, you’re addressing more than just unionized
workers. Most people in states like Michigan have a family member or
close friend in a union,” said Adrian Hemond, a longtime political
strategist in Michigan. “Unions are just a vessel to get that messaging
out to workers.”
Trump has seized on the union non-endorsements, claiming they prove
rank-and-file workers support his vision for the country.
Many Midwestern communities once core to the labor movement have shifted
to the right in recent decades, often in response to economic concerns
such as deindustrialization and the removal of trade barriers. In that
same span, non-college-educated white voters across the country began
voting more conservatively for a number of reasons, including concern
about cultural issues involving race and gender.
In Michigan, home to the Big Three automakers and the largest
concentration of UAW workers, Trump seeks to capture an even larger
share of these votes by framing Harris as a supporter of electric
vehicle mandates and trade policies that he says send jobs overseas.
Attempting to separate union workers from their leaders, he labeled Fain
a “stupid idiot" and praised Tesla CEO Elon Musk for firing workers who
went on strike. The UAW says that could intimidate people who work for
the Trump campaign or at Tesla who might want to join a union.
In 2020, Biden narrowly carried the blue wall states that had broken
with Democrats in 2016 for the first time in decades on his way to
winning the White House. That election win was built on a foundation of
strong support from unionized voters, who have traditionally formed a
turnout machine for Democrats in the Midwest. But it stood apart from
past Democratic victories in a number of significant ways.
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Democratic presidential nominee Vice President Kamala Harris, with
Democratic vice presidential nominee Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz, left,
and UAW President Shawn Fain, speaks at a campaign rally at UAW
Local 900, Aug. 8, 2024, in Wayne, Mich. (AP Photo/Julia Nikhinson,
File)
While Trump narrowly won white voters in Michigan in 2020, the
former president’s vote margin was highly polarized along
educational, professional and income lines; Trump won nearly
two-thirds of non-college-educated white voters in the state, while
Biden and Trump were drawn to a near tie among college-educated
white voters, according to AP VoteCast, a comprehensive survey of
the electorate.
Among Michigan’s nonwhite voters, who make up 16% of the state’s
electorate, Biden won a resounding 80% of the vote. But signs of
that coalition fracturing have emerged more recently, particularly
among Arab Americans in metro Detroit, many of whom are expected to
turn away from Democrats due to the Biden administration’s handling
of the Israel-Hamas conflict.
As Trump again seeks the presidency, his campaign hopes to boost GOP
support among the state’s non-college-educated white and nonwhite
workers to unprecedented levels, partly to offset expected losses
Trump will face with white college-educated voters, where he has
hemorrhaged support since his 2020 loss and subsequent efforts to
overturn the results in Michigan, Pennsylvania and other swing
states.
“I think that part of the problem that Democrats are having with
some of the white male, blue collar voters is not within the union
itself,” said Brian Rothenberg, a former UAW spokesman. “It’s those
folks that are children or relatives of union members that just
aren’t doing as well."
Harris has aimed to win over these voters by emphasizing how unions
benefit all workers. At a Labor Day rally in Detroit, she said “you
better thank a union member” for the five-day work week, for sick
and paid leave and for vacation time.
“When union wages go up, everybody’s wages go up,” said Harris.
Just over a year after securing new contracts for UAW workers at
Ford, General Motors and Stellantis, Fain has staked much of his
political capital — and potentially his future — on supporting
Harris. He argues that UAW backing for Democrats has remained steady
over recent elections, with approximately 60% of members voting for
the Democratic presidential nominee.
Biden became the first president to walk the picket line when he
visited Michigan in late 2023 amidst the autoworker strike. A day
later, Trump traveled to Michigan and appeared at a non-union plant,
where he railed against Biden's electric vehicle push and told
workers to “get your union leaders to endorse me, and I’ll take care
of the rest.”
Union leaders have said his first term was far from worker-friendly,
citing unfavorable rulings from the nation’s top labor board and the
U.S. Supreme Court, as well as unfulfilled promises of automotive
jobs. They emphasize Democratic achievements in states like
Michigan, including the recent repeal of a union-restricting
right-to-work law enacted over a decade ago by a
Republican-controlled legislature.
With membership dwindling in states like Michigan, Fain will need to
attract more than just union workers to secure a victory for Harris,
who has campaigned in the state alongside him. If the union
president cannot deliver Michigan after all these efforts, it could
raise questions about his union's political influence in future
elections.
“This is a generation-defining moment, where we are right now,” Fain
told Michigan voters. “This election is going to determine where we
go.”
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Cappelletti reported from Lansing, Michigan. Associated Press writer
Tom Krisher in Detroit contributed to this report.
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