Service workers union rejoins AFL-CIO after 20 years just ahead of
Trump's inauguration
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[January 09, 2025] By
JOSH BOAK
WASHINGTON (AP) — The Service Employees International Union is returning
to the AFL-CIO after 20 years, betting that a united labor movement will
do more to help workers overcome legal challenges to organize and join
unions.
The union groups' executive boards each unanimously approved the
combination on Wednesday, with plans to formally announce the
affiliation at a Thursday roundtable discussion in Austin, Texas, with
workers who are attempting to become union members. There are roughly 2
million SEIU workers in the health care, janitorial and food services
sectors, among others. Their addition would bring the total number of
AFL-CIO members to nearly 15 million, helping increase the political
heft of a federation already composed of 60 unions.
Both AFL-CIO President Liz Shuler and SEIU President April Verrett were
careful to say in interviews Wednesday that the combination was not a
consequence of Republican Donald Trump winning the November election and
returning to the White House.
But their shared goal is to be a political presence in a Trump-dominated
Washington that has at times courted organized labor without necessarily
backing the policies on wages, overtime and unionization that the
movement's leadership has supported.
“We are amassing our forces, building our strength and our power before
the inauguration,” Shuler said. "Working people will continue to demand
that our voices be heard.”
Verrett said the election did not play a role in the choice, even if it
affirmed the decision.
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“We are determined to organize in
unprecedented ways — and that requires real power,” she said.
“This is a big deal,” President Joe Biden said in a statement
Wednesday night, adding, “Their affiliation will help workers across
the country to organize, earn higher wages, receive better benefits
and build retirement security.”
The SEIU, along with the Teamsters union, left the
AFL-CIO in 2005. At the time, the SEIU leadership saw the AFL-CIO as
insufficient at slowing the declining share of U.S. workers who
belong to unions. The decline has largely continued over the past 20
years, but union leadership says that 60 million workers would like
to be unionized if they could. Union leaders said that by having the
SEIU rejoin the AFL-CIO, they will be better equipped to share
research and best practices on organizing to overcome resistance to
unionization by some employers and government officials.
After Biden dropped his reelection campaign, both the AFL-CIO and
SEIU endorsed Vice President Kamala Harris, the Democratic nominee.
The Teamsters declined an endorsement, which Trump interpreted as a
victory for him. His labor secretary nominee is former Rep. Lori
Chavez-DeRemer, an Oregon Republican who has shown support for union
policies.
AP VoteCast, an extensive survey of voters in November's elections,
found that 18% of the electorate came from union households, with
54% backing Harris and 44% voting for Trump.
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