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Public
Employee Press Union Scrapbook Arlene
Baker is AFL-CIO Exec. VP
The
Executive Council of the 10-million-member American Federation of Labor and Congress
of Industrial Organizations penned another chapter in labor history on Sept. 21,
2007, when it unanimously elected Arlene Holt Baker executive vice president.
Ms. Baker, a grassroots organizer for 30 years and a former California AFSCME
leader, is the first African American to serve in one of the AFL-CIO’s top
three executive offices.
As an assistant to AFL-CIO President John Sweeney,
Baker oversaw the federation’s Gulf Coast recovery operation, including an
apprentice program for Katrina victims.
At a Jan. labor breakfast sponsored
by Cornell University in midtown Manhattan, Baker spoke on today’s exciting
political possibilities, the challenge of organizing and the need to engage young
people in the labor movement.
In a few months, the country will elect
a woman, a Southerner or an African American as its next president, Baker said.
She stressed that it is just as important to elect a Democratic Congress to give
that president the necessary support.
“Labor has helped change the
political debate,” moving it away from the bedroom and focusing “on
the issues affecting us all: the economy, affordable health care, the right to
join a union and rebuilding the middle class,” she said.
Baker, a
Fort Worth, Texas, native born to a day laborer and a domestic worker, also said
unions need to step up their organizing now, especially among immigrant populations
and those toiling in low-wage jobs.
“Low-wage jobs become good jobs
when they become union jobs,” she said. | |