Wednesday, September 19, 2007

Daily News (New York), September 4, 2007, Tuesday

Copyright 2007 Daily News, L.P.

Daily News (New York)


September 4, 2007 Tuesday

SPORTS FINAL EDITION

SECTION: NEWS; Pg. 19

HEADLINE: HIL ASKS UNIONS TO MAKE HER LABOR DAY

BYLINE: BY MICHAEL McAULIFF DAILY NEWS WASHINGTON BUREAU With Celeste Katz

BODY:

DES MOINES - For Hillary Clinton, Labor Day described the mission as much as the holiday as she campaigned with her husband at her side for still-uncommitted union support.

"Unions gave dignity and respect and improved working conditions to million of Americans, and we need to make sure you have the right to organize and bargain collectively in the 21st century," the New York senator told a rally of Iowa's South Central Federation of Labor yesterday.

Bill Clinton set the stage for her, saying Bush administration policies helped the rich and hurt everybody else.

"We're back to where money has too much influence and labor too little in America's life," said the ex-President at a Sioux City labor picnic, while touting job growth and rising middle-class fortunes during his two terms.

Hillary Clinton's push was well-received by the union crowds, but most weren't ready to commit. Many interviewed said they still liked former Sen. John Edwards (D-N.C.), who leads in Iowa and yesterday grabbed the endorsements of the United Mine Workers and the United Steelworkers. Their combined membership of 1.8 million puts his third-place campaign in first place for labor support.

"These endorsements matter. Union members vote twice as much as nonunion members, and they vote Democratic twice as much," said Jefferson Cowie, associate professor of labor history at Cornell University. "You can get a two-for-one deal if you bring in these endorsements."

While Edwards "has the strongest position on labor issues," Cowie said, many unions are staying on the sidelines out of fear "that endorsing him could generate animosity with a possible Clinton White House."

Sen. Clinton (D-N.Y.) said her experience would achieve goals unions want, and she took a shot at the "hope" and "change" pitch central to the campaign of her chief rival for the Democratic nomination, Sen. Barack Obama (D-Ill).

"You don't just do it by making a speech, you don't just do it by hoping it happens - you do it by hard work," she said. "You know change is just a word if you don't have the strength and experience to make it happen."

Obama, in New Hampshire, said it's going to take someone new to bring real change.

"George Bush and Dick Cheney may have turned divisive special interest politics into an art form, but it was there before they got to Washington," he said.

mmcauliff@nydailynews.com

GRAPHIC: Democratic presidential hopeful Hillary Clinton speaks at a labor picnic in Sioux City, Iowa, yesterday. She was joined at the rally by former President and First Husband hopeful Bill Clinton. Photo by EPA