Can Labor Help Break the Power of the Democratic Establishment? A Connecticut City's Model for Change
The success of a union-organized campaign to take over New
Haven's city government offers a counternarrative to the old story of
labor’s political decline.
January 30, 2012 | On January 1, as their colleagues
around the country geared up for another year of battling governors and
mayors to hold on to eroding union rights, progressive labor activists
in New Haven, Connecticut, took on a different challenge: running a city
government. Or at least one branch of city government.
On that day, thirty newly elected aldermen (the equivalent of city
councilors) took the oath of office for a new term. Eighteen of the
thirty won their seats as members of a union-organized slate taking on
City Hall–backed candidates; fifteen were first-time candidates.
Combined with other solidly pro-labor members of the Board of Aldermen,
the slate begins its term with a commanding two-thirds majority of the
city’s perennially reactive, pliant legislature. The success of the
campaign startled the city—including the union activists who organized
it. And it offered a counternarrative and possible strategic antidote to
the old story of labor’s political decline.
Friday, February 3, 2012
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