If a labor leader’s phone is ringing this month, odds are it’s a House candidate hoping to make a case for an endorsement. Many candidates are just getting their campaigns going in battleground New York, and one of their first steps has been to bolster ties with New York’s powerful labor unions. Former Sen. Jim Gaughran, a Democrat running for an eastern Long Island seat held by Republican Nick LaLota, said labor officials were among the first on his call sheet when he got into the race. “That type of support is just invaluable in a political campaign,” Gaughran said in an interview. Sen. John Mannion, running for the Democratic nomination to challenge Republican incumbent Brandon Williams in the Syracuse area, has already rolled out endorsements from the American Federation of Teachers and the Civil Service Employees Association. Mannion himself is a former teachers union president. “It’s going to have a tremendous impact on my campaign,” he said of the endorsements. “These labor groups know that I’m with them, and they’re with me.” Labor endorsements are no small thing for a campaign: They can tap into a network of engaged members and help a candidate with getting voters to the polls. New York has the largest percentage of unionized workers than any state in the country. But the labor movement is also not homogenous, and many unions in New York are often bipartisan in their endorsements. The nods from labor organizations and unions themselves can be a rolling process, and many are not expected to issue their endorsements until later next year. Both parties have pegged New York as a key state in 2024 for control of the House. And crowded primary fields are already developing in the Hudson Valley and Central New York, as well as on Long Island. Top labor officials expect to be a major factor heading into next year’s elections. “The labor movement in New York state always plays an outsize role in any election, and this coming year going into 2024, we will probably play an outsize role in the national landscape,” New York State AFL-CIO President Mario Cilento told Playbook. IT’S WEDNESDAY. Got news? Send it our way: Jeff Coltin, Emily Ngo and Nick Reisman. WHERE’S KATHY? Delivering remarks at the NYC Central Labor Council 2023 Labor Day Parade reception and then making an education announcement with United Federation of Teachers. WHERE’S ERIC? Hosting a reception for the new Universal Hip Hop Museum, making a public safety-related announcement, giving remarks and adding names to the World Trade Center Memorial Wall, then holding “Talk with Eric: A Community Conversation” and lastly speaking at the 52 Park Salsa Concert Park Series 2023. QUOTE OF THE DAY: “I think Virgos are better than her sign,” — New York City Mayor Eric Adams, when asked to elaborate on the philosophical disagreements between him and Gov. Kathy Hochul — apparently not realizing that she, too, is a Virgo.
|
No comments:
Post a Comment