<html><head><meta http-equiv="Content-Type" content="text/html charset=utf-8"></head><body style="word-wrap: break-word; -webkit-nbsp-mode: space; -webkit-line-break: after-white-space;" class=""><div class=""><h1 style="font-size: 39px; line-height: 1; margin: 0px; font-family: proxima-nova, arial, helvetica, sans-serif;" class="">Unions want one thing from Hillary tonight: A stake in TPP’s heart<br class=""><br class=""></h1></div><a href="http://thehill.com/policy/finance/289568-unions-want-one-thing-from-hillary-tonight-a-stake-in-tpps-heart" target="_blank" class="">http://thehill.com/policy/finance/289568-unions-want-one-thing-from-hillary-tonight-a-stake-in-tpps-heart</a><div class=""><br class=""></div><div class=""><div style="margin: 0px; font-weight: bold; color: rgb(0, 51, 102); font-size: 11px; line-height: 1; font-family: helvetica, arial, sans-serif;" class="">By <span rel="sioc:has_creator" class=""><a href="http://thehill.com/author/alexander-bolton" target="_blank" style="color: rgb(0, 51, 102); text-decoration: none; outline: none;" class="">Alexander Bolton</a></span> - <span style="color: rgb(102, 102, 102);" class="">07/28/16 06:00 AM EDT</span></div><div style="font-size: 15px; font-family: arial, sans-serif; line-height: 18px;" class=""><p style="margin: 15px 0px;" class="">PHILADELPHIA — Labor unions want <a href="http://thehill.com/people/hillary-clinton" target="_blank" style="color: rgb(0, 0, 102); text-decoration: none; outline: none; font-weight: bold;" class="">Hillary Clinton</a> to put a stake in the heart of the Trans-Pacific Partnership trade deal once and for all on Thursday, when she accepts the Democratic nomination for president at the party's national convention.</p><p style="margin: 15px 0px;" class="">Doing so would cement a significant break for Clinton with President Obama, and labor officials believe it would kill any chance of moving the pact in a lame-duck Congress after the election.</p><p style="margin: 15px 0px;" class="">Unions have waged an intense pressure campaign this week geared at Clinton, vice presidential nominee <a href="http://thehill.com/people/tim-kaine" target="_blank" style="color: rgb(0, 0, 102); text-decoration: none; outline: none; font-weight: bold;" class="">Tim Kaine</a> and other Democratic leaders to kill the TPP, the largest trade deal in U.S. history.</p><p style="margin: 15px 0px;" class="">While Clinton says she opposes the agreement after initially supporting it, there are lingering concerns, especially after Virginia Gov. Terry McAuliffe (D), who is close to the Clintons, predicted she would ultimately sign it into law.</p><p style="margin: 15px 0px;" class="">Kaine, a Virginia senator, supported the trade accord as recently as a few weeks ago. He quickly changed his position after being tapped as the vice presidential nominee.</p><p style="margin: 15px 0px;" class="">“I would like for her to finish this whole debate about TPP, that would be very important for us. I would like for her to articulate who she will be as president as the United States,” Dennis Williams, president of the United Auto Workers, told The Hill in an interview.</p><p style="margin: 15px 0px;" class="">Robert Martinez, president of the International Association of Machinists and Aerospace Workers, said, “I’d like to hear her come out and say she’s strongly against trade deals like the Trans-Pacific Partnership.”</p><p style="margin: 15px 0px;" class="">Unions feel they have strong leverage this week as the Clinton campaign has made it a top priority to win over liberals allied with her primary rival, Sen. <a href="http://thehill.com/people/bernie-sanders" target="_blank" style="color: rgb(0, 0, 102); text-decoration: none; outline: none; font-weight: bold;" class="">Bernie Sanders</a> (I-Vt.), and many of them also feel strongly about killing the TPP.</p><p style="margin: 15px 0px;" class="">They have met with lawmakers and delegations from across the country to ensure there aren’t any Democratic defections after the election in case Republican leaders try to bring the trade deal to the floor in December.</p><p style="margin: 15px 0px;" class="">“Lots of them — House members, Senate members, governors — I’ve met with the delegations and the delegations are doing the same. We’ve armed them with the facts and they're going out to their [Senate and House] members,” AFL-CIO President Richard Trumka said in an interview.</p><p style="margin: 15px 0px;" class="">He said the effort has shored up the resolve of Democratic leaders and rank-and-file members.</p><p style="margin: 15px 0px;" class="">House Democratic Leader Nancy Pelosi (Calif.) announced Tuesday she would oppose it, unifying the Democratic congressional leadership as other leaders, including Senate Minority Leader <a href="http://thehill.com/people/harry-reid" target="_blank" style="color: rgb(0, 0, 102); text-decoration: none; outline: none; font-weight: bold;" class="">Harry Reid</a> (Nev.), have already announced their stances.</p><p style="margin: 15px 0px;" class="">McAuliffe rattled labor officials and fellow Democratic colleagues this week when he said Clinton, a longtime friend, would likely flip on the issue.</p><p style="margin: 15px 0px;" class="">Clinton’s campaign chairman, John Podesta, immediately refuted McAuliffe, who later pulled back his statement.</p><p style="margin: 15px 0px;" class="">Labor unions and allied lawmakers were left fuming.</p><p style="margin: 15px 0px;" class="">“McAuliffe just talks too much. He doesn’t know what he’s talking about sometimes, and I have no idea why he shot his mouth off but that’s his tendency and I’m very unhappy about it. It hurt his friend the Clintons and he should keep his mouth shut,” said Sen. <a href="http://thehill.com/people/sherrod-brown" target="_blank" style="color: rgb(0, 0, 102); text-decoration: none; outline: none; font-weight: bold;" class="">Sherrod Brown</a> (D-Ohio).</p><p style="margin: 15px 0px;" class="">Labor leaders and liberals allied with Sanders wanted language in the Democratic platform that stated specific opposition to the TPP, but Obama intervened to keep that sentence out of the draft, according to a labor source familiar with the negotiations.</p><p style="margin: 15px 0px;" class="">Out of deference to Obama, the platform committee adopted more general language pledging the party “will oppose trade agreements that do not support good American jobs, raise wages and improve our national security.”</p><p style="margin: 15px 0px;" class="">The compromise dismayed pro-labor delegates backing Sanders, who question whether Clinton can be trusted to hold the line against the TPP.</p><p style="margin: 15px 0px;" class="">Although Clinton moved to the left during her surprisingly close primary against Sanders, her selection of Kaine raised new worries.</p><p style="margin: 15px 0px;" class="">In addition to supporting TPP, Kaine backed Virginia’s right-to-work law, which labor unions abhor, when he served as the state’s governor from 2006 to 2010, and he voted last year to give Obama fast-track authority to negotiate trade deals.</p><p style="margin: 15px 0px;" class="">“I was stunned. They couldn’t have picked a worse VP pick for progressives and labor people. He supported the right to work legislation as governor of Virginia, he’s pro-TPP,” said Katie Nelson, a labor activist and Bernie delegate.</p><p style="margin: 15px 0px;" class="">“I didn’t trust Hillary that she was really going to be there for labor. I don’t trust her on TPP and then she goes and grabs Tim Kaine,” she added. “It confirms what my feelings were.</p><p style="margin: 15px 0px;" class="">Nelson said she’s concerned that Clinton will appoint people who are good on social issues but that she will “throw labor under the bus.”</p><p style="margin: 15px 0px;" class=""><a href="http://thehill.com/people/donald-trump" target="_blank" style="color: rgb(0, 0, 102); text-decoration: none; outline: none; font-weight: bold;" class="">Donald Trump</a>, the Republican nominee, has tried this week to exploit mistrust within the Democratic ranks toward Clinton’s trade views.</p><p style="margin: 15px 0px;" class="">Stephen Miller, a senior policy adviser to Trump, on Wednesday called Clinton and Kaine “corporatists and globalists.”</p><p style="margin: 15px 0px;" class="">“They will approve TPP, protect NAFTA, enable China and destroy the U.S. middle class — causing the most harm to Latino and African-American workers,” he said in a statement.</p><p style="margin: 15px 0px;" class="">Sen. <a href="http://thehill.com/people/jeff-merkley" target="_blank" style="color: rgb(0, 0, 102); text-decoration: none; outline: none; font-weight: bold;" class="">Jeff Merkley</a> (D-Ore.), the only member of the Senate who endorsed Sanders, said Clinton should use her Thursday speech to clear up the lingering uncertainty over her trade stance.</p><p style="margin: 15px 0px;" class="">“I’m really hoping she’ll articulate that when you give a huge advantage over American manufacturers, that the foreign manufacturers are going to thrive and the American manufacturers are going to be hurt and that’s going to result in the loss of millions of American jobs,” he said.</p><p style="margin: 15px 0px;" class="">He said Clinton should also address currency manipulation and speak out against investor-state dispute settlement programs, such as the one included in the TPP, that allow companies to resolve claims through an international arbitration panel instead of a domestic court.</p><p style="margin: 15px 0px;" class="">Senior labor leaders have had to defend Clinton this week from the grumbling of rank-and-file members.</p><p style="margin: 15px 0px;" class="">Chris Shelton, president of the Communications Workers of America, said the trade language in the platform was better than what was originally contemplated.</p><p style="margin: 15px 0px;" class="">“The language before was so bad that there was no way we could go forward with that language,” he said.</p><p style="margin: 15px 0px;" class="">Other labor leaders defended Kaine as someone who was a strong ally while in the governor’s mansion, despite his professed support for the law.</p><p style="margin: 15px 0px;" class="">Williams, of the UAW, said, “I know the Right to Work Committee was angry with him when he was governor because he put some very strong labor folks on committees.”</p><p style="margin: 15px 0px;" class="">The conservative National Right to Work Committee in 2012 dubbed him a “friend of labor bosses.”</p><p style="margin: 15px 0px;" class="">Trumka had conversations in the past week to nail down his view on massive trade deals.<br class=""></p><p style="margin: 15px 0px;" class="">“I know where Hillary’s at and I know where Tim Kaine’s going to be at. Tim Kaine’s going to be right where the president’s at,” he said.</p><p style="margin: 15px 0px;" class="">If Hillary takes a strong stand against the TPP on Thursday, it will be easier for Trumka and other labor leaders to sell their members on her candidacy.</p><p style="margin: 15px 0px;" class="">“All she’s got to say is what she’s been saying: She’s against TPP,” Trumka said.</p></div></div></body></html>