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Teamsters Reform Movement Stalled
Campaign Tactics Under Fire
IPSN August 28, 1997
These are trying days for International Brotherhood of Teamsters President
Ron Carey. In the last few years, the Service Employees International Union
has eclipsed the Teamsters as the nations largest collective bargaining
union. According to official estimates, there are 2-million dues paying
SEIU members compared to a withering membership base of 1.4 million Teamsters.
Between 1979 and 1994, the union lost roughly 500,000 rank-and-file members.
Financial losses topped $58 million in 1992, the year Carey took office.
In June, 1994, the Teamster strike fund went broke leaving the union weak
in bargaining situations.
Since he was elected to the Teamster top post in 1991, Carey has been assailed
by the old guard of corrupt officials linked to organized crime,
and tarred by allegations of mob ties in the national media. The Carey
people insist that the print attacks were vicious smears engineered by
reporters sympathetic to the old guard.
Now, through stupidity, or arrogance, or both, Carey has provided the corrupt,
mobbed-up old guard cabal a fresh window of opportunity to seize
back the union and reverse the course of reform his regime embarked upon
in 1992.
In December of last year, Carey and his regime won a narrow 4-percentage-point
re-election victory over James P. Hoffa, Jr., son of the legendary - and
presumed dead - James Riddle Hoffa. It was the first direct election for
a Teamsters president in the long and often sordid history of this union
following the settlement of an epic racketeering suit in 1989 in which the
IBT agreed to allow all members a voice in the selection process .
But the election outcome fell well short of a solid mandate of approval
for the embattled Carey, and now, because of campaign financing irregularities,
the government has ordered a new election for President to take place within
a 112-day window period after a federally appointed Teamsters election officer,
a Milwaukee labor attorney named Barbara Zack Quindel, refused to certify
the Carey victory.
The problem began with a 30-year-old campaign hustler named Martin Davis
who has been charged with fraud in connection with the Carey re-election
bid. It is alleged that Davis was at the center of a dubious agreement
between the Democratic National Committee (DNC) and the Teamsters. who promised
to donate union funds to various state Democratic parties in return for
supporting Carey. According to a published 1996 memo emanating out of Democratic
Party circles, nearly $1 million in Teamster action-committee contributions
was earmarked to union-friendly, nationwide DNC affiliates.
In a separate memorandum, Davis, who heads a political consulting firm
known as the November Group, mentions a DNC commitment to helping
the Teamsters in return for this money. The Carey people blame old
guard gangster tactics and the desire of Hoffa Junior to wrest the
presidency away from their man for purely self-serving motives.
Carey supporters argue that if wrong doing occurred, the president was
unaware of the actions of his slick fund raiser who has done
work for a number of Democratic politicians over the years including former
Los Angeles mayor Tom Bradley in his failed gubernatorial bid.
The Carey-Davis connection began after the July 1996 Teamster convention
in Philadelphia, when supporters of Hoffa Junior staged a raucous demonstration
on behalf of their candidate, which indicated to the worried Ron Carey
strategists that their man was vulnerable to attacks from the old
guard and his re-election was not cut in stone, as previously thought.
Shortly after Carey received his Philadelphia wake-up call, Davis rolled
up his sleeves and went to work. He contacted a Boston telemarketing firm
called the Share Group, and contracted with them to place cold calls to
prospective Democratic voters in advance of the November congressional elections.
The Share Group is headed by Michael Ansara, a former 1960s activist in
the Students For a Democratic Society (SDS) .
The scheme Davis allegedly cooked up involved the awarding of a $97,000
Teamster contract to Share Group, but with the proviso that a portion of
this money be set aside for the Carey campaign. Davis insisted that the
International Brotherhood of Teamsters wanted it done this way.
Michael Ansara has since pleaded guilty to fraud and is presently awaiting
sentencing. Martin Davis was arraigned in June, but the affair does not
end right there. Prosecutors have issued subpoenas to the Teamsters and
the DNC seeking the financial records of all the involved parties.
Meanwhile, with Davis help, Ron Carey defeated Hoffa by the narrowest
of margins, after pulling out all the stops. In Chicago, two powerhouse
Locals, 714, and 710 (the former placed into trusteeship by the Independent
Review Board several months before the election), voted for the losing Hoffa
ticket.
The Midwest remains a stronghold of the old guard, and Ron
Carey knows that if his reform movement is to be successful, he must shore
up his support in this region of the country. To do so, he must maintain
his reformer image - increasingly difficult when the press keeps dredging
up allegations of mob ties and financial improprieties.
The Carey camp countered the incriminating charges leveled against them
by accusing the Hoffa people of raising $200,000 of improper campaign contributions
- all of which leaves the Teamsters union in the hot seat at a pivotal moment
in labor history.
With his luster fading fast, Ron Carey must also counteract old rumors
that he was friendly with the mob in his former life. Carey, a former UPS
truck driver out of New York, has been accused of mob ties by Alfonso Little
Al DArco, a former acting boss of the Luchesse crime family
who became an effective government witness in 1991. DArco alleged
that Carey was linked to the Luccheses through the late Joseph Joe
Shrugs Trerotola, a powerful East Coast Teamster boss who stepped
down in 1991 amid allegations that he allowed the mob a free hand in the
union. Trerotola served as chairman of the Irish American Teamsters. Ron
Carey was a committee member within that organization, which he has since
denied.
Now, in a more important battle that finally tested his abilities as a
union leader and not as a Teamster apologist for the sins of the past,
Carey has claimed victory for 190,000 UPS workers over management in a
historic make-or-break 15-day strike that will likely determine his future
and the future of the Teamsters Union.
Ms. Quindel conveniently withheld her ruling until two days after the settlement
of the UPS strike, prompting angry denunciations from James Hoffa, Jr.,
the Michigan attorney who has demanded that Carey step down. Hoffa has
called on the government to impose a national trusteeship - the same takeover
tactics that drove out hundreds of mob-linked Teamster officials in the
nationwide Locals where Hoffa tapped his greatest strength.
With the strike over there are grave concerns expressed for Careys
reform movement and the continuing financial health of the union which owes
about $10 million of the $13 million it has borrowed from 13 other labor
unions.
The settlement of the contentious UPS strike, at first glance, bodes well
for the future of the American labor movement. The big unions have been
on the run and hurting since Ronald Reagan busted the PATCO strike in 1981.
Public confidence in the collective bargaining process waned in the 1980s
as union membership declined to record low levels.
Clear and resounding victories at the bargaining table could signal a period
of revitalization and renewed confidence in the union label, but then again
maybe not. The economy is chugging along nicely just now, and the perception
that unions are out of touch with the changing realities of the private
sector, and rife with corruption is a tough one for even the most savvy
PR spin doctor to overcome.
Mr. Carey is sliding down a slippery slope these days. He has played into
the hands of his opponents, and the kind of publicity he has been attracting
of late, sorely compromises the modest gains of the recently concluded UPS
strike.
A Hoffa victory at the eleventh hour will set the course of Teamster reform
and the fondest hopes of all who are desirous of clean, efficiently-run
unions free of mob control, back a hundred years.
It would be an even greater shame if the crusader for union reform turns
out to be the fox in the hen house.
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