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<title>Democratic National Committee: Union Members and Families</title>
<link>http://www.democrats.org/</link>
<description></description>
<language>en</language>

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	<title>Democratic Party Podcasts</title>
	<link>http://www.democrats.org</link>
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<copyright>Copyright 2008</copyright>
<lastBuildDate>Fri, 19 Dec 2008 16:40:38 -0500</lastBuildDate>
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<item>
<title>Rep. Solis Named Labor Secretary; Fmr. Rep. LaHood to Lead Transportation</title>
<description><![CDATA[<p>California Congresswoman Hilda Solis was named Secretary of Labor, and former Illinois Congressman Ray LaHood was appointed Secretary of Transportation by President-elect Barack Obama at a <a href="http://change.gov/newsroom/entry/more_members_of_the_economic_team/">press conference in Chicago</a> this afternoon.</p>

<p>The President-elect also named Karen Mills as Administrator of the Small Business Administration and former Mayor Ron Kirk as United States Trade Representative.</p>

<blockquote><p>Hilda has always been an advocate for everyday people. When she received an award several years ago, she said, “Fighting for what is just is not always popular, but it is necessary.” And that is exactly what she has done throughout her career, blazing new trails every step of the way. Whether it’s creating green jobs that pay well and can’t be outsourced or expanding access to affordable health care or raising the minimum wage in California, Hilda has been a champion of our middle class. And I know that Hilda will show the same kind of leadership as Secretary of Labor that she showed in California and on the Education and Labor Committee by protecting workers’ rights – from organizing to collective bargaining, from keeping our workplaces safe to making our unions strong. [...]</p>

<p>Few understand our infrastructure challenge better than the outstanding public servant I am asking to lead the Department of Transportation – Ray LaHood. As a Congressman from Illinois, Ray served six years on the Transportation and Infrastructure Committee, leading efforts to modernize our aviation system by renewing our aging airports and ensuring that air traffic controllers were using cutting edge technology. Throughout his career, Ray has fought to improve mass transit and invest in our highways. But he has not only helped rebuild our landscape, he has helped beautify it by creating opportunities for bikers and runners to enjoy our great outdoors.  When I began this appointment process, I said I was committed to finding the best person for the job, regardless of party. Ray’s appointment reflects that bipartisan spirit – a spirit we need to reclaim in this country to make progress for the American people.</blockquote></p>]]></description>
<link>http://www.democrats.org/a/2008/12/rep_solis_named.php</link>
<guid>http://www.democrats.org/a/2008/12/rep_solis_named.php</guid>
<category>Blog</category>
<pubDate>Fri, 19 Dec 2008 16:40:38 -0500</pubDate>
</item>

<item>
<title>Dow Plummets to Lowest Point Since 2004</title>
<description><![CDATA[<p>This weekend, campaign advisers to John McCain say they want to "turn the page" on the economic crisis and explore new depths of dishonorable and sleazy campaigning. This morning, the <a href="http://thinkprogress.org/2008/10/06/dow-plunges-to-lowest-level-since-2004/">Dow Jones sank below 10,000 points for the first time in four years</a>.</p>

<blockquote><p>Wall Street joined a “selloff around the world” today, with the Dow Jones dropping more than 400 points and falling to below 10,000 for the first time in four years. As the AP reports, the “markets have come to the sobering realization that the Bush administration’s $700 billion rescue plan won’t work quickly to unfreeze the credit markets, and that many banks are still having difficulty gaining access to cash.”</p></blockquote>

<p>Think about it -- while untold thousands of Americans lose their life savings or retirement funds because of the greed of Wall Street, John McCain wants to "turn the page" on the financial crisis.</p>

<p>Then again, we've seen this before from John McCain. <a href="http://www.keatingeconomics.com/">He knows a thing or two</a> about thousands of Americans losing their life savings.</p>]]></description>
<link>http://www.democrats.org/a/2008/10/dow_plummets.php</link>
<guid>http://www.democrats.org/a/2008/10/dow_plummets.php</guid>
<category>Blog</category>
<pubDate>Mon, 06 Oct 2008 11:33:13 -0500</pubDate>
</item>

<item>
<title>American Voices Program</title>
<description><![CDATA[<p><strong>Roy Gross, Michigan</strong></p>

<p>My name is Roy Gross. I’m a proud member of Teamsters Local 299 in Detroit, Michigan.</p>

<p>When I was a young man and wanted to start a family, I went to Detroit and landed a job as an automobile transporter. I delivered new cars from the assembly plants to dealerships around the country.</p>

<p>It was a great job, a Teamsters union job. You worked hard and it paid good wages, plus health care and pension. I worked there for 18 years. Working class families were doing well in Detroit until the Bush Administration took office, then everything changed.</p>

<p>Manufacturing jobs were exported by the hundreds of thousands and replaced with minimum-wage jobs in the so-called “New Economy.” I’m one of the lucky ones; I still have a job. But many of my friends and co-workers have lost their jobs and their homes.</p>

<p>If you ask me, this so-called “New Economy” is not working. We need a renewed economy. That’s why I’m seeing so many of my friends in Michigan - Democrats, Republicans and Independents - putting aside their differences to join this campaign.</p>

<p>Barack Obama will enact fair trade policies and work just as hard for us as we work for America. I will do everything I can, from now until Election Day, to put Michigan in the Obama column. </p>

<p><strong>Monica Early, Ohio</strong></p>

<p> I’m Monica Early from Cuyahoga Falls, Ohio. Last January, someone sent me an e-mail containing so-called “facts” about Senator Obama. The e-mail painted a scary picture, questioning his faith and patriotism. I decided to do some fact-checking on my own and learned the truth.</p>

<p>What I discovered is that Barack Obama is a man of faith, a man of values and a man of action—someone who has shown his love for America by fighting for our people, helping communities left behind on Chicago’s South Side, fighting today for working families and the tax breaks we need to purchase a home, pay for college and save for retirement.</p>

<p>I am grateful for the e-mail that tried to scare me. It brought me here, an ordinary citizen, empowered by a leader who told me I could make a difference. Ohio is home to four of the fastest-dying cities in America. John McCain promises to continue the Bush economic policies that got us there.</p>

<p>Einstein said a definition of insanity is doing the same thing over and over again expecting a different result. If we elect John McCain, then, according to Einstein, we surely would be insane.</p>

<p>We need change. We need President Barack Obama!</p>

<p><strong>Wes Moore</strong></p>

<p>Hi, my name is Wes Moore. Twelve years ago, I took an oath on the Bible to defend, support and protect the United States of America. Today, I cannot fathom a more perfect expression of my allegiance as a soldier and citizen than giving my full support for Barack Obama to be my next commander-in-chief.</p>

<p>Before I deployed for Afghanistan, my grandparents gave me a Bible. Inside, they wrote four simple words: have faith, not fear. Those words protected and guided me and the soldiers under my command during some of the most trying days of my life.</p>

<p>I want a president who has a comprehensive strategy for Iraq and Afghanistan, and who can rally young people to serve, both in and out of uniform, and sees these as complementary, not contradictory goals. I want a president who believes in supporting our troops while we are fighting overseas, and supporting us with proper health care and education when we come home.</p>

<p>This election is not about history. Nor is it about making history. It’s about seizing history.</p>

<p>The charge my grandparents gave me—have faith, not fear—is the same challenge I issue tonight. A faith that this nation can rise to meet any challenge.</p>

<p>Tonight, Senator Obama is not asking you to have faith in him. He is asking you to have faith with him. Let’s make Barack Obama our next president.</p>

<p><strong>The Honorable Janet Monacco, Florida</strong></p>

<p>I’m Janet Monaco from Rockledge, Florida, by way of Long Island, New York. Fourteen years ago I moved to Florida to pursue my vision of the American dream. Within five years, I had bought a house and opened two pet stores. I was living well.</p>

<p>Then disaster struck: back-to-back hurricanes, and rising costs of food and gas. Today, I’m a struggling small-business owner who is diabetic and without health insurance. I work 70-hour weeks at the store and more hours in a part-time job and still can’t afford insurance.</p>

<p>I don’t tell this story to get sympathy. Everyone has challenges. But what gets me angry is that George Bush and John McCain have done nothing for people like me—and, in fact, have done plenty of things that make it even harder to get by. Huge tax breaks for those at the top. Looking out for the lobbyists and not the little guy. And billions spent in tax cuts for big corporations, but not enough for small businesses like mine.</p>

<p>I’m supporting Barack Obama, because we can’t afford four more years of the same. Yes, we can make a change!</p>

<p>Nathaniel Fick</p>

<p>Good afternoon. I’m Nathaniel Fick. My Marine platoon landed in Afghanistan on a moonlit night in 2001. A little more than a year later, we rolled into Iraq. I’ll never forget one dawn after a vicious gun battle. We’d just medevaced one of our wounded Marines, and I turned to see a small American flag hanging from a humvee’s antenna. For a second, it reminded me of the line we all know so well: “And our flag was still there.”</p>

<p>I registered as a Republican at 18 and voted for John McCain in 2000. It took seven years of hard experience to get me on this stage. But we cannot afford more of the same. That’s why we need Barack Obama and Joe Biden to lead us beyond the tired divisions of the past. They have the judgment to make the right decisions, leading our military, and uphold our highest ideals.</p>

<p>Everyone who fought in Iraq or Afghanistan has left something: a friend, a limb, a piece of their youth. In those palm groves and on those ridge lines, this is personal for us. I don’t want to retreat; I want to win.</p>

<p>The past seven years have been hard, often heartbreaking. Our flag, however, is still there. Let’s move forward in our quest to live up to the idea of America.</p>

<p><strong>Teresa Brito-Asenap, New Mexico</strong></p>

<p>Buenas noches, good evening.</p>

<p>I am Teresa Brito-Asenap from Albuquerque, New Mexico. The first nine years of my life my grandparents worked with me to study and learn. They always talked about the importance of education. But it was not until third grade that I realized that mi abuelita, my grandmother, could neither read nor write.</p>

<p>But because of them, today I hold a doctorate in education. I owe them and my parents everything. Strong families raise strong students. All they need are world-class schools and dedicated teachers. Yet because of George W. Bush and John McCain, our schools don’t have the resources they need to meet the high standards of No Child Left Behind.</p>

<p>We don’t need four more years of the same. We need to turn the page and put our kids at the head of the class. Barack Obama will invest $10 billion a year in early education funding and give any student who wants to go to college a $4,000 tax credit. That’s the change we need and the change Barack Obama will bring as president of the United States.</p>

<p>Arriba y adelante – si se puede!</p>

<p><strong>Pamela Cash-Roper, North Carolina</strong></p>

<p>I’m Pam from Pittsboro, North Carolina. Wait till you hear what’s happening to me.</p>

<p>You might find my story familiar. Maybe it’s happening to you.</p>

<p>My husband, Keith, and I used to have a modest home we could afford, cars, money in a 401(k) plan, health insurance, and our health. We educated ourselves, got good jobs with benefits, worked night and day, raised four happy children, and saved some money.</p>

<p>It was the American dream. We did everything we thought you were supposed to do to live it. We really felt America was working for us.</p>

<p>Then, eight years ago, our American dream turned into a nightmare. Keith needed open-heart surgery. He lost his job and with it the family’s health insurance. I couldn’t afford to pay for health insurance on my nurse’s income, so we don’t have any.</p>

<p>Having no health insurance works – as long as you stay healthy.</p>

<p>Five years after Keith’s surgery, I had a quadruple bypass, and our medical expenses grew.</p>

<p>I’m a lifelong Republican who voted for Nixon, Reagan, Bush, and Bush. But I can’t afford four more years like this.</p>

<p>That’s why I am supporting Barack Obama as my president.</p>

<p><strong>Barney Smith, Indiana</strong></p>

<p>My name is Barney Smith.</p>

<p>For most of my life, I was a proud Republican.</p>

<p>Growing up in the Indiana heartland, America was a place of boundless opportunity. You could go to the town factory and get a job the same day. You could start a family and buy a house with your salary.</p>

<p>My father started at Marion’s RCA plant in 1949, manufacturing picture tubes for TV sets. </p>

<p>I started in 1973. My wife worked in a high school cafeteria. Together, we made a living and raised a family.</p>

<p>Then, in 2004, the plant closed. Today, a foreign worker does my job.</p>

<p>After 31 years, I received 90 days’ severance pay and was unemployed.</p>

<p>Thirteen months later, I got a job at a distribution center.</p>

<p>Republicans talk about putting “country first,” but tell that to Marion, Indiana. They sent my job overseas.</p>

<p>America can’t afford more of the same. We need a president who puts the Barney Smiths before the Smith Barneys.</p>

<p>I’m going to put country first by voting Barack Obama for president.</p>

<p>The heartland needs change. And with Obama, we’re going to get it.</p>]]></description>
<link>http://www.democrats.org/a/2008/08/american_voices.php</link>
<guid>http://www.democrats.org/a/2008/08/american_voices.php</guid>
<category>Convention 2008</category>
<pubDate>Thu, 28 Aug 2008 19:20:05 -0500</pubDate>
</item>

<item>
<title>Mark Docherty</title>
<description><![CDATA[<p>Hello, I’m Mark Docherty from Sterling Heights, Michigan. I’m a professional firefighter and a proud member of the International Association of Firefighters Local 1557.</p>

<p>In the economy that’s going up in flames, I’m fortunate to have the protection of a union that fights to protect my pay, benefits and rights. That’s not the case for most of working America.</p>

<p>An estimated 60 million Americans would join a union if only given the opportunity, but George Bush and John McCain have made it harder for workers to organize. At the same time, George Bush and John McCain have made it easier for companies to ship jobs overseas.</p>

<p>We can’t afford four more years of the same. We need change, and Barack Obama will deliver that change.</p>

<p>Everyday my fellow firefighters and I see the impact of nearly eight years of the Bush Administration’s scorch-and-burn policies, policies that have reduced the quality of life for middle-class Americans. With John McCain, Americans can count on more of the same. John McCain has voted against the minimum wage not once, not twice, but 19 times.</p>

<p>Because of the failed economic policies of George Bush and John McCain, with nearly every response call firefighters see Americans struggling to get by and forced to make choices that endanger themselves and their neighbors.</p>

<p>With an ever increasing number of empty, foreclosed properties, neighborhoods deteriorate, communities dwindle and what’s left is a situation ripe for fires and arson. All around the country, fire departments are working with fewer personnel and resources, which endangers the lives of firefighters and the residents they are sworn to protect. Since the horrors of September 11, fire departments and other first responders have been asked to carry a heavier load, preparing us to respond to another attack or a natural disaster.</p>

<p>Nearly eight years later the system is in place, but what’s missing is the funding needed to keep up training, staffing and equipment. And John McCain has voted time and again against all the vital increases in funding these dangerous times demand. We can’t afford four more years of the same.</p>

<p>We need change, and Barack Obama will deliver that change. He’ll fully fund our fire departments and first responders. He’ll jump-start our economy and give hardworking families a much needed tax cut. Barack Obama will stand up for collective bargaining, stand up for workers and always fight for the middle class.</p>

<p>The American people have called in an emergency, and Barack Obama will answer that call with the change we so desperately need.</p>]]></description>
<link>http://www.democrats.org/a/2008/08/mark_docherty.php</link>
<guid>http://www.democrats.org/a/2008/08/mark_docherty.php</guid>
<category>Convention 2008</category>
<pubDate>Wed, 27 Aug 2008 18:00:49 -0500</pubDate>
</item>

<item>
<title>Lily Ledbetter</title>
<description><![CDATA[<p>Good evening. Many of you are probably asking: Who is that grandmother from Alabama at the podium? I can assure you, nobody is more surprised, or humbled, than I am. I’m here to talk about America’s commitment to fairness and equality, and how people like me—and like you—suffer when that commitment is betrayed.</p>

<p>How fitting that I speak to you on Women’s Equality Day, when we celebrate ratification of the amendment that gave women the right to vote. Even as we celebrate, let’s also remind ourselves: the fight for equality is not over. I know that from personal experience. I was a trailblazer when I went to work as a female supervisor at a Goodyear tire plant in Gadsden, Alabama.</p>

<p>My job demanded a lot, and I gave it 100 percent. I kept up with every one of my male co-workers. But toward the end of my 19 years at Goodyear, I began to suspect that I wasn’t getting paid as much as men doing the same job. An anonymous note in my mailbox confirmed that I was right. Despite praising me for my work, Goodyear gave me smaller raises than my male co-managers, over and over.</p>

<p>Those differences affected my family’s quality of life then, and they affect my retirement now. When I discovered the injustice, I thought about moving on. But in the end, I couldn’t ignore the discrimination. So I went to court. A jury agreed with me. They found that my employer had violated the law and awarded me what I was owed.</p>

<p>I hoped the verdict would make my company feel the sting, learn a lesson and never again treat women unfairly. But they appealed, all the way to the Supreme Court, and in a 5-to-4 decision our highest court sided with big business. They said I should have filed my complaint within six months of Goodyear’s first decision to pay me less, even though I didn’t know that’s what they were doing.</p>

<p>In dissent, Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg wrote that the ruling made no sense in the real world. She was right. The House of Representatives passed a bill that would make sure what was done to me couldn’t happen again. But when it got to the Senate, enough Republicans opposed it to prevent a vote.</p>

<p>We can’t afford more of the same votes that deny women their equal rights. Barack Obama is on our side. He is fighting to fix this terrible ruling, and as president, he has promised to appoint justices who will enforce laws that protect everyday people like me. But this isn’t a Democratic or a Republican issue. It’s a fairness issue. And fortunately, there are some Republicans—and a lot of Democrats—who are on our side.</p>

<p>My case is over. I will never receive the pay I deserve. But there will be a far richer reward if we secure fair pay. For our children and grandchildren, so that no one will ever again experience the discrimination that I did. Equal pay for equal work is a fundamental American principle. We need leaders in this country who will fight for it. With all of us working together, we can have the change we need and the opportunity we all deserve.</p>

<p>Thank you.</p>]]></description>
<link>http://www.democrats.org/a/2008/08/lily_ledbetter.php</link>
<guid>http://www.democrats.org/a/2008/08/lily_ledbetter.php</guid>
<category>Convention 2008</category>
<pubDate>Tue, 26 Aug 2008 19:20:23 -0500</pubDate>
</item>

<item>
<title>Gloria Craven</title>
<description><![CDATA[<p>Hello, everyone. My name is Gloria Craven. I live in Eden, North Carolina.</p>

<p>My story is not much different than a lot of other people in this country. I lived in a town built on textiles. Growing up, most of us didn’t have much use for schools, because we didn’t think a diploma meant that much. The important thing was taking care of your family. A lot of people in our area chose work over school.</p>

<p>I worked at the same place—for a company called Pillowtex—for 30 years. In 2003, the plant shut down for a week. The next week, when we were supposed to report back to work, we were told not to come in. A few weeks later, we were told the plant had closed. More than 8,000 people lost their jobs in one day. And that was it, after 30 years: no notice, no “thank you.” For the job he did, our CEO got a bonus of $300,000. Our union, UNITE-HERE, fought for several years to get back our vacation pay.</p>

<p>Overnight, my family and community totally changed. George Bush told us that we should all just go to college. But 65 percent of the people in the mill could barely read or write. We weren’t in a position to go to college, and we couldn’t afford it anyway.</p>

<p>My husband, Jacob, lost his job, too. Now, we live on his Social Security. I used to think I was middle class, but now we are living at the poverty level. I tell my husband how proud I am because even at his age, he’s going back to school. But for a 62-year-old man, who spent his life in the mills, there aren’t many opportunities.</p>

<p>I used trade adjustment assistance to go back to school myself and graduated in 2006. But I had some medical problems. Turns out walking on a concrete floor for 30 years was bad for my health. My husband and I worked hard all our lives. Now, we’re struggling to get by without health insurance and just a little retirement money.</p>

<p>There used to be a time in America when you felt like there were people in government who were looking out for people like me. But not the last eight years. I know I can’t stand another four years of George W. Bush.</p>

<p>But John McCain will be no different. When he said a few months ago that we’ve made great progress economically, it made me wonder: who does he mean by “we?” And then, I read he owns seven houses, and it was clear that “we” didn’t include “me.”</p>

<p>But Barack Obama has made me believe again. I get the feeling he cares about people like me and will create an America where things like hard work and loyalty mean something again.</p>

<p>My hope is that he’ll bring the change so many of us need.</p>

<p>I can’t wait to see Barack Obama in the White House.<br />
</p>]]></description>
<link>http://www.democrats.org/a/2008/08/gloria_craven.php</link>
<guid>http://www.democrats.org/a/2008/08/gloria_craven.php</guid>
<category>Convention 2008</category>
<pubDate>Tue, 26 Aug 2008 18:38:45 -0500</pubDate>
</item>

<item>
<title>Anna Burger</title>
<description><![CDATA[<p>I grew up in Levittown, Pennsylvania, in the 1950s believing in the American dream. My mom was a nurse, working the evening shift. My dad, a Teamster truck driver, was permanently disabled in a terrible accident when I was 9. Dad’s Social Security and Medicare—and mom’s enormous strength—allowed my sisters, brother and me to get by and even go to college, without being buried by debt.</p>

<p>After I got my first union job, my dad gave me some good advice. He said, “Stick to the union. It’s what makes a difference for working people like us.” Unions are the best all-in-one program for working families that America ever had—and it didn’t cost the government a dime.</p>

<p>My dad was right. Unions help ordinary people like me, like truck drivers. Nurses. And farm, factory and construction workers, who work hard to find a way to own a home. Raise a family. Send our kids to college and retire with dignity.</p>

<p>Our unions helped us pass on to our kids a better life than our own. And we call this legacy the American dream. But today, that dream is fading.  After eight years of George W. Bush, work hours are up but wages are down. And John McCain is offering more of the same. The gap between the rich and the rest of America—it’s staggering and growing. And John McCain is offering more of the same. Nine in 10 workers have no union, while healthcare costs are exploding, pensions wiped out. Job security, a thing of the past.</p>

<p> Working people in this country can’t afford more of the same. But that’s exactly what John McCain’s offering—more of the same. Brothers and sisters, it is time for change, and I stand here today to tell you that working people all around this country know—Barack Obama will bring the change we need.</p>

<p>Barack Obama believes in an America where workers have a voice on the job and their hard work is valued and rewarded. Where health care is affordable and accessible. Where corporations pay their fair share, and workers are free to join a union without being harassed or intimidated.</p>

<p>Barack Obama believes in an America in which we work with each other, take care of each other and where our kids do even better than we do. Barack Obama will bring the change we need. And when he is our president, working families around this country will again know that the American dream is within the reach of everyone who calls this great country home. </p>]]></description>
<link>http://www.democrats.org/a/2008/08/anna_burger.php</link>
<guid>http://www.democrats.org/a/2008/08/anna_burger.php</guid>
<category>Convention 2008</category>
<pubDate>Tue, 26 Aug 2008 18:15:27 -0500</pubDate>
</item>

<item>
<title>Pauline Beck</title>
<description><![CDATA[<p>Good evening. My name is Pauline Beck. I’m a homecare worker in Oakland, California, and a very proud supporter of Senator Obama for president!</p>

<p>I’m here tonight because one year ago, Senator Obama spent a day with me, doing my job. That’s right, doing homecare with me. He helped me take care of an 87 year-old man named Mr. John. Mr. John is a proud man, and I help him stay in his home.</p>

<p>You know what he did, the next President of the United States? Senator Obama did laundry. He mopped floors. He made lunch. He changed the sheets. He did dishes. And he talked with Mr. John about his family and his career as a cement mason.</p>

<p>Senator Obama spent the day in my shoes. He didn’t want to talk politics or pose for pictures. Senator Obama wanted to work. That’s the kind of president we need, someone who really understands working people.</p>

<p>My job is to help people, and I love my job. But being a homecare worker is hard. The wages are low, the hours can be long, and the work can be physically challenging. Our union, SEIU, is a great help. But workers need a president who stands up for us.</p>

<p>All his life, Senator Obama has understood the importance of work. First from his single mom, then struggling families in Chicago, now all Americans. I’ll never forget the day I spent working with Senator Obama, and I know he won’t either. He was my co-worker, he is my friend, and next November, he will be our president.</p>]]></description>
<link>http://www.democrats.org/a/2008/08/pauline_beck.php</link>
<guid>http://www.democrats.org/a/2008/08/pauline_beck.php</guid>
<category>Convention 2008</category>
<pubDate>Tue, 26 Aug 2008 18:10:08 -0500</pubDate>
</item>

<item>
<title>Robin Golden</title>
<description><![CDATA[<p>Good evening Denver. I am Robin Golden from Grand Rapids, Michigan. I am president of UAW Local 2344. Ten years ago, I started working for an auto parts manufacturer. I am an end-of-the-line inspector: I make sure our products are safe before they get into the cars that Americans drive.</p>

<p>When I first took my job, the economy was growing and business was booming. It looked like I had a great future there. I believed if I worked hard and did good work, I would have a job until I retired.</p>

<p>In two weeks, I will be unemployed. My job is being shipped to Mexico, along with the jobs of most of my 430 hourly co-workers. That means every single member of my local will be unemployed in two weeks. I am not just losing my job; I am losing my union—and all the benefits it has brought me. I feel like I am losing my chance to get ahead.</p>

<p>Meanwhile, in Washington, Senator McCain voted for tax breaks for companies that outsource jobs. Senator McCain voted against supporting those companies whose products are made by American workers like me. It’s time for a change.</p>

<p>I’ve just been diagnosed with diabetes and my health insurance runs out three months after I lose my job. Paying for it out of pocket will be one-third of my unemployment benefit. It’s time for a change.</p>

<p>Gas and grocery prices keep going up, and everyone’s paychecks are buying less. Families all around us in Michigan are losing their homes. I’ve sent out resumes to try and find a new job, but I haven’t even heard anything back. I can’t even think about retirement any more. It’s time for a change.</p>

<p>I have worked hard my entire life. My wife works hard as a librarian. We clip coupons. We make sacrifices. Because we love America, we want to protect and strengthen the American dream. We want a fair chance to get ahead for all who work hard. I want a president who represents working-class families, not big oil companies. I want a president who knows that organized labor helped build the middle class, and that organized labor helps keep our middle class strong. I want a president who will keep American jobs here at home.</p>

<p>The change we need is Barack Obama for president. Americans, unite! Let’s come together to send someone to Washington who will work for American jobs, American energy independence and the American dream. Let’s come together for Barack Obama!</p>]]></description>
<link>http://www.democrats.org/a/2008/08/robin_golden.php</link>
<guid>http://www.democrats.org/a/2008/08/robin_golden.php</guid>
<category>Convention 2008</category>
<pubDate>Tue, 26 Aug 2008 17:55:35 -0500</pubDate>
</item>

<item>
<title>John Sweeney</title>
<description><![CDATA[<p>All over America, children like Marcus Lewis are riding their bikes, starting sixth grade, and dreaming of breaking Olympic records or just finding a good job and raising a family. But unless we turn our country around, they’re not going to make it, not even into the middle class.</p>

<p>Marcus’s mom, Annette, is a single mother who worked hard to get her children where they are today. She works full time and is struggling to send her 18-year-old daughter to college. But after the rent and the bills, there’s hardly enough left over for food.</p>

<p>Dan Luevano is an electrician who worked for a construction company for ten years, six of them without a raise. When he told his boss he’d be voting for a union so he could bargain for a better life, he was fired.</p>

<p>Steve Skvara is a retired steelworker who learned about unfair trade the hard way when the giant company where he’d worked went bankrupt, cut his pension by a third, and eliminated his family’s health care.</p>

<p>These are good people. Strong people. They work hard and believe in their country, their faith and the future. They can’t afford four more years like the last eight. They need change, and that’s why they all support Barack Obama for President of the United States.</p>

<p>They deserve a better America, an America where every worker can count on a good job. Where every family has health care. Where every senior enjoys a decent retirement. They deserve an America that works for everyone. Where all workers have a free choice to join unions, to collectively bargain, to lift up their communities and our economy, and build a better life for their children.</p>

<p>Whatever happened to the promise of a better America? What happened was that the Bush Administration—with the support of Senator McCain—broke that promise, undermined our values, and turned our economy into a threshing machine for big business.</p>

<p>Brothers and sisters, this is our chance to create much-needed change for young people like Marcus and rebuild this country we love. We can create the better America that Annette, Steve, and Dan—and all of us—deserve. A country whose heart is as big as the hearts of its people. A country that lifts up our families here at home and lights up the world with our vision and values.</p>

<p>On behalf of America’s unions, with 28 million voters in union households, we will win for Barack Obama and Joe Biden, and we will create a better America.</p>

<p>Thank you and god bless America.</p>]]></description>
<link>http://www.democrats.org/a/2008/08/john_sweeney.php</link>
<guid>http://www.democrats.org/a/2008/08/john_sweeney.php</guid>
<category>Convention 2008</category>
<pubDate>Tue, 26 Aug 2008 17:52:56 -0500</pubDate>
</item>

<item>
<title>Rep. Linda Sanchez</title>
<description><![CDATA[<p>Good afternoon. I’m Congresswoman Linda Sanchez and I’d like to share a story with you. One day in the Capitol while going to vote, I threw my arm into the closing doors of an elevator to catch it. There were two older men standing inside, and one of them asked me, “So, whose office do you work in?” Dressed professionally and wearing my pin that identified me as a member of Congress, I was dismayed that these two assumed I was someone else’s staff. I politely smiled and responded, “Oh, I have my own office in this building.” Then the elevator doors opened, and they scurried out.</p>

<p>As a young Latina, most people may not think of me as a person they would go to in search of answers. But I’ll tell you someone who did: Barack Obama. He recognized that my background as a union member and organizer gave me a grasp of the difficulty families face trying to make ends meet. That’s why he picks up the phone to ask me about policies that impact working families.</p>

<p>With the soaring cost of energy, families today are paying more for basics like food and fuel and just about everything else. Rising health care costs mean that for many people, coverage is out of reach. With joblessness on the rise, hard-working families are being squeezed from all sides. They worry about their economic security and whether tomorrow will bring more hardship than happiness.</p>

<p>But Barack Obama knows what we need to get the American economy back on track. He’s restoring America’s promise that if you work hard and play by the rules, you won’t be left behind. Barack Obama understands what single-parent families confront every day, because he grew up in a single-parent home.</p>

<p>Barack Obama understands that we must preserve programs like low-interest student loans, because that’s how he was able to afford to go to college.</p>

<p>Barack Obama understands that as Americans, we can achieve economic success, but also lend a hand to help those who are struggling. He did just that when he became an advocate and organizer for communities that had been devastated by plant closures.</p>

<p>There are people listening to me right now who think that the outcome of this election won’t affect them. It will. It will determine whether you have a champion on your side, who will help you into the elevator, or whether you get more of the same failed leadership that has given hard-working families the shaft.</p>]]></description>
<link>http://www.democrats.org/a/2008/08/rep_linda_sanch.php</link>
<guid>http://www.democrats.org/a/2008/08/rep_linda_sanch.php</guid>
<category>Convention 2008</category>
<pubDate>Tue, 26 Aug 2008 15:35:49 -0500</pubDate>
</item>

<item>
<title>Tom Balanoff</title>
<description><![CDATA[<p>I bring you warm greetings from 175,000 hard-working members of the SEIU of Illinois. I was born in 1950. My father was a steelworker in south Chicago. Like millions of other industrial workers in this country, he believed in the American dream: if you worked hard, you could build a good life for yourself and your family and create better opportunities for your children.<br />
 <br />
My parents, like millions of other working families, were able to own a home and car and put their children through college. Back then, in that City of Big Shoulders, the Chicago of the 1950s and ’60s and ’70s, the American dream was a reality. By the early 1980s, as our economy began to globalize, the steel industry was in decline, and industrial plants were closing all over our country—and especially in Chicago.<br />
 <br />
That’s what Barack Obama found when he moved to Chicago in 1984. On the south side of Chicago, in the aftermath of steel plant closings, this enormously talented man, who undoubtedly had many other opportunities, chose to begin his political career at the grassroots level.<br />
 <br />
As a community organizer, he devoted his considerable gifts to helping displaced workers and their families try to rebuild their lives. He worked with church-based groups to bring job training programs to poor neighborhoods. He organized tenants in successful efforts to remove asbestos from public housing. He committed himself to improving the future of hard-working people devastated by the decline of the manufacturing sector.<br />
 <br />
It was this experience as a community organizer that has greatly influenced Barack Obama’s political perspective and which is at the core of his identity. He understands the challenges that working families face. He knows that they are the strength of this nation. He knows that in the current economic climate, many of these families struggle despite how hard they work every day.<br />
 <br />
Barack Obama believes that if you go to work in the United States, you should not have to live in poverty. He believes that hard work should be rewarded with a living wage, health care, and a secure retirement, and that these rewards will build stronger families and communities and a stronger America. John McCain looks to Wall Street and says the economy is OK. Barack Obama looks to Main Street and knows that it is not OK. The working families of this country cannot afford four more years of Bush-McCain economic policies.<br />
 <br />
Barack Obama offers the change we need to revive the American dream for millions of America’s workers and their families.</p>]]></description>
<link>http://www.democrats.org/a/2008/08/tom_balanoff.php</link>
<guid>http://www.democrats.org/a/2008/08/tom_balanoff.php</guid>
<category>Convention 2008</category>
<pubDate>Mon, 25 Aug 2008 18:05:47 -0500</pubDate>
</item>

<item>
<title>McCain Doesn&apos;t Want to Muddy the Election Debate with Policy Details</title>
<description><![CDATA[<p>At a time of great uncertainty in the economy, millions of Americans of all ages, working and retired, are worried about their economic future -- before and after they retire. That's why voters want to know more about John McCain's plans for Social Security.</p>

<p>It turns out, they won't get them.</p>

<p>John McCain, whose support for privatization of Social Security is well known, <a href="http://www.politico.com/news/stories/0708/12215.html">refuses to provide the details of his plan</a> because it would, according to one senior adviser, "politicize the debate."</p>

<blockquote>Consider McCain campaign senior adviser Taylor Griffin’s description of his candidate's plan for fixing Social Security:

<p>"The history of the Social Security debate has taught that too many specifics, especially during a presidential campaign, has polarized the debate," he said of the program that McCain called "an absolute disgrace [that's] got to be fixed."</p>

<p>Will he contrast his plan to that of his opponent? "Sen. McCain believes this is so important that we do not politicize this debate during an election season."</blockquote></p>

<p>This explains why John McCain's "Jobs for America" economic plan is only thirteen pages and economists widely criticized as thin on the details. It is not that John McCain wants to hide his massive tax cuts for the rich, and massive corporate tax breaks, he just does not want to politicize the debate.</p>

<p>And really, who needs to discuss policy details in a presidential campaign? John McCain doesn't want to cause a distraction from <a href="http://www.democrats.org/a/2008/08/dnc_web_ad_prou.php">talking about Britney Spears and Paris Hilton</a> -- you know, the things that matter.</p>]]></description>
<link>http://www.democrats.org/a/2008/08/mccain_doesnt_w_1.php</link>
<guid>http://www.democrats.org/a/2008/08/mccain_doesnt_w_1.php</guid>
<category>Blog</category>
<pubDate>Fri, 01 Aug 2008 13:43:15 -0500</pubDate>
</item>

<item>
<title>Schwarzenegger to Slash 200k State Workers&apos; Pay to $6.55 an Hour</title>
<description><![CDATA[<p>In California, word broke last week that Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger is attempting to <a href="http://www.calitics.com/showDiary.do?diaryId=6479">slash the pay of 200,000 state workers</a> down to the federal minimum wage of $6.55 an hour.</p>

<blockquote>Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger plans to sign an executive order next week that will reduce pay for more than 200,000 state workers to the federal minimum wage of $6.55 per hour to preserve cash in the midst of a month-long budget standoff, according to a draft copy of the order obtained by The Bee.</blockquote>

<p>$6.55 an hour to pay the rent, keep the lights on, gas up their cars and feed their families. For some perspective, in college at the University of Arizona, I worked 40 hours a week on $7.85 and struggled to pay a modest rent along with all the bills, and I did not drive a car then, either. Gov. Schwarzenegger expects families to survive on $262 gross pay per week?</p>

<p>Democrats across the state are fighting this attempt to thrust the burden of the California budget onto the shoulders of 200,000 state workers with massive cuts.</p>

<p>Controller <a href="http://www.calitics.com/showDiary.do?diaryId=6526">John</a> <a href="http://www.calitics.com/showDiary.do?diaryId=6493">Chiang</a>, Speaker of the Assembly <a href="http://www.calitics.com/showDiary.do?diaryId=6479">Karen Bass</a>, Lt. Gov. <a href="http://www.sacbee.com/static/weblogs/the_state_worker/2008/07/pension-web-site-worth-your-ti.html">John Garamendi</a>, and <a href="http://www.calitics.com/showDiary.do?diaryId=6499">twenty-seven members of the California congressional delegation</a> led by Rep. Hilda Solis are leading the fight to stop Arnold from shifting the budget burden onto 200,000 state workers.</p>]]></description>
<link>http://www.democrats.org/a/2008/07/schwarzenegger_3.php</link>
<guid>http://www.democrats.org/a/2008/07/schwarzenegger_3.php</guid>
<category>Blog</category>
<pubDate>Thu, 31 Jul 2008 14:45:03 -0500</pubDate>
</item>

<item>
<title>Jobless Claims Jumped</title>
<description><![CDATA[<p>The fundamentals of our economy are strong, says John McCain. <a href="http://www.reuters.com/article/marketsNews/idUSN2345093820080724">Reuters</a>, however, has a different story:</p>

<blockquote>The number of U.S. workers filing new claims for jobless benefits jumped 34,000 last week, government data on Thursday showed, reflecting seasonal volatility typical at this time of year.

<p>Initial claims for state unemployment insurance benefits rose to a seasonally adjusted 406,000 in the week ended July 19, from a revised 372,000 the prior week, the Labor Department said. It was the highest reading since late March.</blockquote></p>

<p>So stop your whining.</p>]]></description>
<link>http://www.democrats.org/a/2008/07/jobless_claims.php</link>
<guid>http://www.democrats.org/a/2008/07/jobless_claims.php</guid>
<category>Blog</category>
<pubDate>Thu, 24 Jul 2008 10:00:00 -0500</pubDate>
</item>


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