Thank you. I’m thankful to everyone who made those kind comments in
the film—Vice President Joe Biden, Cardinal McCarrick, my charming
sister Cathy. She’s part of the most caring and supportive family
anybody could ever hope for. Cathy’s here this afternoon with her
husband, Greg, and their family; my brother Jim is here; my sister
Peggy, her husband, Ted, and their family; my wife, Maureen, our son,
John, our daughter, Trish, and our granddaughter, Kennedy. Will the
Sweeney family stand and take a bow?
I also owe so much to my
union family—my partners Rich Trumka and Arlene Holt Baker, members of
our Executive Council, our international, national, state and local
leaders, our entire staff—especially my executive assistant for nearly
30 years, Bob Welsh—and my administrative assistant for just as long,
Liz Maiorany. I owe so much to all of you, my union brothers and
sisters.
I’ve loved our labor movement all my life. There
is no greater honor than the opportunity to serve working people, and
the best thing about this job has been all of you. You are the magic of
our movement, the source of my spirit and the iron will that moves us
forward.
We are many but you have made us one, and I salute you—thank you so much.
Brothers
and sisters, this week isn’t about what Sweeney has done, it’s about
what you have done. When we started down this road together, I said it
wasn’t about who headed the AFL-CIO but where the AFL-CIO was headed.
Thanks to your commitment, your personal sacrifice and your hard work,
we’ve taken our Federation in a new, positive, progressive direction.
In
1995, I also said I was going to put myself way out front and then ask
you to push me. I did—and you did—and together we changed the course of
our country. We transformed the debate over globalization and helped
redefine the global labor movement as a champion of workers’ rights.
We
increased the minimum wage. We took on the Enrons and the Exxons. We
called the hand of the greedy corporations that sent our jobs overseas,
scammed our mortgage markets and nearly destroyed our economy. We
brought health care and labor law reform to the top of our national
agenda. We seated a pro-working-family majority in the U.S. Congress.
We
elected a champion of working families as the first African American
president in the history of our country—and what a thrill it was to
watch him last week as he took on the ugly forces that are ripping at
the right of every American family to have health care—health care as a
right, not a privilege.
With him out front, we’re
restoring government as a force for ensuring individual opportunity,
eliminating special privilege, and promoting the common good. Those are
his values, those are our values and they are America’s values.
Yes, we changed the direction of our country and we should be just as proud of how we changed our movement.
We
built the strongest grassroots political operation in our country and
brought hundreds of thousands of union volunteers into the fight to
protect the dreams we share. We stopped just listening to politicians
and started insisting they listen to the voices of working families. We
made organizing the responsibility of every national union, every local
union, every state fed, and every CLC.
We knew we were faced
with building a movement on changing ground and we reached out to
organizations and workers outside our walls. As Jenn Jannon said in
the film you just saw, we threw open the doors of the house of labor to
everyone who shares our values.
We created Working America and
added the power of 3 million families who don’t have a union where they
work. We tapped the energy of 4 million of our retired brothers and
sisters with the Alliance for Retired Americans. We revived our state
federations and central labor councils and what a job you have done.
We
forged beyond our traditional boundaries and created historic
partnerships with worker centers, independent unions and the National
Education Association. We pulled our allies together in vibrant
coalitions and made our federation the action center of the progressive
movement. Now we’re making sure our doors stay open by bringing more
women, more young people and more minorities into our leadership.
I
often say I was lucky to be escorted into the House of Labor through
the front door by my father, who was a foot soldier for Mike Quill and
Local 100 of the Transport Workers Union. Now we have to continue our
march toward diversity, inclusion and full participation—and make sure
no one ever has to knock at our back door again.
As we begin
our convention today, I’m filled with optimism. We’ve helped create one
of those rare moments when history invites dramatic improvement in the
human condition. And we’re about to elect a new and exciting
leadership team who will help us seize that moment.
But the
excitement over our possibilities is tempered by the realities of our
times. We’re seeing glimmers of an economic recovery, yet nearly 20
million of our brothers and sisters are still without work. The poor
and the out-of-work are no longer invisible or abstract figures—they’re
our friends and neighbors, our mothers and fathers, our sons and
daughters.
We’re on the cusp of the greatest advance in labor
law reform in 70 years, but we’re taking heavy fire from the corporate
captains of deceit.
We’re closer than ever to winning our long
struggle for universal health care, but our success has kindled a
firestorm of meanness stoked by politicians playing on fear, racism,
nativism and greed.
Every one of our achievements represents unfinished business—and the tasks we’re challenged with are daunting.
But
if there is one thing we’ve learned over the past 14 years it is
this: Miracles present themselves on the shoulders of commitment, unity
and action.
At the center of these is unity—the solidarity that flows through the marrow of our movement.
For
us, solidarity is more than just a strategy, it’s a way of life. We
believe in helping each other. We care about our brothers and sisters.
Solidarity is what gives workers the collective courage to form a union, to fight back against a greedy employer.
Solidarity
is what compelled thousands of first responders and construction
workers to risk their lives at Ground Zero eight years ago last Friday.
Solidarity is what saved 155 airline passengers who could have drowned in the icy waters of the Hudson River.
Solidarity
is what compels a firefighter to dive into an inferno to save a
stranger, a teacher to refuse to give up on a child or back off from a
battle with a school board.
Your solidarity is what pulled us
through when our federation split apart—you cared more about our common
purpose than your own self-interest—and proved that, “we are many, we
are one.”
Now it is up to you to bring even more solidarity
behind Rich and Liz and Arlene as they fight to bring our movement back
together.
With your commitment and unity and action behind them,
we will revive our economy and make it work for everyone. We will pass
the Employee Free Choice Act and help millions of America’s workers
lift their lives and realize their aspirations. We will guarantee
every family in America health care when they need it. And we will be
true to our enduring mission of improving the lives of working
families, bringing fairness and dignity to our workplaces and securing
economic and social equity in our nation.
That’s our mission, that’s our job—let’s get at it.
Thank you, God bless all of you and your loved ones, and God bless America.








