By Jennifer Fermin and Erin Durkin
Bill de Blasio came into office hoping to be the most labor-friendly
mayor the city had seen in years, but as he gears up for re-election his
work to win over support from some unions may require serious elbow
grease.
In a column exclusive to the Daily News,
Transport Workers Union Local 100 President John Samuelsen called on
workers to question what de Blasio did to help them during his nearly
three years in office before deciding whether to support him.
“To my brothers and sisters in the labor movement, I say this:
Thoughtfully contemplate whether de Blasio really shares our trade union
values before you give the mayor your stamp of approval. At Bill’s
core, it’s all about Bill, not the trade unionist working families we
represent,” Samuelsen, head of the 42,000-member union, wrote.
De Blasio, initially considered a longshot, did not get the support of
most unions in the mayoral primary in 2013, but the labor movement
coalesced around him in the general election — a feat he hopes to repeat
in 2017, where he does not yet face a serious challenger.
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Source: The New York Daily News (via The Empire Report)
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