From In These Times: http://inthesetimes.com/working/entry/12585/trumka_voices_dissent_from_obamas_corporate-backed_jobs_council_report/
Strong criticism comes as labor federation withholds re-election endorsement
By Mike Elk
Thursday Jan 19, 2012
WASHINGTON D.C.—In a sign of what could be growing political independence from the White House, AFL-CIO President Richard Trumka on Tuesday strongly criticized the latest report issued by the President's Council on Jobs and Competiveness. The Council's "Roadmap to Renewal" report, released that day, recommended corporate tax cuts, deregulation and government budgets cuts.
“[R]eforming our regulatory system and reducing the statutory corporate tax rate are not not crucial elements of “competitiveness” for the United States going forward, nor does empirical evidence support the claim that significant net new job creation would result from such “reforms,” Trumka said in what he called "constructive dissent."
He didn't attend the Council's Tuesday meeting at the White House because he was sick, according to the AFL-CIO. The other labor leader on the 25-member Council, United Food and Commercial Workers President Joe Hansen, did attend the meeting. But on this video of the meeting, Hansen appeared to be the only Council who abstained from approving the report, saying, "I certainly think there's been an awful lot of good work in the report, but I choose to abstain at this time. ... My concern is with the tax reform."
President Obama issued a laudatory statement, saying “I’m proud that we’ve taken action on a majority of the Council’s recommendations on issues ranging from insourcing to permitting to clean energy.”
Trumka also criticized the composition of Obama’s Job Council, which is made up of 23 corporate executives and two labor leaders, saying, “I believe strongly that the Jobs Council’s membership is simply too narrowly representative of our country to provide a balanced set of recommendations to the President in these critical areas…. As a result, the report addresses regulatory issues as if we were not in the midst of a prolonged economic crisis whose proximate causes clearly included inadequate regulation of business, and in particular financial markets and institutions.”
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