Democrats hope economy trumps workers' doubts on race
By Andrea Hopkins
DENVER (Reuters) - Union leaders know that ringing speeches at this week's Democratic Party convention will not in themselves win over white working-class Americans reluctant to elect Barack Obama the first black president of the United States.
That's going to take one-on-one persuasion and a closer focus on pocketbook issues that the party hopes will trump racial concerns and win backing from critical blue-collar swing voters before the November 4 election, they said.
Obama's troubles with white working class voters have been overshadowed at the convention by the party's struggle to bring into the fold disgruntled supporters of his defeated rival Democratic Hillary Clinton.
But union leaders talk more about the need to overcome racial prejudice to rally working class voters behind the 47-year-old Illinois senator in the close race with Republican John McCain, 71.
"Many folks around the country have never voted for an African-American, not for president," Karen Ackerman, the political director of the AFL-CIO trade union umbrella group, told reporters on the convention sidelines.
"But we are confident Barack Obama will be elected when working class voters know who he is and what he stands for." The AFL-CIO, like most other labor groups which traditionally back Democrats, has endorsed Obama.
A survey released this week showed that while black and Latino workers support Obama by wide margins, white working Americans are almost evenly split, with 43 percent supporting Obama and 44 percent McCain.
But the poll, by Lake Research for the Change To Win union group, also indicated a way to bridge the racial divide: 40 percent of working Americans said the economy was their top concern this election year.
"ANGRY WHITE GUYS"
"We need to accept the fact that there are going to be some angry white guys who won't vote for Barack Obama because he's a black man," said Mike Fikes, 56, a construction union leader and convention delegate from Michigan.
But the rest are up for grabs. Blue-collar voters have long eschewed political loyalty in the United States, gravitating to Republican Ronald Reagan in the 1980s, Democrat Bill Clinton in the 1990s and Republican George W. Bush in 2000 and 2004.
"The fundamental challenge for us is not the whole issue of what color his skin is ... it's that our economy has gone into the toilet," Fikes said.
Robert Thompson, 54, director of a local American Federation of State, County and Municipal Employees in Akron, Ohio, and a delegate in Denver, said he hears first-hand the "undertone" of racism when colleagues discuss the election.
"The reality is we have the first African American candidate running for president and you can't minimize that dynamic," said Thompson, who is black.
"It's going to be difficult to overcome," he said. "We have to keep it simple. We have to tell a worker the difference between Barack and McCain is that McCain is trying to do away with employer-provided health care." Continued...




