Wednesday, December 10, 2008

"Change To Win" Union Denies Job Offered To Governor Blagojevich

Time will tell if this statement is more than just wishful thinking on behalf of the biggest of the Big Labor instruments.

The following is a statement from Change to Win
communications director Greg Denier on the federal investigation involving
Governor Blagojevich.

"No one connected with Change to Win ever considered, discussed or promised any
position at Change to Win to Governor Blagojevich, his staff or his advisers. In
the affidavit released by the United States Attorney, a position at Change to
Win is discussed only in conversations between the governor and his advisers.
The first time Change to Win learned of any of the matters raised in the
criminal complaint was with today's public release of the affidavit."
I don't trust Big Labor bosses and neither should The Justice Department and The National Labor Relations Board.

UPDATE: According to The Washington Post, contained in the complaint against Blagojevich is:
a description of an official with the Service Employees International Union acting as an apparent intermediary between the governor and Barack Obama's camp in discussions over Obama's Senate seat.

[...]

The U.S. attorney's complaint states that Blagojevich mused aloud with his advisers about the possibility that he could seek a high-paying job with Change to Win, the coalition of seven unions -- dominated by SEIU -- that broke away from the AFL-CIO in 2005. Blagojevich and his chief of staff wondered aloud about a "three-way deal" in which he would appoint Obama confidante Valerie Jarrett, a Chicago businesswoman believed to be the woman identified in the complaint as "Candidate 1," to Obama's Senate seat; Blagojevich in return would become Change to Win's executive director; and Obama would reward Change to Win with pro-labor policies.



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