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Kamala Harris struggles to secure men's support

1/11/2024 6:06
        With the U.S. election
        days away, Vice President Kamala Harris is struggling to secure
        the support of male volunteers in some labor unions whose phone
        calls and house visits are needed to get Democratic supporters
        out to vote, senior labor officials said.
        
        Most unions have long supported Democratic candidates, and
        both Harris and President Joe Biden have backed unions in
        contract negotiations and championed workers' rights.
        
        But Republican candidate Donald Trump, who was president
        from 2017-2021, has made inroads with union workers in recent
        years and any drop in support for Harris could be a decisive
        factor in the neck-and-neck race.
        
        If elected, Harris would make U.S. history as the first
        female and second Black president, and sexism and racism have
        been seen as a hurdle to her winning.
        
        Liz Shuler, president of the 12.5 million-member AFL-CIO,
        said enthusiasm for Harris is strong overall but sexism is
        likely undermining support for her in some unions.
        
        "Let's be honest, there are people who look at a female
        candidate and at face value dismiss her because, you know, she's
        perceived as not being presidential," she said. "No one
        questions Donald Trump in that way."
        
        Finding these men at home can be a challenge and the AFL-CIO
        is addressing the problem instead by visiting men at their job
        sites, where chances of a conversation to address their concerns
        are much higher, she said.
        
        The problem is especially acute within the building trades
        unions like electricians and pipefitters, whose members are
        predominantly male and white.
        
        Larger service unions, where membership is more diverse,
        have witnessed a growing gender gap, where a drop in male
        support has been offset by a surge in support from women, labor
        officials say.
        
        It's part of a phenomenon playing out across the country
        that could be a pivotal factor in the election, Reuters polling
        shows - Harris is gaining with women, especially white women,
        while Trump is polling better with men than he was in 2020.
        
        James Maravelias, head of the Delaware AFL-CIO, said Harris'
        support among male members has been weaker in part because of
        her liberal track record on social issues and in part because of
        male chauvinism.
        
        "I am afraid some won't come out at all," Maravelias said
        about potential impact on Election Day.
        
        In interviews, AFL-CIO door knockers said some households
        view Harris and Democrats as strong defenders of union rights
        while others have lost faith in the Democratic Party and see
        more common ground with Trump.
        
        “The men are the toughest doors,” said one of six door
        knockers interviewed. “They want to argue and there’s no
        agreement on the facts.”
        
        An AFL-CIO-led door-knocking effort in the Philadelphia area
        was forced to narrow its focus to known Harris supporters after
        an expected wave of volunteers failed to materialize, according
        to a local organizer.
        
        Most major unions have endorsed Harris, including the United
        Auto Workers union, but it is a mixed picture at the
        rank-and-file level across industries and different parts of the
        country.
        
        
        
        POLL FAVORS HARRIS, BUT WILL IT BE ENOUGH TO HELP HER WIN?
        
        Support for Harris remains strong in Racine, Wisconsin, said
        Richard Glowacki, chairman of the UAW Local 180, which
        represents workers at a CNH Industrial's sprawling tractor
        factory on the outskirts of that faded blue-collar city.
        
        He called demand for Harris' and other Democrats' yard signs
        "unreal" and said retirees are actively getting out the vote.
        
        But the 1.3 million-member International Brotherhood of
        Teamsters, representing workers ranging from airline pilots to
        zookeepers, decided not to endorse a candidate in this election
        after a poll of members found Trump led Harris by 59.6% to 34%.
        
        A Reuters/Ipsos poll showed Harris leading Trump 47%-36%
        among Americans who were union members or had a family member in
        a union. The survey of 655 union household respondents was held
        Oct 16-21 and had a margin of error of about 4 percentage
        points.
        
        In the 2020 election, Biden had a 16-point advantage over
        Trump - 56% to 40% - in an Edison Research poll of people who
        lived in households with a union member.
        
        Lauren Hitt, a spokeswoman for the Harris campaign, said
        steep losses in support among non-college educated males could
        be made up by gains from non-college educated women. The Trump
        campaign did not immediately respond to a request for comment.
        
        
        
        UNION VOTES MATTER
        
        Union workers make up one-fifth of the voters in
        battleground states Michigan, Pennsylvania and Wisconsin, says
        the AFL-CIO, the largest federation of unions in the country
        that counts several building trades unions among its members.
        
        The three states, known as the "Blue Wall" for their
        importance to Democrats, are among the seven battlegrounds that
        will decide Tuesday's presidential election.
        
        Unions are also key to Democrats' "Get out the vote" efforts
        in these states, and their members traditionally knock on
        thousands of doors ahead of elections to rally voters.
        
        Harris, who is also of South Asian origins, has dismissed
        concerns that sexism could hurt her chances of winning the White
        House, saying the country is "absolutely" ready to elect a
        female president.
        
        Jimmy Williams, president of the International Union of
        Painters and Allied Trades (IUPAT), which has over 140,000
        members, said a drop in support from men is being more than
        offset by women within his union.
        
        "I have spoken to women members in the states of
        Pennsylvania, Michigan, Wisconsin, and Ohio and I can tell you,
        not one woman member that I have spoken to, has been somebody
        who has been supportive of Donald Trump, not one," he said.
        



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