I'm the one candidate who comes from the working class
If we had trade agreements that had workers' rights in them, that would lift up conditions for workers in this country and all countries. I'm the candidate of workers because I've stood for jobs, full employment economy, health care, education for all.
A Kucinich administration will means a workers' White House. Right now wealth is being accelerated upwards. I'm the one candidate in the race who comes right from the working class and can address those needs directly because I remember where I came from
Source: 2007 Democratic debate in Las Vegas, Nevada
Nov 15, 2007
Put unemployed to work rebuilding infrastructure
Edwards would change the minimum wage to "at least $7.50 and hour." He has a jobs program for the unemployed that sounds limited and vague.
He would create a million "stepping stone jobs for workers who take responsibility" -- minimum wage jobs lasting up to twelve months, and in return, "workers must show up and work hard, stay off drugs, not commit any crimes, and pay child support."
Dennis Kucinich, in contrast, wants to put people without jobs to work rebuilding America's crumbling infrastructure--bridges, tunnels, roads--at a time when many politicians in both parties are desiring to sell them off; his program would put people of
New Orleans to work rebuilding their own city and its water defenses.
Require all government agencies to follow ENDA for GLBT jobs
As president of the United States [I would] issue executive orders that will require all federal contractors, anyone who's doing business with the federal government any way, every federal agency to have to follow the principles that are written in
ENDA [the Employment Non-Discrimination Acts, focusing on discrimination on the basis of sexual orientation]. Let the federal government be the agent of change that it should be, and then lead the way as president in bringing about the kind of unity
that shows that real unity is to respect each other's inner equality and real unity is to respect the power of human love. The greatest commandment is love, and I think that if someone embodies that and lives it, then things change in a country.
Love has that transformative power, and that's what I have always tried to bring in to public forums, and that's what I'll bring into White House as well.
Restore right to organize; to collective bargain; to strike
Q: How wold you restore the rights of workers who want to form a union?
A: The right to organize is a basic right in a democratic society. And in a Worker's White House under a Kucinich administration, the right to organize, the right to collective
bargaining, the right to strike, the right to decent wages & benefits, the right to a safe workplace, the right to a secure retirement, the right to participate in a political process--these are all basic rights that will be the hallmark of my presidency
Source: 2007 AFL-CIO Democratic primary forum
Aug 8, 2007
Would accept minimum wage as president, reluctantly
Q: If you're elected to serve as president, would you be willing to do this service for the next four years and be paid the national minimum wage of $7.25 per hour?
A: I live in the same house I purchased in 1971 for $22,500. I think we need to increase the minimum wage and so all my neighbors can get an increase in their wages.
Works Green Administration: WGA creates green jobs, like WPA
Just like Pres. Roosevelt created a WPA where we built public works all over this country, so I will call forth the capacity of our people to participate in a major environmental effort to not only conserve energy, so that each person participates in wha
you could call a cap-and-share approach to protecting our environment but also where we use the productive capacity of government in every area, to have NASA help develop a new technology which can protect our environment, to have the Dept. of Energy
shift its focus towards green energy, to have every area of the government involved in environmental consciousness.
A president can do that, & I intend to, with a WGA--a Works Green Administration--which will produce millions of new jobs; retrofitting
homes with green building, putting wind & solar, microtechnology; enabling people to save money, reduce the carbon footprint. We can save our planet. We will save our planet, and we'll do it with leadership and with all of us working together to do that.
A: First, cancel the Bush tax cuts that went to the people in the top brackets. Second, get the US out of Iraq. Third, cut the Pentagon budget by 15% and put that money into universal pre-kindergarten.
Fourth, take the money from the Bush tax cuts that went to the top bracket and put it into a fund to create universal college education. Fifth, get NASA involved in developing new energy technologies, new environmental technologies.
Source: CNN "Rock The Vote" Democratic Debate
Nov 5, 2003
Rebuild infrastructure with a program like FDR's WPA
On Labor Day, I announced a new initiative, a new initiative which will enable the United States to rebuild its cities in the same way that Franklin Roosevelt rebuilt America during the Depression, called a new WPA-type program,
rebuild our cities, our streets, our water systems, our sewer systems, new energy systems. It's time to rebuild America. We have the resources to do it, we have to have the will to do it.
Source: Democratic Primary Debate, Albuquerque New Mexico
Sep 4, 2003
Shift USDA funds from agribusiness to family farmers
Kucinich will shift USDA funding and focus away from the promotion of concentrated intensive and industrial agribusiness.
New focus will benefit family farmers, rural communities, the environment, and consumers, with policies crafted to enable farmers to earn a fair price and to provide safe, nutritious food to all people.
Will increase funding for regional food processing facilities, marketing assistance, farm to school programs, on-farm renewable energy, and the Farmers Market Nutrition Program.
Agricultural research and development institutions will be given funding priority to help family farmers make a transition to profitable and sustainable agriculture.
Source: Campaign website, www.Kucinich.us, "On The Issues"
Aug 1, 2003
Labor defends workers when corporations attack
Labor has stood almost alone while corporations have cut wages and benefits, slashed working hours, tried to undermine wage and hour provisions, reneged on contracts, and jettisoned retirements through bankruptcy strategies.
There needs to be equal concern for those who created the wealth through their labor because the attacks on unions are a means of redistributing the wealth upwards.
Source: Campaign website, www.Kucinich.us, "On The Issues"
Aug 1, 2003
Right to a job and to decent wages
People have a right to:
A job.
A safe workplace.
Decent wages and benefits.
Organize and be represented.
Grieve about working conditions.
Strike.
Fair compensation for injuries on the job.
Sue if injured by negligent employers.
Security of pension and retirement benefits.
Participate in the political process.
Source: Campaign website, www.Kucinich.us, "On The Issues"
Aug 1, 2003
Labor protections; not binding employer arbitration
In 2001, the US Supreme Court repealed 100 years of labor and civil rights protections and gave employers the right to require mandatory, binding arbitration as a condition of employment.
This repeal meant that anyone seeking a job in America could be required to sign away their civil rights, disability rights, sex discrimination protections, pension rights, and whistleblower rights.
Source: Campaign website, www.Kucinich.us, "On The Issues"
Aug 1, 2003
Genetically-engineered food is an issue of freedom of choice
Genetically engineered food represents a challenge to freedom of choice and freedom of expression.
It touches something very deep in all of us that in our striving to consume that we not become less than that which we consume. Country-of-origin labeling will be required.
Source: Campaign website, www.Kucinich.us, "On The Issues"
Aug 1, 2003
Address plight of small farmer by canceling NAFTA & WTO
Something's wrong when profits of agribusiness corporations skyrocket, but farmers must find off-farm jobs or sell their farms to survive.
The first act of a Kucinich Administration will be to cancel NAFTA and the WTO, replacing them with bilateral trade agreements designed to benefit family farmers and workers while protecting the health of communities and the environment.
Source: Campaign website, www.Kucinich.us, "On The Issues"
Aug 1, 2003
Break apart monopolistic agribusiness companies
The Kucinich Administration will create new markets by actively enforcing existing anti-trust laws and proposing new laws to force divestiture in concentrated markets,
breaking apart monopolistic agribusiness companies and shifting farm economics towards higher commodity prices for farmers.
Source: Campaign website, www.Kucinich.us, "On The Issues"
Aug 1, 2003
National ban on packer ownership of livestock
The Kucinich Administration will support a national ban on packer ownership of livestock.
Source: Campaign website, www.Kucinich.us, "On The Issues"
Aug 1, 2003
Farm worker safety by fining employers
The Kucinich Administration will strengthen and enforce air and water quality laws to safeguard rural communities from factory farm pollution. Kucinich will implement new safety standards in meatpacking and food processing.
Worker health and safety protections will be expanded through increased inspections and fines, with criminal charges for employers who cause injury or death to agricultural industry workers.
Source: Campaign website, www.Kucinich.us, "On The Issues"
Aug 1, 2003
Invest in rural America
The Kucinich Administration will initiate a major new program of investment in rural America, putting thousands to work rebuilding invaluable public assets such as schools, hospitals, libraries, swimming pools and parks.
Teachers, doctors, veterinarians, and other important service providers will be offered incentives to work in under-served areas.
Source: Campaign website, www.Kucinich.us, "On The Issues"
Aug 1, 2003
Enshrine workers' rights in a workers' White House
As president I'll make sure that workers' rights are enshrined in a workers' White House. Because workers have a right to organize, a right to bargain collectively, a right to strike, a right to compensation if you're injured on the job. Certainly a
right to fair wages and fair benefits.
As president, I'll issue an executive order which will say that anyone who gets a federal contract will have to provide that when 50 percent of the workers sign up for a union, there's an automatic union.
Source: AFSCME union debate in Iowa
May 17, 2003
Joblessness is a weapon of mass destruction
I ask this administration: "Tell me Mr. Bush, where are those weapons of mass destruction?" I've seen those weapons and I'll tell you where they are. Joblessness is a weapon of mass destruction. Poverty is a weapon of mass destruction.
Hopelessness is a weapon of mass destruction. Let's bring back hope in America. Let's bring back jobs in America. Let's bring back workers' rights in America.
Source: AFSCME union debate in Iowa
May 17, 2003
Engrave into stone the rights of working people
The soul of the worker is not for sale. It will not be sacrificed upon the corporate altar, nor annihilated by a hostile or indifferent government. The soul of the worker will be redeemed by the enshrinement in law of workers' rights.
If in 2004 Labor goes up to the mountaintop of our nation's capital, it must bring back, engraved in stone, the rights of working people:
People have a right to a job.
A right to a safe workplace.
A right to decent wages and benefits.
A right to organize and be represented.
A right to grieve about working conditions.
A right to strike.
A right to fair compensation for injuries on the job.
A right to sue if injured by negligent employers.
A right to security of pension and retirement benefits.
Q: The National Labor Relations Act passed in the 1930s grants uniform collective bargaining rights to all private-sector employees but does not cover public-sector workers. Should it?
A: One of the reasons why you've seen union membership dropping in
this country is because you haven't seen that kind of common application of labor law. We have to make sure that all these institutions that have been set up to protect the rights of working men and women actually have teeth.
We have a Department of
Labor. It's seldom that you see the kind of enforcement for workers or workers' rights. I'm now the chairman of Domestic Policy Subcommittee for the US House. We're finally going to get into looking at what the NLRB does and how they really work
consistently to undermine the rights of workers & unions to try to be heard and to be represented.
We also have to look at OSHA and enforcement like that because there's a lot of unsafe workplaces where the people are not being held to account in law.
Q: What increases, if any, do you favor in the $5.15 an hour federal minimum wage?
A: I favor restoring the value that has been lost to inflation over the past 35 years,
which would mean a minimum wage of over $8.50. I favor indexing this to automatically keep pace with the cost of living.
Source: Associated Press policy Q&A, "Minimum Wage"
Jan 25, 2004
Repeal portions of Taft-Hartley Act; enhance right to strike
Kucinich introduced HR 5644 to repeal sections of the Taft-Hartley Act of 1947, which allow for Presidential interventions in strikes and lockouts.
Source: Campaign website, www.Kucinich.us, "On The Issues"
Aug 1, 2003
Voted YES on restricting employer interference in union organizing.
To enable employees to form & join labor organizations, and to provide for mandatory injunctions for unfair labor practices during organizing efforts. Requires investigation that an employer:
discharged or discriminated against an employee to discourage membership in a labor organization;
threatened to discharge employees in the exercise of guaranteed collective bargaining rights; and
adds to remedies for such violations: back pay plus liquidated damages; and additional civil penalties.
Proponents support voting YES because:
The principle at stake here is the freedom that all workers should have to organize for better working conditions & fair wages. There are many employers around the country who honor this freedom. Unfortunately, there are also many employers who do not. These employers attempt to prevent workers from unionizing by using tactics that amount to harassment, if not outright firing. In fact, one in five people who try to organize
unions are fired. These tactics are already illegal, but the penalties are so minor, they are not effective deterrents.
Opponents support voting NO because:
Democracy itself is placed at risk by this bill. The sanctity of the secret ballot is the backbone of our democratic process. Not one voter signed a card to send us here to Congress. None of us sent our campaign workers out to voters' houses armed with candidate information & a stack of authorization cards. No. We trusted democracy. We trusted the voters to cast their ballots like adults, freely, openly, without intimidation, and we live with the results. But here we are, poised to advance legislation to kill a secret ballot process.
Let's be clear. Every American has the right to organize. No one is debating that. This is a right we believe in so strongly we have codified it and made it possible for workers to do so through a secret ballot.
Reference: The Employee Free Choice Act;
Bill H R 800
; vote number 2007-118
on Mar 1, 2007
Voted YES on increasing minimum wage to $7.25.
Increase the federal minimum wage to:
$5.85 an hour, beginning on the 60th day after enactment;
$6.55 an hour, beginning 12 months after that 60th day; and
$7.25 an hour, beginning 24 months after that 60th day.
Proponents support voting YES because:
We have waited for over 10 years to have a clean vote on the minimum wage for the poorest workers in this country Low-wage workers had their wages frozen in time, from 10 years ago, but when they go to the supermarket, the food prices are higher; when they put gasoline in the car, the gasoline prices are higher; when they pay the utility bills, the utility bills are higher; when their kids get sick, the medical bills are higher. All of those things are higher. They are living in 2007, but in their wages they are living in 1997.
Opponents support voting NO because:
This bill is marked more by what is not in the bill than what is in it. Small businesses are the backbone of our economy. They create two-thirds of our Nation's new jobs, and they represent 98% of the new businesses in the US. What protection does this bill provide them? None whatsoever.
We can do better. In the interest of sending the President a final measure that provides consideration for small businesses and their workers, the very men and women who are responsible for our economy's recent growth and strength, we must do better.
Voted NO on end offshore tax havens and promote small business.
American Jobs Creation Act of 2004: <0l>
Repeal the tax exclusion for extraterritorial income - Permits foreign corporations to revoke elections to be treated as U.S. corporations Business Tax Incentives - Small Business ExpensingTax Relief for Agriculture and Small Manufacturers
Tax Reform and Simplification for United States Businesses
Deduction of State and Local General Sales Taxes
Fair and Equitable Tobacco Reform
Provisions to Reduce Tax Avoidance Through Individual and Corporation Expatriation
Reference: Bill sponsored by Bill Rep Thomas [R, CA-22];
Bill H.R.4520
; vote number 2004-509
on Oct 7, 2004
Voted NO on $167B over 10 years for farm price supports.
Vote to authorize $167 billion over ten years for farm price supports, food aid and rural development. Payments would be made on a countercyclical program, meaning they would increase as prices dropped. Conservation acreage payments would be retained.
Voted NO on zero-funding OSHA's Ergonomics Rules instead of $4.5B.
Vote to pass a resolution to give no enforcement authority or power to ergonomics rules submitted by the Labor Department during the Clinton Administration. These rules would force businesses to take steps to prevent work-related repetitive stress disorders.
Reference: Sponsored by Nickles, R-OK;
Bill S J Res 6
; vote number 2001-33
on Mar 7, 2001
Require full disclosure of outsourced employees.
Kucinich co-sponsored requiring full disclosure of outsourced employees
OFFICIAL CONGRESSIONAL SUMMARY: Transparency and Responsibility for US Trade Health Act (TRUTH Act): Requires a US national that employs individuals in a foreign country, either directly or through subsidiaries, to take necessary steps to provide transparency and public disclosure in all its operations.
EXCERPTS OF BILL:
Be it enacted:
A national of the US that employs one or more individuals in a foreign country, either directly or through subsidiaries or licensees (including any security forces of the national), shall take the necessary steps to provide transparency and disclosure in all its operations, including the full public disclosure of the following:
Information relating to location, address, and corporate name of all facilities abroad
Applicable financial agreements and investments of partners and subcontractors
Worker rights practices and labor standards, including any complaints from employees and violations of local labor laws.
Age, gender, and number of employees in each facility.
Wages paid to employees, including policies on overtime pay.
Working conditions based on current OSHA standards for similar operations.
Environmental performance, including toxic release inventory.
The human rights policy, any complaints received from local communities, and any human rights lawsuits filed.
LEGISLATIVE OUTCOME:Referred to House Committee on International Relations; never came to a vote.
Source: TRUTH Act of 2001 (H.R.460) 01-HR0460 on Feb 6, 2001
Rated 100% by the AFL-CIO, indicating a pro-union voting record.
Kucinich scores 100% by the AFL-CIO on union issues
As the federation of America’s unions, the AFL-CIO includes more than 13 million of America’s workers in 60 member unions working in virtually every part of the economy. The mission of the AFL-CIO is to improve the lives of working families to bring economic justice to the workplace and social justice to our nation. To accomplish this mission we will build and change the American labor movement.
The following ratings are based on the votes the organization considered most important; the numbers reflect the percentage of time the representative voted the organization's preferred position.
Source: AFL-CIO website 03n-AFLCIO on Dec 31, 2003
Allow an Air Traffic Controller's Union.
Kucinich co-sponsored allowing an Air Traffic Controller's Union
OFFICIAL CONGRESSIONAL SUMMARY: Federal Aviation Administration Fair Labor Management Dispute Resolution Act of 2006: Prohibits the FAA from implementing any proposed change to the FAA personnel management system in cases where the services of the Federal Mediation and Conciliation Service do not lead to an agreement between the Administrator and FAA employees, unless Congress authorizes the change during the 60-day period. Requires binding arbitration if Congress does not enact a bill into law within the 60-day period.
SPONSOR'S INTRODUCTORY REMARKS: Sen. OBAMA: Because what air traffic controllers do is vital to our safety, I became very concerned by a letter I received from Illinois air traffic controller Michael Hannigan. He wrote that "the air traffic controllers are not being allowed to negotiate in good faith with the FAA."
What was clear in Michael's plea was the sense that he and his colleagues felt that they were being treated unfairly.
I looked into it and came to the conclusion that if we did not restore a fair negotiation procedure, it would threaten agency morale and effectiveness.
The problem is this: the FAA Administrator currently has the extraordinary authority to impose wages and working conditions on her workers without arbitration. In order to do that, she merely has to declare an impasse in negotiations and if Congress does not stop her from imposing her terms and conditions within 60 days, the Administrator can go ahead and act unilaterally. That authority denies air traffic controllers and all other FAA employees the opportunity to engage in and conclude negotiations in good faith.
It is in the best interest of the agency and public safety to have management and labor cooperate in contract negotiations.
EXCERPTS OF BILL:
LEGISLATIVE OUTCOME:Referred to Senate Committee on Commerce, Science, and Transportation; never came to a vote.
Source: FAA Dispute Resolution Act (S.2201/H.R.4755) 06-S2201 on Jan 26, 2006