October 4, 2012
AFL-CIO registers 450,000 voters from union homes
AP Photo
Dawn (right) and Randy Cornell, watch the presidential debate at the United Steelworkers Local 4856 Union Hall with fellow union members, Wednesday, in Henderson, Nev. President Obama and Republican presidential candidate Mitt Romney faced off, Wednesday night, in their first debate.
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Podhorzer said the plan began in March 2011, when the labor federation began matching lists of union household members with voter registration files from every state. It then identified about 2.3 million people living in households of active and retired union members who were not registered to vote.

Union leaders hoped to register at least 20 percent of that number. That would raise the estimated overall union household registration from 70 percent to 75 percent of eligible voters.

The task was easier in states like Ohio, where union density is highest. In Pennsylvania, for example, Podhorzer said the AFL-CIO registered 57,000 new voters from union households. But the federation also made gains in other swing states, registering 13,500 in Colorado, 10,000 in Nevada and 6,700 in Virginia.

Unions have been trying to maintain their relevance as major political players amid years of steady declines in membership. The voter registration drive could help labor leaders maximize their impact with the numbers they have.

Podhorzer said the project had already met the 75 percent goal as of early August, and he hopes to exceed it in the next four weeks. In the general population, about 65 percent of people 18 and older are registered to vote, according to Census Bureau figures.

Most of the registration work is being done by the federation's 56 affiliated unions, which represent about 9 million workers with collective bargaining agreements.

Unions expect to spend hundreds of millions of dollars to help Obama and other mostly Democratic candidates for state and federal office win election. The AFL-CIO is devoting most of its attention to six battleground states: Florida, Michigan, Nevada, Ohio, Pennsylvania and Wisconsin.

"I think there is an enthusiasm among these voters, a feeling that unions are embattled these days," said Beck, the political science professor. "Given what's happened to unions since 2010, they may be more energized than normal to vote for a Democratic candidate." 

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