AFL-CIO Convention Endorses Single Payer Healthcare
Thursday, September 17, 2009
AFL-CIO Convention Endorses Single Payer
Healthcare
Pittsburgh,
Pennsylvania. The AFL-CIO, the
nation’s largest labor
federation
representing 11.5 million workers in 57
international and national unions, has endorsed
a single payer health care system as the best
way to guarantee healthcare to everyone.
The unanimous vote in favor of Convention
Resolution 34, The Social Insurance Model for
Health Care Reform, came immediately after
President Obama had addressed the Convention
last Tuesday.
The resolution
states: “The experience of Medicare (and
of nearly every other industrialized country)
shows the most cost effective and equitable way
to provide quality healthcare is through a
single-payer system.”
It
continues: “We reiterate our
longstanding call for congressional leaders to
unite behind such a plan.”
Resolution 34
singles out HR 676 as one of a number of
single-payer bills introduced in Congress and
states: “The single-payer approach is one
the AFL-CIO supports and that merits dedicated
congressional support and enactment.” The
Resolution concludes by stating:
“Whatever the outcome of the current debate
over health care reform in the 111th Congress,
the task of establishing health care as a human
right, not a privilege, will still lay before
us.”
The Convention adopted Resolution
34 after a thirty minute debate in which 12
delegates spoke in favor of the resolution and
a number of delegates who wished to speak were
still standing at the four floor microphones
when the time allotted to debate ran out.
No one spoke against the
resolution.
Those who spoke for the
single payer resolution included three members
of the AFL-CIO Executive Council, the
Presidents of two state AFL-CIO federations,
four Presidents or Executive Officers of
Central Labor Councils, a high ranking official
of the AFT who was chosen to speak in favor of
the resolution by the AFT caucus and delegates
from AFSCME and ILWU.
Rich Trumka, in
his speech to the delegates immediately after
being elected President of the AFL-CIO the
following day, reiterated his support for
single payer healthcare telling the
delegates: “Now, I know that a lot of us
would prefer a single payer plan. I sure
would.”
Over 70 resolutions, an
unprecedented number, were submitted to the
Convention calling on the AFL-CIO to endorse
single payer healthcare.
More than 575
labor organizations, including 136 Central
Labor Councils, 22 international and national
unions, and 39 state AFL-CIO’s have endorsed HR
676, single payer legislation which has 87
sponsors in the House
of
Representatives. #30#
