Biden hails unions: ‘Worker power is essential’
President Biden on Wednesday honored labor unions at the White House, saying that empowering workers will help to build back the economy.
“In the economy my administration is building, instead of workers competing with each other for the jobs that are scarce — everybody’s mad at me because now, guess what, employers are competing to attract workers, having to raise pay,” Biden said.
“Worker power is essential to building our economy back better than before,” he added.
The president held an event to celebrate Labor Day alongside Labor Secretary Marty Walsh, AFL-CIO President Liz Shuler and United Food and Commercial Workers member Jocelyn Cruces, a pharmacy technician who is administering COVID-19 vaccines in Arizona.
“I’m so tired of trickle down,” Biden said. “When the middle class is booming and moving, everybody does well.”
The president touted his Build Back Better agenda, the massive $3.5 trillion spending package that Democrats are pushing in Congress.
“My Build Back Better investments are going to allow us to keep and progress and move further in the years to come,” he said.
He also called for Congress to pass the PRO Act and send it to his desk “immediately.” The bill, which would stiffen penalties for employers who violate workers’ rights and strengthen protections for employees against retaliation, is the top priority for labor unions and is stalled in the Senate.
“When unions win, workers across the board win, that’s a fact. Families win, communities win, America wins, we grow. Despite this, workers have been getting cut out of the deal for too long a time,” he said.
“My measure of economic success is how families like mine growing up, working families busting their neck, how they’re doing. Whether they have a little breathing room, whether they have a job that delivers some dignity, a paycheck they can support a family on,” he added.
He reiterated his campaign promise to be the most “pro-union president” and Walsh endorsed that, calling him the “working person’s president.”
To mark Labor Day on Monday, Biden visited the International Brotherhood of Electrical Workers (IBEW) Local 313 in Wilmington, Del., to greet workers and bring them sandwiches.
“If the last year has taught us anything, it’s what’s essential. And what’s essential is you — not a joke — you and your union members. Wall Street could go on strike but all of a sudden in the middle of [Hurricane] Ida, every IBEW member resigned, we’d be in real trouble,” he said Wednesday.
Biden also said that Wall Street is “not all bad folks” but that it was unions who built America.
“Everyday, we remember that America wasn’t built by Wall Street, they’re not all bad folks on Wall Street, I’m not suggesting that. But they didn’t build America, it was built by the middle class and unions built the middle class,” he said.
Walsh announced at the event that the Labor Department would be inducting essential workers of COVID-19 pandemic into the department’s hall of honor.
Copyright 2023 Nexstar Media Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.