The Democratic Party is a "stale party of ideas." That surprising assessment comes not from a conservative critic but from one of the Democrats most stalwart supporters, Andrew Stern, the president of the largest union in the AFL-CIO, the 1.6 million-member Service Employees International Union (SEIU). Stern set off a huge controversy when he spoke to the Washington Post's David Broder and Thomas Edsall on the first day of the Democratic convention, and he has since been backtracking on his statements -- with some difficulty since they were caught on tape and are readily available on the Post's Website.
But what Stern said should come as a big surprise not just to the Democratic Party but to union members, given the huge amount of their dues that will be directed toward electing Democrats this election. Unions will spend an estimated $800 million to defeat President Bush and other Republicans in 2004 -- $60 million of which will come from Stern's own SEIU and at least another $35 million from one local in that union, Local 1199, in New York City.
Stern, who has been speaking out for weeks now about what he seems to believe is a sclerotic labor movement, hit some raw nerves in his comments to the Post. He said, for example, "We can't talk about education. . . We can't discuss when it is failing our members (children) in public schools in urban areas. You know, we're the experiment. Maybe vouchers aren't the only answer, but then, what is? I'm tired of hearing if we just pay teachers more, you know life will be terrific. It's a huge problem."
Of course he's right. Just as he is when he describes the inability of the government to regulate the U.S. economy, which he admits is "too big. You can't regulate an American economy without markets. ... " He accurately describes his fellow Democrats' understanding of the economy: "We don't understand markets, we don't understand employers, we don't understand competition; we don't understand globalization; we don't understand how wages are set in an economy."