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Andrew McDonald |
Remember how
Andy Stern was
recently
trashed for supporting the efforts of
Gina
Raimondo, the Treasurer of Rhode Island, to slash workers’ pensions?
Well, check out this new development.
It turns out that Stern’s former spokesperson, Andrew McDonald, is linked to a
“diabolical plot to loot worker pensions” that’s backed by a billionaire from
Enron.
Who’s Andrew McDonald?
In 2008, McDonald was the “Assistant Director of
Communications” at SEIU’s DC headquarters. He served as Stern’s press
spokesperson and helped carry out SEIU’s attack against SEIU-UHW,
which was then headed by union reformer Sal
Rosselli.
In 2008, McDonald worked with
Tyrone
Freeman to try to prevent the
Los
Angeles Times from completing its investigation into his massive corruption scandal, according to internal emails that have not
previously aired publicly.
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Andy Stern |
Below, Tasty has posted an email between Freeman and his
communications staffer,
Leigh Shelton,
in which they discuss McDonald’s role in trying to fend off inquiries by
LA Times reporter
Paul Pringle. At the time, McDonald reported to
Steve Trossman.
The email is important because it shows how SEIU’s top
officials in DC directly aided Freeman in the midst of the scandal... perhaps as
part of the cover-up operation allegedly directed by
Trossman.
Now… let's turn back to McDonald’s link to the pension-slashing campaign that's raging across the U.S.
At that time, Pew partnered with an Enron billionaire, John Arnold, to launch an attack against workers’
pensions in the U.S., according to a report recently issued by David Sirota, a nationally syndicated columnist and author.
By “issuing joint reports and conducting joint legislative
briefings,” says Sirota, “Pew and Arnold have successfully manufactured the
perception of crisis -- which has prompted demands for dramatic action. Pew and
Arnold have consequently helped shape those general demands into specific
efforts to cut guaranteed retirement income…”
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John Arnold, Enron billionaire |
Is it pure coincidence that McDonald and SEIU's President Emeritus are both working to promote the slashing of workers’ pensions?
Interestingly, Pew and the
Enron billionaire have specifically targeted a handful of states such as Rhode
Island… where Stern recently
rushed
to the aid of the state’s pension-slashing treasurer.
The following are some excerpts from Sirota’s report... which
raise an obvious question:
Why the f*ck are SEIU officials promoting
efforts to slash the pensions of public-sector workers, especially given that SEIU's members include hundreds of thousands of state, county and municipal workers across the U.S? (Note: Freeman's email exchange regarding the LA Times and McDonald is below.)
In each of these
states and many others now debating pension “reform,” Pew and Arnold have colluded
to shape a narrative that suggests cutting public pension benefits is the only
viable path forward. This, despite the fact that a) cutting wasteful corporate
welfare could raise enough revenues to prevent such cuts; b) the pension
“reform” proposals from Pew and Arnold could end up costing more than simply
shoring up the existing system; and c) pension expenditures are typically more
reliable methods of economic stimulus than corporate welfare.
Those inconvenient
facts have been ignored in the political debate over pensions. Thanks to the
combination of Pew’s well-known brand and Arnold’s vast resources, the
pension-slashing movement’s extremist message has been able to dominate the
political discourse in states throughout America.
The result is a skewed
national conversation about state budgets – one in which middle-class public
sector workers are increasingly asked to assume all the financial sacrifice for
balancing the government books, and corporations and the wealthy are exempted
from any sacrifice whatsoever.