The Denver Post

Courting unions, Obama pushes for paid sick leave

- By Josh Lederman

boston» Courting unions on Labor Day, President Barack Obama denounced Republican­s for a “constant attack on working Americans” and said he was using his executive power to force federal contractor­s to give paid sick leave to their employees.

Obama was met with resounding applause at a major union rally and breakfast in Boston on Monday when he said he had signed the executive order aboard Air Force One as he flew in to mark Labor Day. He said Republican­s who claim the mantle of middle-class protectors are talking big, but they “have to walk the walk.”

Obama said opponents of his economic policies “won’t let facts or evidence get in their way.”

“You just wait, you look up at the sky and prosperity will come raining down on us from the top of whatever high-rise in New York City,” he said sarcastica­lly. “But that’s not how the economy works.” He added that the GOP’s mind-set has been “wrecking the economy for a long, long time.”

The Labor Day gesture to workers’ groups came as Obama works to smooth over tensions with the labor movement over his trade agenda. Major unions are opposing Obama’s push for sweeping new trade deals with Asia and Europe, with some threatenin­g to work against Democrats who voted to support those talks in Congress. Unions have warned that the deals could lead to widespread job eliminatio­n. Obama has signed a law providing money to retrain workers if their jobs get shipped overseas.

Under the executive order, employees working on federal contracts gain the right to a minimum of one hour of paid leave for every 30 hours they work. Stretched out over 12 months, that’s up to seven days per year. The order will allow employees to use the leave to care for sick relatives as well, and will affect contracts starting in 2017.

Business groups said Obama’s order would make it harder for small businesses to retain federal contractor­s and could hinder economic growth.

“Once again, President Obama is using the federal procuremen­t system to do something it has never been designed to do: usurp the legislativ­e authority of Congress to determine appropriat­e workplace policies,” said Randy Johnson, senior vice president of the U.S. Chamber of Commerce.

The White House wouldn’t specify the cost to federal contractor­s to implement the executive order. The Labor Department said any costs would be offset by savings that contractor­s would see as a result of lower attrition rates and increased worker loyalty, but produced nothing to back that up.

Obama chose Labor Day to announce the executive order as he works to enact what workplace policies he can before his presidency ends despite resistance in Congress to laws he’s proposed. The push has reverberat­ed on the 2016 campaign trail, with Democrats seeking a distinctio­n with Republican­s on who’s most supportive of the middle class.

The president didn’t mention any of the 2016 candidates by name, but invoked a number of their policies to challenge claims that they care about workers. In a reference to Wisconsin Gov. Scott Walker, he remarked incredulou­sly that one GOP candidate had “said busting unions prepared him to fight ISIL,” an acronym for the Islamic State group.

Obama chose Massachuse­tts as the backdrop for his Labor Day message because voters in the state approved a similar paid leave policy statewide. The law took effect July 1 and is expected to affect 900,000 workers who previously received no paid leave, the White House said.

 ??  ?? President Barack Obama waves to attendees after addressing the Greater Boston Labor Council Labor Day Breakfast on Monday in Boston. Mandel Ngan, AFP/Getty Images
President Barack Obama waves to attendees after addressing the Greater Boston Labor Council Labor Day Breakfast on Monday in Boston. Mandel Ngan, AFP/Getty Images

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