Labor Loses Its Champion: Ted Kennedy (1936-2009)
August 27
12:44 pm
(Photo by Lindsay Beyerstein)
—"Working people aren’t getting their fair share of our economic growth. Their hard work is producing skyrocketing corporate profits – not higher paychecks, better benefits, or better lives for their families. The best way to see that employees get their fair share is to give them a stronger voice."
-Sen. Ted Kennedy (1932-2009)
Labor lost its most powerful champion in the United States Senate on Tuesday with the death of Sen. Ted Kennedy.
Throughout his long career in the Senate, Kennedy was an advocate for workers. He helped pass bills to protect the right to organize, to keep workers safe on the job, to combat discrimination, and to ensure a secure retirement for all.
Kennedy was lead sponsor of the Pension Protection Act of 2006, which required companies to manage their pension funds more responsibly and transparently. One of his last legislative accomplishments was relief for pension funds that would otherwise have gone bankrupt in the financial crisis of 2008.
He was a vocal proponent of the Healthy Families Act, which would guarantee up to seven paid sick days for all workers.
Kennedy was a driving force behind the Lily Ledbetter Fair Pay Act, which makes it easier for women to sue for wage discrimination that was concealed from them until years after the fact.
And the senator was a leading proponent of the Employee Free Choice Act, legislation that would make it easier for workers to unionize. "The freedom to choose a union is vital to restoring the American Dream, especially for the most vulnerable Americans," Kennedy famously wrote.
But in a career filled with accomplishments, Kennedy singled out his crusade for universal healthcare as "the cause of my life." He understood the link between healthcare and middle-class security.
Kennedy's remarks on healthcare at the 1980 Democratic National Convention were eerily prescient:
[W]e cannot have a fair prosperity in isolation from a fair society. So I will continue to stand for a national health insurance. We must -- We must not surrender -- We must not surrender to the relentless medical inflation that can bankrupt almost anyone and that may soon break the budgets of government at every level.
Posted by Lindsay Beyerstein · + share/save
Please Login to Comment register a new account »
About this Blog
"Working In These Times" is dedicated to providing independent and incisive coverage of the labor movement and the struggles of workers to obtain safe, healthy and just workplaces. more
Recent Posts 
- NYC Reformers Rise Again—In Transit And Teamsterdom December 9
- Brand-New Nurses Union Aims to Ramp Up Organizing, Push for Single-Payer December 8
- Working Families’ Bailout Needed Urgently. But Who Will Make it Happen? December 8
- It’s Official: Three Unions Merge to Form Nurses ‘Super Union’ December 8
- A Penny for Our Work: Florida Farmworkers Protest Grocer December 8
WORKING E-NEWSLETTER:
Receive our weekly blog round-up
Contributors
Blogroll
- Work in Progress (FDL)
- Labor Is Not a Commodity
- United Steelworkers Blog
- Jobs With Justice
- Association for Union Democracy
- National Labor Relations Board
- Open Left
- AFSCME Blog
- Talking Points Memo
- Democracy Now!
- Union Review
- Economic Policy Institute
- Robert Reich
- Left Turn
- Today’s Workplace
- Alternet: Workplace
- AFL-CIO Now Blog
- Change to Win Connect
- Monthly Review
- Talking Union
- Christopher Hayes’ Capitolism
- Labour Start
- Labor Notes
- Working Life
- Dollars and Sense
- American Prospect

Comments
There are not any comments yet.
Start the discussion below!