1998-10-06 Clinton-Gore Administration Labor Accomplishments

Doug Henwood dhenwood at panix.com
Sat Nov 7 12:46:31 PST 1998


[Is this payback for all the get-out-the-vote work?]

Delivered-By-The-Graces-Of: White House Electronic Publications Precedence: Bulk To: Public-Distribution at pub.pub.whitehouse.gov Date: Sat, 7 Nov 1998 07:42 -0500 From: The White House <Publications-Admin at pub.pub.whitehouse.gov> Reply-To: Publications at pub.pub.whitehouse.gov Subject: 1998-10-06 Clinton-Gore Administration Labor Accomplishments Keywords: Business, Civil-Rights, Economy, Education, Fact-Sheet, Fiscal-Policy,

Government, Healthcare, Labor, Legislation, Legislative-Process,

Social, Social-Values, Staff-Report, Welfare Document-ID: pdi://oma.eop.gov.us/1998/11/6/10.text.1 URL: http://www.pub.whitehouse.gov/uri-res/I2R?urn:pdi://oma.eop.gov.us/1998/11/6/10. text.1

THE WHITE HOUSE

Office of Communications ________________________________________________________________________

CLINTON-GORE ADMINISTRATION LABOR ACCOMPLISHMENTS

"The key to success in tomorrow's economy is people, and you cannot move into the 21st century by restoring the labor policies of the 19th century. I will oppose it, you will oppose it, and we will prevail."

-- President Clinton, Remarks to the AFL-CIO Convention,

9/24/97

Creating More Jobs and a Stronger Economy

- 16.7 Million New Jobs Under President Clinton and Vice President

Gore -- Since President Clinton took office, the economy has added

16.7 million new jobs -- more new jobs in 68 months than were

created during the entire 96 months of the Reagan Administration

(16.7 million under President Clinton vs. 16.0 million under

President Reagan).

- Fastest Real Wage Growth in More Than Two Decades -- Over the past

year, average hourly earnings have risen 4.0 percent -- more than

twice the rate of inflation. After adjusting for inflation, wages

have increased 2.8 percent in the past 12 months -- the fastest real

wage growth in more than two decades.

- Unemployment Has Been Below 5 Percent For 15 Months In A Row. The

unemployment rate has fallen from 7.5 percent in 1992 to 4.6 percent

today (September 1998). And for the first time in 28 years, the

unemployment rate has been below 5 percent for 15 months in a row.

- Construction Jobs Are Coming Back -- Under President Clinton and Vice

President Gore, construction and manufacturing jobs are coming back:

after losing 662,000 jobs in construction during the previous four

years, nearly 1.5 million new construction jobs have been added

since January 1993 -- a faster annual rate than any other

Administration since Harry S. Truman was President.

- Manufacturing Jobs Are Up Under President Clinton -- After losing

2.1 million manufacturing jobs between 1981 and 1992, the economy

has created 579,000 new manufacturing jobs since January 1993.

- World Leader in Auto Production Four Years in a Row -- After losing

46,000 jobs in the auto industry during the Bush years, 151,000 new

auto jobs have been created during the Clinton-Gore Administration.

And for the first time since the 1970s, America has led the world in

auto production for four years in a row.

- Highest Home Ownership Rate in History -- there are more than 6.5

million new homeowners since the President took office.

- Balanced the Federal Budget -- in 1992, the budget deficit was $290

billion, a record dollar high. This year, the budget will be in

surplus for the first time in 30 years.

Creating Better Jobs

- Increased the Minimum Wage from $4.25 to $5.15 per hour -- increasing

wages for 10 million. For an average full-time minimum wage worker

this amounts to a $1,800 raise. President Clinton also proposed an

additional minimum wage increase in his 1998 State of the Union.

- Saving Social Security First -- The President is committed to saving

Social Security for the 21st Century. The President will fight any

attempt to break the budget rules and drain the surplus. His

commitment is unwavering: every penny of any future surplus must be

reserved until a bipartisan plan to save Social Security is enacted.

- Signed the Family and Medical Leave Act into law -- allowing workers

to take up to 12 weeks of unpaid leave to care for family members

without fear of losing their jobs. Millions of workers have already

benefited from FMLA since its enactment.

- Fighting for Critical Education Investments -- maintaining his

longtime commitment to education, the President enacted the largest

investment in education in 30 years -- and the largest investment in

higher education since the G.I. Bill -- by signing the 1997 Balanced

Budget Act. This year, the President has called on Congress to pass

critical education priorities included in his FY99 Budget that

include initiatives to recruit quality teachers, rebuild crumbling

schools and reduce class size.

- Fighting for Paycheck Equity -- called on Congress to pass

legislation to strengthen laws prohibiting wage discrimination.

- Expanded Earned Income Tax Credit providing tax relief for 15 million

working families.

- $500 Per-Child Tax Credit --26 million families with 40 million

children will receive the $500 per-child tax credit.l

- Increasing Pension Security -- Fought for legislation that has

expanded pension coverage, made pensions more secure for 40 million

American workers and retirees, and simplified pension plan

administration. Promoting new efforts to encourage retirement

savings.

- Signed the Bipartisan Workforce Investment Act --- reforming

America's job training system for the 21st Century.

- Opposed the creation of company unions.

- Blocked efforts to undermine prevailing wage laws.

- Revitalized enforcement at the Labor Department (Added more

front-line enforcers).

- Signed Hatch Act reform into law -- allowing federal civil servants

to more actively participate in the political process.

- Rescinded Reagan Administration Executive Order prohibiting the

rehiring of PATCO strikers.

- Enacted Single Largest Investment in Health Care for Children since

1965 providing health care coverage for up to five million children.

- Fighting to Pass a Strong, Enforceable Patients' Bill of Rights --

Called on Congress to pass a strong, enforceable patients' bill of

rights that assures Americans the quality health care they need.

- Signed Meaningful Health Insurance Reform which limits exclusions

for pre-existing conditions, makes coverage portable and helps

individuals who lose jobs maintain coverage.

- Supported the comprehensive Occupational Safety and Health Reform

Act and opposed efforts to the workplace less safe.

Established Better Labor Relations

- Appointed a National Labor Relations Board that is fair to workers

and their unions for a change. And placed in all levels of

government Presidential appointees who are dedicated to fighting for

the issues that matter most to working men and women.

- Issued an Executive Order prohibiting federal agencies from doing

business with employers that permanently replace striking workers.

- Supported anti-"striker replacement" legislation -- which would have

prohibited companies from permanently replacing striking workers.

- Preserving the collective bargaining process -- the Administration

has played an activist role in helping to resolve tough disputes,

bringing parties together to reach agreement. These collective

bargaining disputes have included: Northwest Airlines, American

Airlines, Long Island Rail Road, UPS, Teamster national trucking

contract, Mineworkers and Bituminous Coal Operators Association.

- Opposed Republican so-called "paycheck protection" measures -- which

would have limited organized labor's political activity.

- Created the National Partnership Council for Federal government

unions.

- Created the Task Force on Excellence in State and Local Government

through Labor Management Cooperation for non-federal public workers.

- Rescinded Bush Administration Executive Orders prohibiting pre-hire

agreements on federal construction projects and requiring all

government contractors to post a notice telling workers they have a

right not to join a union. In sharp contrast, President Clinton

authorized agencies to use Project Labor Agreements where they serve

the best interests of the government and the people.



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