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DC 37 volunteers and Ms. Roberts (center) gather Nov. 5 after a morning of campaining
in Ebbets Field, Brooklyn. They are joined by (back row from left) City Council
member James Davis and Brooklyn State Senator Carl Andrews and State Assembly
member Roger L. Green, who both won their elections with support from the union
activists.
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By
DIANE S. WILLIAMS
The DC 37 Green Machine ran at full throttle Nov.
5 in its citywide effort to get out the vote. More than 1,100 DC 37 volunteers
worked from dawn to 9 p.m., when the polls closed, to help union-endorsed candidates
win two out of the three statewide races. The union also helped 95 percent of
its endorsed candidates get elected to the United States Congress and the State
Legislature.
"We can be proud that we fought the fine fight,"
said DC 37 Executive Director Lillian Roberts, who campaigned with members in
all five boroughs on Election Day. "DC 37 is back as a political power to
be reckoned with in New York City's political arena."
In field operations
run by newly appointed Political Action and Legislation Director Wanda Williams
and PAC Chair Leonard Allen, DC 37 volunteers distributed literature from door
to door, at subway and bus stops, in malls and on the streets. In the weeks before
the vote activists staffed computerized phone banks daily to urge fellow members
to get involved and vote, participated in lunchtime leafleting, campaigned for
our endorsed candidates and coordinated New York City Labor field operation for
Senator Guy Velella. On Election Day, the union showed its strength by putting
a record number of volunteers on the streets.
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L. 1549's Annette Nelson (l.) and Lucy Gardner distributed leaflets as others
placed calls at union phonebanks and knocked on doors to get out the vote.
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DC 37-endorsed candidate Eliot L. Spitzer swept
the race for state Attorney General, and received the most votes in the state.
Alan Hevesi, who said DC 37 support made the difference for him in the tightest
statewide election, became the first city comptroller to win the state Comptroller's
seat.
Other political victories for the union included having 17 of its
18 endorsed congressional candidates win seats. An upset was the victory of DC
37 endorsed Democrat Timothy Bishop, who beat out Republican incumbent Felix J.
Grucci in the 1st Congrssional District.
Despite record
low voter turnout nationwide, DC 37 helped candidate Carl McCall outpace incumbent
Gov. George E. Pataki within the city limits, where McCall won the contest in
all boroughs except Staten Island. Still, the union's efforts couldn't win a gubernatorial
contest beset with problems that included insufficient funds, a lack of cohesion
among labor unions and what many perceived as indifference on the part of the
Democratic Party.
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DC 37's Green Machine helped Martin Malave Dilan
(3rd from l.) coast to victory to become State Senator of District 17 in Brooklyn.
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Now that the dust has settled and Governor Pataki
has won a third term, it remains to be seen how he will handle the state's future:
Political pundits cite problems like New York State's estimated $10 to $12 billion
budget deficit; whether Mr. Pataki will be able to keep the promises he made to
win support from some unions, and if he will fully address issues such as education,
the state economy and employment, which he managed to avoid during his lackluster
though successful campaign.
And in the political system
of checks and balances, whichever direction Gov. Pataki takes to tackle the problems
that assail the state, he will have to work with the Legislature, including the
heavily Democratic Assembly.