Pennsylvania vote to test labour’s strength and loyalty
PITTSBURGH — The fight for the hearts and minds of America’s labour unions is raging in western Pennsylvania, where Joe Biden has suddenly stopped smiling.
In the midst of a speech to boost Democrat Conor Lamb ahead of next week’s special election, the former vice-president shifts to his decades-long relationship with organized labour, which is now under attack.
“It makes me angry when we’re not respected — when you’re not respected,” Biden tells scores of carpenters who packed into a suburban Pittsburgh union hall on Tuesday. “Everything unions do is done well.”
Yet after a painful 2016 election season that exposed cracks in labour’s political might, the longtime pillar of Democratic politics is looking to Pennsylvania’s March 13 election for a much-needed comeback.


