THE PROVIDENCE JOURNAL-BULLETIN
Tuesday October 24, 1995
Coia votes may decide AFL-CIO presidency
RIVALS: Challenger John Sweeney and AFL-CIO
president Thomas Donahue vie for the support of the Laborers' International Union of North
America.
CRUCIAL VOTES: Arthur
Coia, Laborers' International Union of North America general president,
may choose the next AFL-CIO president
By JOHN E. MULLIGAN and DEAN STARKMAN Journal-Bulletin Staff
Writers
NEW YORK
Arthur A. Coia, general president of the
Laborers' International Union of North America, may hold the swing votes
in this week's election of the next president of the AFL-CIO, making him a pivotal figure
at a key juncture in the federation's history.
Coia, attending the AFL-CIO's annual convention here, disclosed
yesterday that he is considering switching his 750,000-member union's longtime support of
the challenger, John J. Sweeney, to the incumbent, Thomas R. Donahue.
The delegates are scheduled to vote tomorrow, in
the first contested election in the modern annals of the 13-million-member labor
organization.
"Right now you got one guy in a position to determine the
whole presidency of the AFL-CIO," Coia, referring to himself, said in an interview.
He said the role of "kingmaker" is "not bad for a small-time, hometown guy
from Providence, Rhode Island."
Early yesterday, Coia joined several other national union leaders
in issuing a reaffirmation of support for Sweeney. But later, he said, Donahue requested
his allegiance - and offered to make him the third-ranking officer in the
national AFL-CIO.
Coia said he's thinking about it.
"I don't know if Arthur wants to do it," said one union
officer in the Donahue camp who is close to the back-room horse-trading. And Coia won't
switch, this official predicted, unless he's confident of bringing along enough other
unions to seal Donahue's victory.
Tad Devine, a political consultant to the Donahue camp, asserted
that some key support for Sweeney is "soft," but he stopped short of predicting
a decisive shift to Donahue. If Donahue scores an upset, Devine said, "Arthur will be
right in the middle of it."
Coia's sudden emergence as a central figure in the AFL-CIO's power
struggle comes just eight months after he narrowly averted a government takeover of his
Laborers union.
Last November, the Justice Department gave Coia a
document - the draft of a contemplated civil suit - alleging that the Laborers union was
dominated by organized crime and that it was undemocratic and systemically corrupt.
The document also alleged that Coia himself had
associated with mobsters and had tried to divert union training funds in upstate New York
to organized crime figures in Buffalo.
The allegations emerged during civil litigation between Coia and
two rival Laborers leaders who have since been eased out of office. The
document had expressed the government's intent to oust Coia, as well.
But in February the Justice Department, without explanation,
changed course and signed an unprecedented agreement calling for Coia to remain in power
and preside over his own program to reform the union.
Also in February, Coia was among the leaders of about a dozen
national unions who privately approached then-AFL-CIO President Lane Kirkland and asked
that he resign the position he had held for many years. Kirkland
refused.
But last summer, under challenge from those unions, Kirkland
resigned, and the AFL-CIO's executive board named Donahue to serve the remainder of his
term.
Since then, Coia has firmly supported Sweeney, the president of
the Service Employees International Union, and Sweeney has consistently claimed the
support of enough union leaders to win the presidency.
Yesterday morning, Coia signed a letter with 26 other unions in
Sweeney's bloc, calling on Donahue and his camp to "cease calling into question our
loyalty" to the Sweeney ticket.
But later in the morning, Coia said, over
"bagels and orange juice" at the convention hotel, fellow leaders of the
Building Trades Council - an umbrella group of construction-industry unions within the
AFL-CIO - asked him to accept the position of executive vice president under a Donahue
administration.
Right now, that post exists only as a proposal before the
convention. The delegates, after loud debate yesterday, agreed not to vote on creating it
until they decide the presidency.
The building-trades leaders called upon him to switch candidates,
bringing along several smaller building-trades unions, as a means of
fostering "solidarity" in the council, which is split over this election, Coia
said. Coia said he was "torn between what's right and what's credible."
Supporting, and electing, Donahue might bring needed solidarity within
the AFL-CIO, he said, but at the potential cost of his own credibility.
A Building Trades Council official, asking anonymity, commented
that the offer to Coia is only one of several elements in the elaborate behind-the scenes
maneuvering in the presidential race.
Two weeks ago, Coia said, it would have been an
"easy" decision to join a decisive shift by building trades unions.
But with the makings of such a shift gelling so late, he said,
"you're taking one union (the Laborers) and making them the ultimate kingmaker."
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