THE PROVIDENCE JOURNAL-BULLETIN
Wednesday October 25, 1995
Coia brings support back to challenger
Sweeney
By JOHN E. MULLIGAN
Journal-Bulletin Washington Bureau
Arthur A. Coia, the Laborers union leader who publicly flirted Monday with a switch of allegiance in the battle for
the presidency of the AFL-CIO, was back in challenger John J. Sweeney's camp again
yesterday.
In fact, Coia was slated to make the second nominating speech for
Sweeney barely 24 hours after portraying himself as a gutsy "kingmaker" who was
weighing an offer to throw his support in the historic contest to incumbent AFL-CIO
President Thomas R. Donahue.
It is "a safe assumption" that Coia
will back frontrunner Sweeney today when the delegates elect a new president of the
13-million member federation of labor unions at their convention in New
York, said Coia spokesman Bert L. Rohrer. Coia, a Providence native, is president of the
Laborers' International Union of North America.
If Coia supports Sweeney, he will have wound up where he started
at the beginning of the first contested AFL-CIO election campaign in almost a century, but
only after he helped to fuel speculation about his loyalty to the Sweeney ticket.
As late as Monday, Coia joined other members of
the Sweeney bloc in signing a letter that asked Donahue's camp to "cease calling into
question our loyalty" to Sweeney.
But shortly afterward, Coia said Donahue representatives sweetened
an offer that he was refused earlier: to take the third-ranking leadership slot in a
Donahue administration, in return for his support.
On Monday, several union leaders confirmed that the offer had been
made to Coia but expressed some doubt about whether he could personally change the outcome
of the election - in which Sweeney claims 55.3-percent of delegate
support.
Sweeney's camp never acknowledged that there was
any softening in their support.
"We were writing the nominating speeches" for Sweeney, including Coia's, on Monday, "so I doubt seriously whether anyone was considering" abandoning the Sweeney ticket, Sweeney campaign spokeswoman Deborah Dion said.
Contents copyright 1982 to 1995 by The Providence Journal Co.