Republicans To Probe Labor Unions
House Speaker Newt Gingrich says hearings on labor corruption will
focus on the Laborers' International Union of North America, which is headed by Arthur A.
Coia of Rhode Island.
By JOHN E. MULLIGAN
Journal-Bulletin Washington Bureau
WASHINGTON -- House Speaker Newt Gingrich said yesterday that
Republicans will convene investigative hearings into labor corruption, centering on the
case of the Laborers' International Union of North America, run by Rhode Islander Arthur
A. Coia.
Gingrich said the GOP decision to probe the Laborers stemmed
largely from the government's 212-page draft racketeering suit against the union. He also
cited the Journal-Bulletin's accounts of how the union avoided a full-scale government
takeover last year and how Coia kept his job.
The Republican investigation follows the
AFL-CIO's special convention here in April to endorse President Clinton for reelection and
launch a $35 million voter-education project fueled by members' dues.
That program has begun to target the congressional districts of
potentially vulnerable Republicans and is the core of organized labor's drive to help
Democrats seize back the House majority they lost in 1994.
Gingrich said in an interview after yesterday's news conference
that the hearings will focus "on the whole question of how the
Clinton administration deals with unions where there are serious problems of corruption
and organized crime."
He said the investigation will zero in on the Justice Department's
campaign to purge the Laborers of longstanding Mafia influence.
"The public has the right to know why (Coia) is still in
charge of the union," which prosecutors had earlier "claimed that he was running
on behalf of organized crime," Gingrich said.
The Providence-born Coia, general president of the 750,000-member
organization of construction laborers, waste haulers and municipal
workers, has denied any wrongdoing.
Gingrich called yesterday's news conference to unveil "worker
right-to- know" legislation that would require unions to make a more detailed public
accounting of what he called "coerced" political campaign spending.
"I think this has been, frankly, brought to
the forefront by the decision by the Washington union bosses to impose a $35 million
program on their membership," he said.
But Gingrich devoted most of his remarks to the
topic of corruption and the Laborers.
Coia and his union, which was linked to the Mafia by the 1986
report of the President's Commission on Organized Crime, were the targets of the draft
racketeering complaint in November 1994. The Justice Department sought a court-supervised
takeover of the Laborers and the ouster of Coia and other leaders.
The document said the union was dominated "at all
levels" by organized crime. It also accused Coia of conspiring with the Buffalo Mafia
to pilfer union funds from upstate New York locals, stealing from New
England benefit funds and tolerating mob influence.
After three months of hard-fought, secret negotiations, Coia
secured an agreement with the Justice Department in February 1995 that permits the union
to conduct its own in-house purge of mob corruption.
Former federal prosecutors and FBI agents are running the cleanup;
Coia remains the union's top official. The government has the right to take over the union
if it is not satisfied with the internal cleansing.
Since becoming union president, in 1993, Coia has become a
prominent backer of President Clinton and a leading Democratic fund-raiser, a fact that
has aroused Republican suspicion.
Last year, for example, the Laborers' $212,500
contribution made it number one among union contributors of "soft money" to the
Democratic Party, a form of campaign largess that permits virtually unlimited
contributions.
Earlier this month, Coia himself was a vice chairman of a
black-tie gala in Washington that raised more than $12 million for the party and featured
Mr. Clinton as its dinner speaker.
Justice Department spokesman Carl Stern has suggested that
politics are motivating the Republican investigation. Stern said the Laborers-Justice
agreement "is almost universally regarded as the most potent and potentially effective cleanup effort undertaken by the Justice Department since such
efforts began under Robert Kennedy 30 years ago."
AFL-CIO president John J. Sweeney was quoted by a spokesman as
saying that "the Republicans have dredged up an old laundry list as a sideshow to
distract public attention from the attacks that Gingirch is leading against working
families."
Similarly, House Democratic Whip David Bonior, D-Mich., several
days ago said, "We are seeing a revitalized union movement in this country" that
has Gingrich and his allies "in a panic because their extremist
agenda is falling flat."
Gingrich gave no timetable for hearings but said they will be held
by the crime subcommittee of the Judiciary Committee, led by Rep. Bill McCollum, R- Fla.
House Republican Conference Chairman John A. Boehner, R-Ohio, said hearings are slated for
this summer, possibly late July.
Bert Rohrer, a spokesman for the Laborers, said last week that
House labor corruption "hearings would be perhaps the biggest waste of time and money
to date."
Copyright © 1997 The Providence Journal Company.
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