Official Overseeing Teamsters Election
Seeks Vote in September
May 7, 1998
The official overseeing the teamsters' union election to fill out
the term of its suspended president proposed yesterday that the voting begin on Sept. 14.
The court-appointed election overseer, Michael Cherkasky, suggested the schedule to Judge David N. Edelstein of Federal
District Court in Manhattan. If Judge Edelstein approves the schedule, ballots will be
mailed to the union's 1.4 million members in July.
The election will see James P. Hoffa run again for the office he
narrowly lost last year to Ron Carey, who has been barred from running again because of
accusations that he was involved in a scheme to siphon more than $850,000 in union money
into his campaign coffers. In the rerun, Hoffa, who is considered the favorite, is likely
to face Ken Hall, who is expected to be the candidate of the group that backed Carey.
Hall, 41, of Charleston, W.Va., played a leading role in the
union's successful strike against United Parcel Service last summer.
The schedule proposed by Cherkasky calls for delegates to the
union's last convention to receive nominating ballots on June 15. If 90 of those 1,800
delegates indicate that they support Hall, he will be on the ballot.
The schedule calls for the nominating ballots to
be counted on June 29 and would allow the nominees to name their slates for other
positions on July 13. After that, an election notice would be posted at
all union work places on Aug. 27, as well as being published in the teamsters' official
magazine, the Reuters news service reported. At the same time ballots would be printed.
Those ballots would be mailed on Sept. 14 for return by Oct. 14,
when counting would begin.
Cherkasky ruled last week that Hoffa could remain
in the race despite having engaged in improprieties in the 1996 campaign.
Cherkasky said that he was loath to disqualify
candidates because it limited union members' right to choose.
In another matter linked to the accusations against the Carey
campaign, The Associated Press reported that the Congressman heading an investigation into
accusations of labor corruption yesterday urged the No. 2 official of the A.F.L.-C.I.O. to
resign for refusing to testify about the campaign.
The representative, Peter Hoekstra, Republican of Michigan, told
the official, Richard L. Trumka, in a letter that he should step down for invoking his
Fifth Amendment right not to testify against himself in refusing to
discuss with the committee -- or even the federation's president, John Sweeney --
accusations that the A.F.L.-C.I.O. had been used to launder money for Carey's campaign.
"The Fifth Amendment does not mean that the labor movement
must see no evil or hear no evil merely because an individual union official, to avoid
giving testimony which may send him to jail, refuses to answer questions
before a public body," Hoekstra said, citing an A.F.L.-C.I.O. ethics code.
"I encourage you to do what is best for the
entire labor movement and resign from your position as secretary-treasurer or take a leave
of absence until the cloud surrounding your involvement in the illegalities associated
with the teamsters election dissipates," wrote Hoekstra, who heads the House
Education and the Workforce subcommittee on investigations.
Copyright 1998 The New York Times Company