Chicago Sun-Times
Trumka Resurfaces,
But Will He See A Shadow?
BY ROBERT NOVAK-Sun-Times COLUMNIST
January 13, 2000
AFL-CIO Secretary-Treasurer Richard Trumka
traveled from Washington to Des Moines last week to emerge from seclusion. A press release
from the labor organization's Washington headquarters trumpeted Trumka's leading role at a
Saturday rally for Al Gore, where he exhorted Iowa union members to back the vice
president at Democratic caucuses Jan. 24. Earlier that afternoon, he was on national
television, seated prominently at Gore's debate with Bill Bradley.
Not that much had been seen of Trumka, big labor's
second-in command, since he took the Fifth Amendment about his role in the tainted 1996
Teamsters election. He was even a no-show at Seattle's World Trade Summit last month,
where union colleagues berated globalism. So, why should he suddenly roar out of the
closet?
Perhaps Trumka is guessing or has been assured
that he will not be implicated in federal prosecution of the Teamsters AFL-CIO-Democratic
scandal that has yielded one criminal conviction. But Trumka's labor critics have a
different theory: He appeared boldly in Des Moines because he wants to show he is too big
to fail. Attorney General Janet Reno's politicized Justice Department might well hesitate
before prosecuting a close associate of the Democratic Party's putative new leader.
The case involves $885,000 distributed by the
Teamsters to the 1996 Clinton-Gore campaign in exchange for contributions to Ron Carey's
re-election as the union's president--an illegal swap that later voided Carey's election
against James P. Hoffa. Last Nov. 19, a federal jury found Teamsters political director
William W. Hamilton guilty of embezzlement for his part in the deal.
But could Hamilton have acted on his own?
Testimony in the trial showed that Trumka personally turned over AFL-CIO funds to the
Teamsters in the swap and may have been involved from the start. In 1997, Trumka took the
Fifth Amendment when questioned by federal authorities and, in fact, would not even talk
to AFL-CIO President John Sweeney.
Yet, on Nov. 21, 1997 Sweeney ditched a
40-year-old union rule requiring resignation by Fifth Amendment officials because Trumka
"has explicitly denied all wrongdoing." Shortly thereafter, Michigan Teamster
leader Lawrence Brennan noted lifetime suspension of lesser officials for taking the Fifth
and accused Sweeney of a "whitewash."
Hamilton faces up to 30 years in prison when he is
sentenced Feb. 29, and there has been speculation that he might reduce the penalty by
incriminating a major figure such as Trumka. But Hamilton has obeyed the code of silence.
Trumka's lawyers have dismissed repeated reports that he will be a target of U.S. Attorney
Mary Jo White.
Hoffa, elected as Teamsters president in a new
election forced by the scandal, has toned down his criticism of Trumka in the interest of
labor movement solidarity. On CNN Dec. 4, Hoffa urged White to "pursue all
avenues" in further prosecutions but refused to name names. When I asked whether
Trumka should be forced to resign as secretary-treasurer, Hoffa replied: "I'm not
going to say whether he should or not."
Others in the Teamsters are less interested in
labor solidarity and more concerned with getting even. They hope Rep. Peter Hoekstra,
chairman of a House Workforce subcommittee, will turn the investigative spotlight on
Trumka if he escapes federal prosecution.
While Trumka's vulnerability to prosecution kept
him largely out of public view until Saturday in Des Moines, it has not inhibited his
political activity. He was a principal player in winning the AFL-CIO's endorsement of Gore
last summer, and the vice president has been duly grateful.
President Ronald Reagan's Commission on Organized
Crime, headed by Federal Judge Irving R. Kaufman, was critical of Reagan's public
appearances with Teamsters President Jackie Presser, who subsequently was prosecuted
despite undercover work for the FBI against mob connections. No current or future
president, Kaufman said, should be seen with a labor leader under investigation. Gore does
not buy that, and Trumka's chumminess with the vice president makes it even less likely
that he ever faces prosecution.