2006: The Year We Changed America

December 19th, 2006

Each December gives us the chance to reflect upon the positive contributions we’ve made to the lives of our family, friends and ourselves. But this year, we have an opportunity to celebrate the contribution we made to the entire nation.

In 2006, AFSCME members changed America. Come January we will have the first pro-worker Congress in over a decade.

And we made it happen. When asked to tell why they voted overwhelmingly for change in the November elections, AFSCME members by the hundreds responded. The short responses varied widely in their content and reflected the great diversity of our membership. Some were humorous and gleeful, some were angry and passionate, but nearly all of the responses conveyed a sense of empowerment – a sense that our members had taken action and succeeded in a first step towards a more worker-friendly Congress.

To show their appreciation for our work, incoming Speaker Nancy Pelosi and Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid recently paid a visit to AFSCME’s Washington, DC headquarters. Pelosi and Reid answered some important questions that AFSCME members submitted online, and they vowed to enact an ambitious legislative agenda that helps working families. During the first 100 hours of the new Congress, Speaker-Elect Pelosi vowed voted to:

• Make college more affordable by cutting the interest rates for student loans in half;

• Lower the cost of prescription drugs by directing Medicare to use its purchasing power to negotiate with pharmaceutical companies as part of Part D;

• Repeal tax breaks and other multi-billion dollar subsidies for Big Oil and invest in alternative sources of energy, and

• Raise the federal minimum wage from $5.15 to $7.25 an hour

This is the agenda of lawmakers who share the values of everyday Americans, not corporate CEOs. And AFSCME members made it happen.

In 2006, we changed America. And that’s something to celebrate