- Thomas R. Donahue
Thomas Reilly Donahue (born
September 4 ,1928 ) was Secretary-Treasurer of theAFL-CIO from 1979 to 1995 and served briefly as its acting President during the second half of 1995.Early life
Born and raised in
New York City , after receiving his undergraduate degree atManhattan College he became a business agent for the New York local of theService Employees International Union (SEIU), during which time it became one of the most powerful unions in the city of New York. In 1963 he became assistant to the President of the national SEIU and then served as Assistant Secretary of Labor during the last two years of theJohnson Administration . From 1969 to 1973 he served as Executive Secretary of SEIU and became executive assistant to the president of the AFL-CIO,George Meany , in 1973.Career as a labor leader
Already an influential figure as Meany's executive assistant, when Meany retired in 1979 Donahue was elected Secretary-Treasurer. In this capacity Donahue played a leading role in the AFL-CIO's critical support movement for Poland's
Solidarnosc or Solidarity movement, which succeeded in establishing free trade unions in the Soviet bloc and was a key catalyst for the fall ofCommunism .In this vein he further played a key role in the establishment of the
National Endowment for Democracy and has served on its board for several non-consecutive terms. Most notably, while serving as its vice chairman from 2002 to 2004, Donahue voiced his criticisms of the Endowment's role in the failed coup attempt againstHugo Chávez in 2002 to "National Catholic Reporter ".In 1993, Donahue was the leading public spokesman, along with
Ross Perot , of the national campaign against the passage of theNorth American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA).Today, he is a board member of the
Albert Shanker Institute .AFL-CIO power struggle
The massive Republican congressional victories in 1994 represented a moment of crisis for organized labor and served to catalyze long simmering dissatisfaction in the AFL-CIO with Kirkland's leadership. Donahue could probably have been easily elected to succeed Kirkland were it not for the latter's resistance to passing the scene gracefully. The dissenting union leaders quickly lined up behind the leadership of Donahue's former protege and then-SEIU President John Sweeney, who proved unable to reach an amiable resolution with Kirkland and Donahue. Kirkland finally stepped down in the late spring of 1995 and Donahue became President, defeating Sweeney in an Executive Council election 22 to 11. Sweeney defeated Donahue at the AFL-CIO convention in December 1995.
Personal
After a first marriage which produced two children, in 1979 Tom Donahue married
Rachelle Horowitz , who served for over 25 years as political director of theAmerican Federation of Teachers (AFT). Together they currently lead an active retirement, split between theirWashington, D.C. residence and a home on Maryland's Eastern Shore.External links
* [http://www.aflcio.org/aboutus/history/history/donahue.cfm AFL-CIO biography]
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