Working America | |
Founded | 2003 |
---|---|
Headquarters | Washington, D.C. |
Location | |
Members | 3.2 million [1] [2] |
Key people | Matt Morrison, executive director |
Affiliations | AFL–CIO |
Website |
workingamerica |
Working America is the political organizing arm of the AFL–CIO. [3] Its membership is made up of non- union individuals. [1] It is the largest non-union workers' group in the United States, with a self-reported membership of 3.2 million individuals. [2] Working America advocates for progressive policy issues. The organization recruits people in working-class neighborhoods on their doorsteps in an effort to persuade them to support labor-backed candidates at election time. [4] [5]
The organization started as a two-state pilot project of the AFL–CIO in 2003. [6] The organization was launched nationally that fall. The organization's founding director was Karen Nussbaum.
In October 2005, the organization announced that it had enrolled 1 million members. [7] It reported a membership of 2.5 million by the fall of 2008. [8]
Working America undertook its first nationwide activities in the 2004 U.S. presidential election. It organized a "Show Us The Jobs" bus tour of workers throughout the Midwest. The tour was critical of President George W. Bush's policies. [9] [10]
Working America was active in the 2006 midterm congressional elections. [11] Working America activists were credited by the press and Democrats for helping to deliver federal and state victories in Ohio and Pennsylvania. [12]
In 2007, Working America began a campaign to build support for universal health care. The group established a "Health Care Hustle" website on which consumers could post stories about how lack of health insurance or under-insurance led to significant financial, health or other problems. Working America promised to launch a campaign against the organization or corporation which received the most "horror stories." The effort built upon a previous campaign by Working America in mid-2006 in which the organization asked the public to submit stories about "bad bosses." [13]
In 2015, Working America led a "massive get-out-the-vote effort" to elect Democrat Jack Conway as Governor of Kentucky. Conway was defeated by Republican Matt Bevin. [14]
Working America opposes social security privatization. [2] It supports the Affordable Care Act and Medicaid expansion. [15] The organization advocates for an increased minimum wage and universal health care. [4]