BCTGM Applauds the Election of Liz Shuler As AFL-CIO President
Representing manufacturing, production, maintenance and sanitation workers in the baking, confectionery, tobacco and grain milling industries.
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BCTGM Applauds the Election of Liz Shuler As AFL-CIO President

In a special session, the AFL-CIO Executive Council elected Shuler as president of the federation of 56 unions and 12.5 million members. Shuler is the first woman to hold the office in the history of the labor federation. The Executive Council also elected United Steelworkers (USW) International Vice President Fred Redmond to succeed Shuler as secretary-treasurer, the first African American to hold the number two office. Tefere Gebre will continue as executive vice president, rounding out the most diverse team of officers ever to lead the AFL-CIO. 

BCTGM International President Anthony Shelton serves as a AFL-CIO Vice President and member of the Executive Council and proudly cast his vote to elect Shuler to serve as President of the AFL-CIO and Redman as secretary-treasurer. The election of Shuler and Redmond comes after the unexpected and untimely passing of Richard Trumka, who served as AFL-CIO president from 2009 until his death on Aug. 5, capping a more than 50-year career of dedication to Americaโ€™s unions and working people. 

โ€œI am humbled, honored and ready to guide this federation forward,โ€ Shuler said after her election. โ€œI believe in my bones the labor movement is the single greatest organized force for progress. This is a moment for us to lead societal transformationsโ€”to leverage our power to bring women and people of color from the margins to the centerโ€”at work, in our unions and in our economy, and to be the center of gravity for incubating new ideas that will unleash unprecedented union growth.โ€ 

Shuler grew up in a union householdโ€”her father, Lance, was a power lineman and longtime member of Electrical Workers (IBEW) Local 125 at Portland General Electric and her late mother, Joyce, worked as an estimator in the companyโ€™s service and design department. In 1993, Shuler was hired as an organizer at Local 125. When energy giant Enron Corp. tried to muscle electricity deregulation through the Oregon Legislature, Shuler worked with a broad-based coalition of labor, community and environmental activists to challenge and ultimately overcome Enronโ€™s powerhouse lobbying campaign, a victory that sparked her passion for mobilizing workers to make change even when faced with overwhelming odds.

In 1998, Ed Hill, then-secretary-treasurer of the IBEW, assigned Shuler to California where she mobilized IBEW members to help defeat Prop. 226, the so-called paycheck protection initiative that threatened to silence union members in the political process. That victory prompted John J. Barry, then president of the IBEW at that time, to hire her as an international representative in the unionโ€™s Political/Legislative Affairs Department in Washington, D.C. In that role, Shuler ran grassroots political mobilization efforts and lobbied Congress on a range of issues important to working families. In 2004, she was promoted to assistant to the international president, where she served President Hill, who had succeeded to that position, in driving the agenda of the nearly 1-million member union. 

In 2009, she joined forces with Trumka, becoming the first woman elected to the position of secretary-treasurer at an AFL-CIO convention and the youngest woman ever on the federationโ€™s Executive Council. As secretary-treasurer, she also served as the chief financial officer, turning deficits into surpluses and steering the federation through multiple fiscal crises, including the COVID-19 pandemic.

In addition to her stewardship of the federationโ€™s finances, Shuler led the AFL-CIOโ€™s initiatives on the future of work, retirement security, the clean energy economy, public safety reform, workforce development, and empowering women and young workers. She is committed to busting myths about labor, leveraging the labor movementโ€™s diversity for innovative approaches to social justice and making the benefits of a union voice on the job available to working people everywhere.