The Communications Workers of America (CWA) has started running radio ads in northern Minnesota targeting freshman Republican Chip Cravaack over a GOP provision on union elections in a bill reauthorizing the Federal Aviation Administration (FAA). The telecommunications union accuses Cravaack and fellow Wisconsin Republican Sean Duffy of "weighing down this important will with an unrelated controversial provision." The ads follows a direct mail campaign last August over the measure, which the union says would count non-participating voters as "no" votes. Democrats oppose the change, which has contributed to a protracted delay in getting the FAA bill through Congress. Lawmakers now face a Jan. 31 deadline for avoiding the second FAA shutdown in less than a year. The dispute comes to a head as Cravaack, a former airline pilots' union member, has been trying to curry favor with organized labor in Duluth. Cravaack spokesman Michael Bars said the dispute does not have to hold up the FAA bill. "Chip thinks we'll need a compromise," he said. "Workers and families have been without the financial certainty associated with a long-term bill for too long."
Most Read
-
Winning streak reaches 11 as Twins top Red Sox 5-2
-
South Dakota Gov. Noem admits error of describing meeting North Korea's Kim Jong Un in new book
-
Minneapolis residential property taxes could rise steeply in 2025
-
Old new burger alert: Edina's Convention Grill is back
-
I attended the Trump trial