http://money.cnn.com/2008/12/19/magazines/fortune/card_check.fortune/?postversion=2008121912Obama the campaigner promised labor he'd support a bill to make unionizing easier. But business is opposed and the GOP hopes it has found an issue to seize on.
By Nina Easton, Washington editor
Last Updated: December 19, 2008: 2:21 PM ET
WASHINGTON, D.C. (Fortune) -- Will he, or won't he dare? That was the question that consumed an otherwise social luncheon of Republican women at the White House last week.
The "he" was President-elect Obama and the subject was "card check," a union organizing tool that is already igniting the business community in a virulent and well-funded campaign to stop it.
Obama strongly supported a union-backed card-check bill during the campaign, as does his choice for Labor Secretary, Hilda Solis. So his intentions should be clear. Except for one thing: Since his election, Obama has gone out of his way to make peace with the business community -- in the choices for his economic team, in suggesting he won't immediately repeal the Bush tax cuts.
Opening a bloody war with business over card check could sap all that good will.
Already, card-check opponents are warning that this could become the new president's gays-in-the-military moment, an early and costly stumble by a neophyte President Clinton similarly fulfilling a campaign promise without fully appreciating the fierce opposition it would stoke.
That may be wishful thinking. But Republican leaders are already counting on the issue as a badly needed motivator for their down-and-out ranks. "It certainly should help us put our coalition back together," House GOP leader John Boehner told Fortune. "This will affect every business in the country."
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