A DELICATE BALANCING ACT: Teamsters General President Sean O’Brien is set to speak at the Republican National Convention on Monday as President Joe Biden’s standing among unions begins to show cracks. The union leader requested speaking slots at both parties’ conventions, but his eagerness to speak at the GOP's gathering rankled members who don’t want the Teamsters flirting with the idea of endorsing former President Donald Trump, along with an anti-union group looking to take jabs at organized labor. “The issue is that the Republicans aren't doing anything to help us. And I don't believe anybody could trust Donald Trump,” John Palmer, vice president at-large at Teamsters, told Shift. “I mean, why would you trust that man?” Palmer wrote an opinion piece attacking Teamsters leadership, urging them to call on O’Brien to cancel his visit to the RNC. O’Brien and the Teamsters have previously asserted that the union benefits from having its message heard from parties on both sides of the aisle. “All of Palmer's efforts are meant to bully a fellow Teamster from speaking,” a Teamsters spokesperson said in a statement to Shift. “He’s afraid of any voice that isn’t his own or one bouncing around in an echo chamber. It’s the type of person who wants to ban books they’ve never read." Aside from the blowback O’Brien has received within the union, the Center for Union Facts, an anti-union interest group, is running billboard campaign in Milwaukee during the RNC calling the union leader “two-faced,” potentially undermining the inroads he hoped to make by speaking in front of a Republican audience. After United Auto Workers and other major unions decided they would endorse Biden, all eyes were on the Teamsters to see if they would back Biden amid his push to cast himself as the most “pro-union president in American history.” The American Rescue Plan, which Biden signed into law in 2021, included billions to bail out the union’s struggling pension fund. The union has historically tilted toward backing Democrats. Many rank-and-file members were angered by Teamsters’ $45,000 donation to the GOP’s convention fund in January. When Teamsters leadership met with Biden in March, O’Brien said the union typically avoids endorsing presidential candidates until after both parties’ nominating conventions. However, Palmer, who was present at the meeting, told Shift members believed that comparing Biden’s labor record to Trump’s was like “putting a brick on one side of a scale and a feather on the other.” He’s now more adamant that Trump’s return would be harmful for workers. “Obviously, the Chevron decision opens a whole new can of worms for organized labor,” he said. GOOD MORNING. It’s Monday, July 15. Welcome back to Morning Shift, your go-to tipsheet on labor and employment-related immigration. Send feedback, tips and exclusives to nniedzwiadek@politico.com and lukenye@politico.com. Follow us on X at @NickNiedz and @Lawrence_Ukenye.
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