Teamsters president Sean O'Brien tried to sell bipartisanship to the RNC, but critics say all he did was legitimize Trump

Teamsters president Sean O'Brien tried to sell bipartisanship to the RNC, but critics say all he did was legitimize Trump
  • Oops!
    Something went wrong.
    Please try again later.
  • The Teamsters' president, Sean O'Brien, spoke at the RNC — a first for the union.

  • O'Brien's message sought to foster bipartisan cooperation toward labor goals.

  • Critics argued that O'Brien's speech legitimized Donald Trump's anti-union record.

Even before the Teamsters' president, Sean O'Brien, made a historic move Monday by being the first president of the union to speak at the Republican National Convention, fellow members were upset by his getting cozy with Donald Trump.

In a scathing op-ed article published last Wednesday, the Teamsters' vice president at large John Palmer said O'Brien's planned appearance "regardless of the message, only normalizes and makes the most anti-union party and President I've seen in my lifetime seem palatable."

And in January, when O'Brien met with Trump, James Curbeam, the national chairman of the Teamsters National Black Caucus, called the former president a "scab masquerading as a pro-union advocate," The New York Times reported.

Amid scrutiny from his union members and some right-wing anti-union groups at the RNC, O'Brien made it clear his goal of speaking at the convention was to invite bipartisan cooperation in achieving the labor movement's goals.

"The Teamsters are here to say we are not beholden to anyone or any party," O'Brien declared onstage in front of hundreds of delegates and the former president himself.

But Rick Smith, a nationally syndicated radio host and Teamster member, said that while O'Brien might have had good intentions in trying to uphold his union's interests, he had assumed the role of the Republican Party's "dancing show pony that they're going to ride to the election."

Smith told Business Insider that he agreed with much of what O'Brien said onstage: In a room full of conservatives, the union boss railed against the US Chamber of Commerce and The Business Roundtable, "corporatists," and "greedy employers." But O'Brien also applauded Trump, calling the former president "a candidate who is not afraid of hearing from new, loud, and often critical voices."

"The problem is none of those people in that room care," Smith said. "They knew why O'Brien was there. He was there to legitimize Trump's horrible record."

Smith said O'Brien also sent a message that "both sides suck for workers," which Smith said was untrue. He pointed to President Joe Biden's putting billions of dollars toward bailing out the Teamsters' pension fund in 2022.

"Going into the RNC and saying 'everybody sucks and it's all bad' was of kind of a slap in the face, considering Joe Biden bailed out the Teamsters pension fund, considering that Donald Trump's record was so bad, and Joe Biden's has been very good," Smith said.

O'Brien and the Teamsters have continued to defend his decision to speak at the right-wing convention.

"The Teamsters have never been afraid of democracy, but self-interested ideologues — on the left and the right, within and outside the union — are terrified of democracy," a Teamsters spokeswoman, Kara Deniz, previously told the Times.

Smith said that in the case of bipartisanship, "every time we have some bipartisanship, it's working people who take it on the chin." He said O'Brien's appeal to the Republican Party would instead divide workers.

"In a time when we have unprecedented interest in people joining and forming unions, this kind of division in the labor movement, I don't think it's helpful," Smith said. "This kind of platforming of someone destructive is not helpful."

The Teamsters did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

Read the original article on Business Insider