"President Trump needs to decide who he stands with. The coal miners, farmers, steelworkers and other regular Americans who he promised to help in the campaign, or the Wall Street tycoons who are rigging the economy at our expense," Trumka said at the National Press Club yesterday. "That decision will be the single greatest test and the most defining thing in his presidency."
Trumka spoke moments after the president finished a speech across town to members of the building trade unions with whom he has a relationship as a real estate magnate.
Labor union membership is slumping nationally, with the per cent of wage and salary workers who were members of unions at 10.7 per cent in 2016, according to government figures. That translates to at 14.6 million people in 2016, down by 240,000 from a year earlier.
As the nation's union membership slides, Trump has populated his Cabinet with wealthy Americans, many with roots in big business. They include former Exxon Mobil CEO Rex Tillerson as secretary of state and Steve Mnuchin, formerly of Goldman Sachs, as treasury secretary. Trump senior adviser Steve Bannon was also formerly with that firm.