Richard Trumka, the powerful president of the AFL-CIO labor union, has died at age 72, Democratic leaders said Thursday. Union leaders said he passed while visiting family for his grandson’s birthday.
“Born the son of a coal miner from Southwestern Pennsylvania, Richard became a giant in the labor movement and in national politics,” AFT (American Federation of Teachers) Pennsylvania President Arthur G. Steinberg said, in a wave of eulogies and remembrances shared Thursday.
“He was a tireless advocate for the working people of America, and much to their benefit, he never forgot his humble beginnings in Greene County, Pennsylvania.”
A burly man with thick eyebrows and a bushy mustache, Trumka grew up in the small southwest Pennsylvania town of Nemacolin, where he worked as a coal miner while attending Penn State University.
A longtime labor leader, Trumka was elected in 1982, at age 33, to be the youngest president of the United Mine Workers of America.
In that role, he led a successful strike against the Pittston Coal Co., which tried to avoid paying into an industry-wide health and pension fund, the union’s website said.
Trumka had been AFL-CIO president since 2009, after serving as the organization’s secretary-treasurer for 14 years.
As AFL-CIO president, he ushered in a more aggressive style of leadership, vowed to revive unions’ sagging membership rolls, and pledged to make the labor movement appeal to a new generation of workers that perceived unions as “only a grainy, faded picture from another time.”
“We need a unionism that makes sense to the next generation of young women and men who either don’t have the money to go to college or are almost penniless by the time they come out,” Trumka told hundreds of cheering delegates in a speech at the union’s annual convention in 2009.
Patrick Eiding, president of the Philadelphia Council AFL-CIO, remembered Trumka as a “real person,” who guided him 20 years ago when he was first elected to the council.
“He put his arm around my shoulder to make sure initially I had good direction,” said Eiding. “It’s a leader like that that could step down from the pulpit, if you will, and step into an office or into a room and talk to somebody at a level that everybody understood.”