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Manafort's 2016 Gambit: A Back Channel From Trump Camp to Labor

In the summer of 2016, Paul Manafort, Donald Trump’s campaign chairman, proclaimed Midwestern states like Michigan and Wisconsin to be critical to the campaign’s strategy.

Manafort's 2016 Gambit: A Back Channel From Trump Camp to Labor

Behind the scenes, he was actively trying to execute that strategy — sometimes in highly unorthodox ways.

According to three people close to the 2016 Trump campaign, Manafort sought to open a back channel to the AFL-CIO, the nation’s preeminent labor federation, which typically backs Democrats for president and had endorsed Hillary Clinton.

These people said the Trump campaign had hoped the federation would scale back get-out-the-vote activity intended to help Clinton win Michigan and Wisconsin. To that end, they said, Manafort enlisted an intermediary friendly with officials at the AFL-CIO to suggest a mutually beneficial relationship.

Manafort wanted to convey that Trump was open to softening his support for right-to-work laws that unions oppose, and which the candidate had supported during the campaign, according to one of the people briefed on what took place.

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While there is no evidence that the two sides negotiated a deal, much less executed one, the episode illustrates the unusual tactics that sometimes emerged in the often-chaotic Trump campaign as it sought to upend the electoral map.

Manafort told allies that he was working through Steven Brown, who worked with Manafort in Ukraine in 2013 and who had a relationship with at least two senior AFL-CIO officials, according to three people with knowledge of what took place.

Brown was in touch with at least one of those officials during the campaign, an AFL-CIO field operative named Don Slaiman, and pressed for an in-person meeting.

Slaiman, who was working for the AFL-CIO in Pennsylvania in the months before the 2016 election, initially denied through an AFL-CIO spokesman, Josh Goldstein, that he had any contact with Brown during the campaign. He later acknowledged through Goldstein that he had communicated repeatedly with Brown during that time.

When contacted directly, Slaiman denied discussing any deal about the 2016 campaign with Brown, but he shared two emails in which Brown asked to meet in person and another asking to speak by phone.

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The correspondence touched on political subjects, like an endorsement of Trump by a police organization and a Senate race in Nevada. But it did not include a discussion of any campaign details, like the role of the AFL-CIO in key battleground states. Slaiman said he had spoken to Brown only once, by phone.

“He wanted to meet with me,” Slaiman said. “I never did. I responded to him because we regularly communicated with both Democrats and Republicans — our focus is on pro-labor issues, not party identification.”

He added, “These con artists were delusional if they believed that the labor movement would enter into any kind of deal.”

Brown, now in prison for a scheme to defraud investors in film productions, could not be reached; his two most recent lawyers said they could not speak for him.

Goldstein insisted that the interactions between the federation and the Trump campaign did not go beyond Slaiman and said there had been no agreement to stand down in any state.

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Officials working for the White House and the Trump reelection campaign did not respond to an email seeking comment, nor did a lawyer for Manafort.

The AFL-CIO and its state and local affiliates have long been a powerful force in turning out voters on behalf of Democratic candidates.

A number of labor and political officials have said that organized labor appears to have played a more modest role than usual in the 2016 presidential election in Michigan, although it appears to have been more active in Wisconsin.

There are a number of possible reasons. Not least is the fact that the Clinton campaign itself does not appear to have taken Michigan as seriously as it should have in retrospect. The campaign’s polling showed the candidate winning the state comfortably, and according to a report in Politico, Clinton’s aides rejected a plan by the Service Employees International Union to send a busload of volunteers to the state less than two weeks before Election Day.

A national AFL-CIO official involved in the 2016 campaign said that while the federation had considered Michigan a battleground state, it had not been a top priority. The official said the calculation may have been that if Clinton faced a close race in Michigan, she was probably going to lose the election, and that devoting more resources to the state wasn’t likely to save her.

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Mike Podhorzer, who was then the AFL-CIO’s political director, disputed that assertion, saying that Michigan had been deemed a key battleground and that the federation had devoted considerable resources to turning out voters there.

“There was no discussion of doing less in Michigan, let alone a diminution of efforts in Michigan,” he said, though he acknowledged that the AFL-CIO devoted more resources to Pennsylvania and Wisconsin, which unlike Michigan featured contested Senate races.

Trump won all three states, and support from union households was crucial.

Manafort left the campaign in August 2016 after questions arose about his business ties to Ukraine. He is in prison following his conviction last year on counts of tax fraud, bank fraud and failure to disclose a foreign bank account.

Brown’s involvement as an intermediary continued after the campaign. In January 2017, Richard Trumka, the federation’s president, met with Trump, then president-elect, in New York. Brown helped set up the meeting, according to officials on both sides, and escorted Trumka upstairs from the Trump Tower lobby.

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Trumka later described the meeting as an ultimately futile attempt to engage with the incoming president.

“After the election, I traveled up to New York to meet with Trump at his tower,” Trumka recalled in a speech last month in Alabama. “I was hopeful we could work together on the few issues where we actually agreed.”

“Well, it’s been nearly three years, and I can tell you one thing for certain,” he continued. “Donald Trump is one of the most anti-worker presidents in American history.”

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