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John J. Sweeney

John Sweeney, who led an era of transformative change in America’s labor movement, passed away Feb. 1, 2021 at the age of 86. Sweeney was one of four children born to Irish immigrants in a working-class Bronx neighborhood shortly after the Great Depression. His parents, James and Agnes Sweeney, worked as a bus driver and a domestic worker, respectively. Sweeney always understood the struggles and the pride of working people.

Sweeney was interested in politics from childhood. His mother took him to see Franklin Delano Roosevelt's funeral train. He often spoke about his father’s loyalty to his union, the Transport Workers Union (TWU), and its colorful president, Mike Quill, with a sense of what it did for his family. Solid meals. A week of vacation. And political rallies with his father. Sweeney met his wife, Maureen Power, while working on a political campaign. He ran for and was elected Democratic district leader and volunteered for John Kennedy’s presidential campaign. But it was the labor movement where it all came together for him.

As a young man, Sweeney held jobs as a grave-digger and building porter while studying economics at Iona College in New Rochelle, New York, where he joined a union for the first time. Sweeney was exposed to Catholic social teaching from an early age, including the Xavier Labor School, whose head was the inspiration for the priest in the film “On the Waterfront.” He worked throughout his career to forge alliances between Catholic leaders and the labor movement.

Read the full obituary.

Videos

Speakers at AFL-CIO President Emeritus John Sweeney’s memorial included AFL-CIO President Liz Shuler, Secretary of Labor Marty Walsh, former AFL-CIO Executive Vice President Arlene Holt Baker, AFL-CIO Executive Vice President Emerita Linda Chavez-Thompson, SEIU International President Mary Kay Henry and his granddaughter, Kennedy Sweeney Moore.

 

This tribute was shared at John Sweeney's memorial service on May 5, 2022. 

Tributes to John J. Sweeney

Read more tributes on the blog


Jon Hiatt: Remembrance of John Sweeney, Former SEIU and AFL-CIO President

One theme alluded to in some tributes, but not discussed in any depth, was the highly significant role that Sweeney played in broadening the labor movement — starting with his recognition that organized labor had a responsibility to be a voice for all workers, not only those already enjoying collective bargaining rights. 

Philip J. Jennings: My Words in Tribute to John Sweeney

To bridge mutual understanding, he encouraged international union delegations to visit with American workers employed in the same multinational. It was always an eye-opener as another hitherto hidden side to corporate behavior was revealed. From anti-union busting campaigns, victimization and intimidation of employees, to third-class wages and unsafe conditions. He felt that if those delegations could walk in the shoes of his members, if even for a day, those human exchanges would build comprehension, sympathy and support.

Press Release

The Legendary Career and Spiritual Calling of John Sweeney

February 1, 2021
Convention Resolution

Resolution 59: AFL-CIO Convention Resolution Honoring President John J. Sweeney

September 13, 2009

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