Labor Secretary Tom Perez is running for Democratic National Committee chair, he told DNC members Thursday after a lot of very heavy hinting. Perez has been an effective and respected labor secretary, but he enters the DNC race after Rep. Keith Ellison has locked up a great deal of support, including the AFL-CIO endorsement.
With President Obama forced to work largely through executive action in his second term, Perez’s Labor Department has been the site of many of Obama’s major recent accomplishments, such as the expansion of overtime eligibility to millions more workers (currently held up in the courts).
Perez has proven himself an able handyman, steering a dizzying array of labor rules and regulations through Washington’s often-stymied bureaucracy despite constant political threats and general hostility coming from Republicans and the business lobby. Those include not only the overtime rule, but an expansion of federal labor protections to cover home-care workers; a long-shot crusade to establish new standards in the retirement-advising industry; an executive order to use the federal government’s contracting process to create good jobs; and a stern guidance aimed at stopping rampant worker misclassification.
Perez has the potential to bridge some of the Democratic Party’s battling priorities after the November elections—he is the son of Dominican immigrants, but as labor secretary, he has gained deep experience with the concerns of white working-class voters (and others, but we all know it’s the white ones who count in the media). However, he’s a relatively late entrant in a field with some strong candidates, including one—Ellison—who has support not just from the AFL-CIO but from a long list of big names.