AFSCME was formed out of the Wisconsin State Employees Association (WSEA), which was founded in
Madison, Wisconsin, in 1932 to represent approximately 50 Wisconsin civil service employees. The WSEA was launched amid fears of politically based firings within the state, the possible elimination of the
civil service and a return to
patronage jobs.
Arnold Zander, Wisconsin's state personnel administrator, emerged as one of the early leaders of the union. Soon after its formation, WSEA was granted an American Federation of Labor charter as Federal Labor Union 18213. One of its first projects was to protect civil service jobs in Wisconsin after a newly elected
Democratic legislature revealed its intention to eliminate
Republicans from the civil service. The group succeeded, with assistance from the
American Federation of Labor (AFL). AFSCME's history is documented through its archives at the
Walter P. Reuther Library in Detroit, Michigan.
Arnold Zander presidency (1936–1964) In 1935, after meetings between Zander and AFL President
William Green, AFSCME became a chapter within the
American Federation of Government Employees. AFSCME received a separate charter from the AFL in 1936. Under Wurf, who initiated the most aggressive unionizing campaign in the organization's history, AFSCME broke from earlier patterns of civil service reform and initiated a more militant form of unionization designed to achieve parity with private sector workers. By 1969, AFSCME was unionizing 1,000 new workers each day. The organization saw its greatest period of growth in the 1970s. In 1973, AFSCME concluded a three-year organizing campaign of 75,000 Pennsylvania employees. It was the largest organizing campaign in U.S. labor history. AFSCME supported
George McGovern's 1972 presidential bid as well as
Jimmy Carter's successful presidential bid in 1976. In 1989, a third of the locals and the headquarters of the dissolving
National Union of Hospital and Health Care Employees (NUHHCE) joined AFSCME. In 1992, AFSCME was the first national union to back
Bill Clinton in his presidential bid. McEntee was paid a gross salary of $1,020,751 in 2012, his last year on the job. McEntee's use of $325,000 in union money to charter private jets in 2010 and 2011 became an issue in the campaign to succeed him.
Lee Saunders presidency (since 2012) At the 2012 AFSCME Convention in
Los Angeles,
Lee Saunders was elected president of AFSCME. Laura Reyes was elected secretary-treasurer. Saunders defeated
Civil Service Employees Association president Danny Donohue with 54% of the votes and was re-elected without opposition in July 2016. Previously, Saunders had been elected as secretary-treasurer in 2010 after Bill Lucy retired. During Saunders' tenure, the union has increased its membership and its political involvement. Reyes stepped down as secretary-treasurer in 2017. AFSCME's International Executive Board elected Elissa McBride to the position in March 2017. ==Leadership and operations==