McFetridge was elected president of the international union in 1940 after Scalise was indicted and convicted of bribery, embezzlement and labor racketeering. Once president, McFetridge instituted modern financial and record-keeping practices at the international union's headquarters. He also undertook a large-scale organizing program, expanding out of the union's traditional base in apartments and office buildings and into airports, nuclear power plants, hospitals, and schools. He created research, legislative affairs, and legal departments, and began publishing a union-wide newsletter. During his tenure, the BSEIU grew from 70,000 members to 275,000 members. He later supported
Dwight D. Eisenhower for president in
1952. Nevertheless, McFetridge was a very close friend of Chicago mayor
Richard J. Daley, and nominated him for mayor in 1954. McFetridge became one of the most important behind-the-scenes players in Chicago under Daley. In 1950, McFetridge was elected a vice-president of the
American Federation of Labor (AFL). After the AFL and the
Congress of Industrial Organizations merged in 1955, McFetridge was elected a vice-president of the
AFL-CIO. Although a close ally of
Teamsters president
Dave Beck, he was also a strong advocate of strict financial practices and worked to cleanse AFL-CIO unions of labor racketeering. ==Retirement and death==