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Biden to celebrate Labor Day in Pittsburgh

Vice President Biden greets people as he walks in the St. Patrick's Day parade in Pittsburgh March 17, 2012.. (AP Photo/John Heller/File)
Vice President Biden greets people as he walks in the St. Patrick’s Day parade in Pittsburgh March 17, 2012. (AP Photo/John Heller/File)

WASHINGTON (AP) _ Vice President Joe Biden will be marking the Labor Day holiday in Pittsburgh.
The office of the vice president announced Monday that Biden will travel to Pittsburgh on Sept. 7 “to participate in Labor Day festivities.”
Traditionally, Labor Day has served as the start of the presidential campaign season and Biden has been considering a run over the last several weeks.
AFL-CIO President Richard Trumka says the Democratic presidential campaign is “still wide open” and Biden has time to join the field.
Trumka, who met privately last week with Biden, said Tuesday at a breakfast with reporters sponsored by The Christian Science Monitor that he does not know whether Biden will enter the race but appeared to welcome an expanded slate of Democratic candidates.
“The field is still wide open. There’s still a lot of time,” said Trumka, who will see Biden at Labor Day events in Pittsburgh on Monday. The labor leader said Biden has “a lot on his shoulders, I’d say,” but “he has to decide whether he’s got the full focus … he and his family and I don’t know the answer to that. Only he knows the answer to that. He would be a good candidate. He would be a good president.”
Trumka said Democratic front-runner Hillary Rodham Clinton would “make a great president” but needs “to really figure out how to energize workers.” He predicted, however, that she could “catch fire, too.”
Trumka also praised her main Democratic rival, independent Vermont Sen. Bernie Sanders. “I think he’s connecting. He has a very unique and genuine way of talking about the most pressing issues in politics and that’s inequality in America,” he said.
The union leader said it was “conceivable” that the federation of the nation’s largest labor organizations could make an endorsement by the Iowa caucuses and New Hampshire primary in February but cautioned, “I would say it is not likely to happen.”
Officials said additional details will be provided later.
 

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