Dissidents win six of 11 Hollywood division seats on SAG's national board
With the backing of moderates, the dissidents, backed by Tom Hanks and Sally Field, now control a majority of votes on the national board. That could jump-start stalled contract talks with studios.
Dissidents backed by Tom Hanks and Sally Field won six of the 11 Hollywood division seats on the national board of the Screen Actors Guild, empowering moderates inside the industry's biggest union and potentially changing the dynamics of stalled negotiations with the studios.
In a fiercely contested election, "Private Practice" star Amy Brenneman and veteran film and TV actor Ken Howard were among the candidates elected from the Unite for Strength group, which mounted a challenge against the leadership of SAG President Alan Rosenberg and the incumbent faction that supported him, Membership First.
With the support from moderates in New York and SAG's regional branches, the dissidents will now have enough votes to muster a majority of seats on the national board. Membership First holds a slim majority on the 71-member national board and dominates the guild's negotiating committee.
A newly reconfigured board could help jump-start talks with the studios that have stalled for months, although it's unlikely the stalemate will end any time soon.
The union's 120,000 members have been working without a contract since June 30, with the guild and studios sharply at odds over how actors should be paid for shows that are distributed via the Internet and other new media.
Unite for Strength candidates could push to unseat Doug Allen as the union's chief negotiator -- or even fire him outright. Such a step, however, would probably deepen rifts within an already divided union, which has been buffeted by executive turnover. Allen is the third executive director in five years at the guild.
What's more, replacing the guild's chief negotiator while contract negotiations are in flux could further weaken SAG's bargaining leverage. In addition, it's unlikely the studios will significantly modify their "final" offer. The studios have repeatedly rejected SAG's chief demand to extend jurisdiction over all shows specifically created for the Web, a goal shared by moderates and hardliners alike.
Nothing will happen before the board meets Oct. 19.
The election highlighted the factions inside Hollywood's largest fractious union, with celebrities lining up on either side. Hanks and Field squared off against Membership First supporters Sean Penn and Martin Sheen.
The dissidents accused SAG leaders of mishandling negotiations with the studios and waging an ill-fated campaign against the smaller actors union, the American Federation of Television and Radio Artists, which they say weakened SAG's bargaining position.
