In 1848, Karl Marx wrote the Communist
Manifesto stating that the struggle between labor and management was a
political struggle. Labor conditions during the industrial revolution were not
good because there was an oversupply of unskilled labor that produced low wages
and some work required dangerous processes.
Marxism taught Samuel Gompers and his
fellow socialists that trade unionism was the indispensable instrument for
preparing the working class for revolution. Union tactics included violence,
property damage and intimidation.
In the history of America's trade and labor
unions, the most famous union remains the American Federation of Labor (AFL),
founded in 1886 by Samuel Gompers.
At its pinnacle, the AFL had approximately 1.4 million members.
Labor unions were created in
order to help the workers with work-related difficulties such as low pay,
unsafe or unsanitary working conditions, long hours, and other situations.
Workers often had problems with their bosses as a result of membership in
the unions.
The US Department of Labor was created in 1913
without an Amendment to the US Constitution authorizing this addition to the
“enumerated powers”.
The Wagner
Act of 1935, gave employees the right to unionize, strike and
negotiate working conditions, benefits and compensation.
Ever
since industrial unions worked to reelect President Franklin Roosevelt in 1936,
organized labor and the Democratic Party have worked together in U.S. politics.
Unions provide votes, money, and volunteer time, and Democrats offer policy
benefits when they take office.
Florida was the first state to pass
right-to-work legislation, in 1943,
according to the National Conference of State Legislatures. Arizona and South
Dakota followed in 1946. Then Georgia, Iowa, Nebraska, North Carolina, North
Dakota, Tennessee and Virginia did so in the right-to-work boom year of 1947.
The Taft Hartley Act of 1947
It allows the president to appoint a board of
inquiry to investigate union disputes when he believes a strike would endanger
national health or safety, and obtain an 80-day injunction to stop the
continuation of a strike. It declares all closed shops illegal. It permits union shops only after a majority of the
employees vote for them. It forbids jurisdictional strikes and secondary
boycotts. It ends the check-off system whereby the employer collects union
dues. It forbids unions from contributing to political campaigns.
Executive Order 10988 is a
United States presidential executive order issued by President John F. Kennedy
on January 17, 1962 that
recognized the right of federal employees to collective bargaining. This
executive order was a breakthrough for public sector workers, who were not
protected under the 1935 Wagner Act. They also continued to benefit under the
Civil Service System that was devised to make unionization unnecessary. This
put the Democrats on steroids.
The act also required union leaders to take an oath stating
that they were not communists. Although many people tried to repeal the act,
the Taft-Hartley Act stayed in effect until 1959 when the Landrum-Griffin Act
amended some of its features.
The Landrum Griffin Act 1959 aka Labor-Management
Reporting and Disclosure Act
deals with the relationship between a union and its members. It requires labor
unions to disclose their expenses and supply audited financial reports.
By the
1970s, US automobile companies were stymied by union contracts and foreign
competitors were producing better cars.
In 1980,
President Reagan ended the Airport Controller’s strike, fired the strikers and
hired non-union replacements.
In 1993,
NAFTA allowed unionized manufacturing companies to escape US unions and
off-shore their manufacturing jobs.
At their peak in 1954, 34.8% of all U.S. wage and salary workers belonged to
unions. By 1983 union membership was
down to 20.1%. As of 2016 only 11.3% of wage and salary workers belonged to unions.
Now in
2018, most union employees are government employees and employees working for
utilities and monopolies.
Norb
Leahy, Dunwoody GA Tea Party Leader
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