Title: Outline
1Outline
- The Labor Problem and the Clayton Act
- The Class War Continues Ludlow,Colorado
- WWI
- Great Migration
- Institutionalizing Conflict
- Boston Police Strike
- Railway Labor Act
- Welfare Capitalism
- National Labor Relations Act (Wagner Act)
- More choicesLabors Strategy
- On Reserve
- PBS Early Labor Dubofsky Kesslerget worksheet
from me - Extra Credit Optionwatch a movie answer 1
questionget 4 points - Matewan http//www.videodetective.com/movies/trail
ers/matewan-trailer/570 - 6 pm Monday LC 326A
- Need 7 to commit for it to happen
- Will put on LUO reserve for 2 pts
2Injunctions
- Injunctions
- Court orders issued by judges that prohibited any
activity that might cause irreparable harm - Injunctions were regularly used to block union
activities - Typically these writs also prohibited union
leaders from encouraging or advising any form of
collective action(Zieger and Gall 2002 29) - Limit union organizing, boycotts, sympathy
strikes and picketing during a strike - Basis for bringing in militia and army
- One judge described an injunction as Gatling gun
on paper note next slide (Who Built America
1992 125)
3The Clayton Act
- Unions lobbied hard to end injunctions
- In 1914, Congress passed the Clayton Act
- Section 6 of the Clayton Act provides that "The
labor of a human being is not a commodity or
article of commerce. Nothing contained in the
antitrust laws shall be construed to forbid the
existence and operation of labor organizations
nor shall such organizations, or the members
thereof, be held or construed to be illegal
combinations or conspiracies in restraint of
trade, under the antitrust laws. - The act was supposed to end the use of
injunctions, but courts interpreted it narrowly
and state courts continued to use injunctions
nothing changed - Katz and Kochan 2004
4One of many Coal Wars
- Labor Problem Generates Conflicts in Colorado
Where Miners Join Together to Demand - Recognition of the UnionA CONTINUING THEME
- 8 Hour Day
- Right to use any store, doctor or boarding house
- Had been required to use company stores, doctors
and housing - Demand about mine safety and regulation
- Official call to go on strike - September 17,
1913 - All mineworkers are hereby notified that a
strike of all the coal miners and coke oven
workers in Colorado will begin on Tuesday,
September 23, 1913 We are striking for improved
conditions, better wages, and union recognition.
We are sure to win.
5Ludlow and the Freedom of Association
- What did the authorities do to Mother Jones?
- Againdoes this seem like a sensible way to
address the labor problem?
6(No Transcript)
7Ludlow Massacre
- New York Times' account of the massacre - April
21, 1914 - The Ludlow camp is a mass of charred debris, and
buried beneath it is a story of horror
imparalleled sic in the history of industrial
warfare. In the holes which had been dug for
their protection against the rifles' fire the
women and children died like trapped rats when
the flames swept over them. One pit, uncovered
the day after the massacre disclosed the bodies
of ten children and two women.
8(No Transcript)
9President Wilson Appoints Committee on Industrial
Relations
- John D. Rockefeller defends "open shop" before
Congressional committee - April 6, 1914 - Rockefeller "These men have not expressed any
dissatisfaction with their conditions. The
recostrike has been imposed upon the company from
the outsiderds show that the conditions have been
admirable A - "There is just one thing that can be done to
settle this strike, and that is to unionize the
camps, and our interest in labor is so profound
and we believe so sincerely that that interest
demands that the camps shall be open camps, that
we expect to stand by the officers at any cost." - Chairman "And you will do that if it costs all
your property and kills all your employees?" - Rockefeller "It is a great principle."
10President Wilson Appoints Committee on Industrial
Relations
- One of three Government reports concluded
- "Where (labor) organization is lacking dangerous
discontent is found on every hand low wages and
long hours prevail exploitation in every
direction is practiced the people become sullen,
have no regard for law and government, and are,
in reality, a latent volcano, as dangerous to
society as are the volcanoes of nature to the
landscape surrounding them." - "We hold that efforts to stay the organization of
labor or to restrict the right of employees to
organize should not be tolerated, but that the
opposite policy should prevail, and the
organization of the trade unions and of the
employers' organizations should be
promoted...This country is no longer a field for
slavery, and where men and women are compelled,
in order that they may live, to work under
conditions in determining which they have no
voice, they are not far removed from a condition
existing under feudalism or slavery. - Final Report of the Commission on Industrial
Relations, 1915
11World War eruptsUS enters in 1917
- Need for soldiers, workers, coal, war production
121890, Blacks in America 90 in South
13The Great Migration North Blacks Move North for
Jobs
14Philly The Great Migration
15World War I
- Mobilization for War Required Production
- Coal, steel, ships, garments, food, you name it
- Gompers and AFL make a no strike pledgebut
there is a Massive Strike Wave - Metal Trades, Ship-building, coal
- 6 million workdays lost
- Youre an advisor to President Wilsonwhat do you
recommend?
16World War I
- Develop Institutions to Reduce or Channel
Conflict National War Labor Board - Set up to prevent labor disputes that might
weaken the countrys military effort - Self organization and collective bargaining
became public policy - Employers forbidden from interfering with union
organizing - Substituted settlements based on non binding
mediation - form of intervention in labor management disputes
whose objective is to help the parties reach a
settlement
17Changing the Rules
- the right to organize was freely conceded by the
government and even insisted uponThe gods were
indeed fighting on the side of labor. - -William Z. Foster, meatpacking organizer
- Union Membership Grows by 70 between 1914 and
1920 - 1917 2.9 million
- 1920 5 million
- Machinists grow by six fold, Garment workers
double in size
18NWLB Dissolved
- After the War, the NWLB is eliminated
- Why? The business community opposes its
continuation - But Labor Problem is not eliminated Large Scale
Conflicts Remerge - 1919-10,000 strikes involving 8 million workers
- Most strikes in any year up that point
- General Strike in Seattle
- a strike by all or most workers in a community or
nation. - http//www.youtube.com/watch?vefM5EsZPfbA
- Steel, Ship-workers even Policelets explore
Boston
19Boston Police Vote to Strike on 9/08/191,134 to
2Why?
- Wages
- Second through 5th year earned 1200 (14,382 in
todays dollars) - Most anyone could earn was 1400 (16,779 in
todays dollars) - Had to pay 200 for own uniforms (2400 in
todays dollars) - Hours
- 73 hours a week (day men)
- 83 hours a week (night men)
- 98 hours a week (wagon men)
- Such men are deprived of enjoying the comforts
of their home and family. - Boston Police Union President
20More ImportantlyShould Police Be allowed to form
unions?
- What are some reasons you might answer yes?
- What are some reasons you might answer no?
21More ImportantlyShould Police Be allowed to form
unions?
- Union Recognition
- Union position
- Police officers are workers with same values and
aspirations as private sector workers - Unions were needed to deal with issues of wages,
hours and working conditions - Opponents
- Police officers are government workers who are
not employees - Not employed, but appointed
- Nobody profits from their efforts
- Unionized police would have divided loyalty
- Might not be willing to enforce injunctions and
break strikes - Strikes by police would be catastrophic
22Boston Police Strike September 9, 1910
- Police Strike
- Public unrest follows
- Governor Coolidge fires all strikers and hires
permanent replacement workers - Though unionized garment worker will not sew
uniforms for scabs the strike is lost - Under pressure, AFL revokes charter of other
Police Unionsthings will not change for 40
years
23The Roaring Twenties
- Decade begins with 5 million in unionsby 1931
only 2.1 million are in unionsWhy? - No government supportNWLB dissolved
- Old Fashioned Management offensive defeats many
strikes - Firings, beatings, shootings, firing workers,
etc. - 921 injunctions issued in 1920about the same
number issued in the previous 40 years - Yellow dog contracts?
24Freedom of Contract?
- Yellow Dog Contracts
- Employers required a loyalty oath stating that
the employee would not join or participate in
union activities - Courts could enforce these common law contracts,
and the employee could be fired - Formed the basis for legal action against
organizers for interfering with a contractual
relationship
25Welfare Capitalism Emerges in 20s
- Personnel practices such as job ladders, pension
insurance benefits introduced by management
with the hope that these would lead employees to
shun unions (Katz Kochan, p.468) - Employee Representation Plan (ERP)
- Labor/management committees established to
discuss welfare programs, develop schemes for
improving efficiency, adjudicating minor disputes
and grievances. (Folks, p,177) - Union avoidance via Company Unions
- An organization of employees that is either
dominated or strongly influenced by management.
(Herman, p.524)
26Some Common Ground
- AFL Business Unionism and Management Driven
Welfare Capitalism differ in the degree of power
and autonomy that workers get - But they share in common a desire to address the
labor problem without open class warfare - Both seek to build institutions that can reduce
conflict generated by employment relationship
27Outline
- Channeling Conflict, 1920s
- Railway Labor Act
- Channeling Conflict, 1930s
- National Labor Relations Act (Wagner Act)
- More choicesLabors Strategy
- AFL and CIO
- Sit Down and Fight Video Clip
- Social Unionism
- CIO PAC
- Matewan on reserve
- Get sheet from me
- Dubofsky/Kessler video sheetHand in now
- Review Questionbig part of grade
- Some are doing an excellent job
- Some havent done anywhat are you waiting for?
- Some are not doing thoroughlydo them thoroughly
28Channeling Conflict
- Railways as key
- Largest Employer in US in 1917
- 250,000 workers
- Constant labor conflict a problem for national
economy - Railroads are the main mode of transportation
- During WWI Government Operates RR
- 1919 the RR Unions Supports Continued Government
Control of the Railroads - Unions would help manage them
- In wake of Bolshevik revolutionthis a very
radical demand
29The Railway Labor Act
- Passed by Congress in 1926
- Specifies that the employees have the right to
organize unions without employer interference and
to bargain through the representatives of their
own choosing - Establish procedures to reduce conflict in the
railroads - Compulsory arbitration
- Procedure used to settle labor disputes in which
a third party makes a binding decision - Unions drop demands for nationalization
- An important step towards rational labor
relations in one of nations most important
industries
30Side Note AFL and the Family Wage
- Trying to be attentive to not just generic
workers, but too different segments of the
working class - Blacks, Immigrants, women
- 1. In the section Prosperity in Chapter 2, the
authors mention something called the family wage.
What does this term refer to? In your opinion,
was a family wage something unions should have
demanded, or was it something that worked against
the interests of women?
31RLA as step toward institutionalizing
conflict.Next step facilitated by the collapse
of the American economy.
32The Labor Problem Intensifies
- Great Depression
- By 1932, ½ of all factories closed down
- By, 1933, 15 million people are unemployed
- Between 25 and 33 of all workers are out of
work - Wages fall by 60
- Approximately 50 of Americans are living below
the poverty level
33Conditions are Intolerable
- We cannot endure another winter of hardship such
as we are passing through. - Republican Governor of Washington
34The Labor Problem Intensifies
- Workers and unemployed organize hunger marches
and demonstrations across the nation - 50,000 march in NYC
- 60,000 march in Detroit
- With banners of Lenin
- Who was Lenin?
35A New Deal for workers
- Franklin Delano Roosevelt elected in 1932
- Administration full of people with experience
with WWI War Labor Board state level reform - Belief that industrial conflict could managed
- 1933, National Industrial Recovery Act
- Many parts all designed to use government to
re-organize the economy - Section 7 A states workers have right to organize
and collectively bargain
367A was like Yeast in Bread
- Unions launch organizing campaigns
- Organizing and strikes pick-up
- Employers refuse to abide by 7A oppose
unionization efforts - Believe law is unconstitutional
- Result Intense labor conflict
- 1934 strikes reach historic highs
37From Business Unionism to something more
dangerous?
- Teamsters organize truck drivers in Minneapolis
- Goal is not class struggle, but Business unionism
- A union to represent the bread and butter
interests of truck drivers. - Employers refuse to recognize unionthe resultA
General Strike
38Revolution as possible?
- General Strikes in 1934
- Minneapolis
- San Francisco shuts down ports up and down west
coast - Note video clip
39Revolution in the Air?
- You have seen strikes in Toledo, you have seen
Minneapolis, you have seen San Francisco, and you
seen some of the southern textile strikesbutyou
have not yet seen the gates of hell opened, and
that is what is going to happen from now on. - -Congressmen Conner, testifying before a Senate
Committee
40Solidifying a New Deal
- 1935 NIRA Struck Down by Courts
- Senator Wagner (D-NY) quickly offers new
billwhat is it? What does it do? - Wagner Act or National Labor Relations Act(1935)
- a federal law that among other things guaranteed
workers to organize unions, join unions and
collectively bargain. - Turning point in American History
- A conscious effort to strengthen unionism by
Federal Government - Still the framework we operate under
41What Drove Wagner
- There can no more be democratic self government
in industry without workers participating
therein, than there could be democratic
government in politics without workers having the
right to vote. - That is why the right to collectively bargain is
at the bottom of social justice for the workers
as well as the sensible conduct of business
affairs. The denial or observance of this right
means the difference between despotism and
democracy. (Tomlins, p.105) - What do you think? Do you agree with Wagner?
42Wagner Act (1935)
- Section 1 The denial by some employers of the
right of employees to organize and the refusal by
some employers to accept the procedure of
collective bargaining lead to strikes and other
forms of industrial strife and or unrest, which
have the intent or the necessary effect of
burdening or obstructing commerce -
43Wagner Act (1935)
- The inequality of bargaining power between
employees who do not possess full freedom of
association or actual liberty of contract and
employers who are organized in the corporate or
other forms of ownership substantially burdens
and affects the flow of commerce, and tends to
aggravate the recurrent business depressions, by
depressing wage rates and the purchasing power of
wage earners
44Wagner Act (1935)
- It is declared to be the policy of the United
States to eliminate the causes of certain
substantial obstructionsby encouraging the
practice and procedure of collective bargaining
and by protecting the exercise by workers of full
freedom of association, self organization, and
designation of representatives of their own
choosing, for the purpose of negotiating the
terms of and conditions of their employment or
other mutual aid or protection.
45Wagner Act/National Labor Relations Act, 1935
- Most non-agricultural private-sector employees
ensured the right to organize - Anyone know/guess which racial or ethnic groups
this will leave behind?
46Wagner Act/National Labor Relations Act, 1935
- Most non-agricultural private-sector employees
ensured the right to organize - Bow to Southern Democrats boxes African American
Sharecroppers out of deal
47NLRA, 1935
- Section 7
- Employees have the right to self organization
and the right to bargain collectively through
representatives of their own choosing, or to
engage in other concerted activities for the
purpose of collective bargaining - Right to strike, picket, etc.
- O.KWhat happens if these rights are violated?
Can employers hire temporary replacement workers?
What about permanent replacement workers? Can
workers strike company B to support workers at
company A?All things well consider
48NLRA, 1935 Section 8
- Employers must bargain in good faith
- Duty to bargain with the intent of reaching an
agreement. - O.KSo what can and can not be the subject of
bargaining? Still to be determined? - Unfair Labor Practices by Employers are Specified
- Cant interfere with right to unionize. Cant set
up company unions. Cant discriminate against
union members. - O.Kso what happens if an ER does this?
49NLRA, 1935
- O.Kwhat if different workers want different
unions to represent them - Section 9
- Union representatives selected by majority vote
of designated bargaining unit - Victorious unions wins exclusive representation
rights - O.KHow will bargaining unit be defined? All
Hospital workers? Just the nurses? Nurse and
orderlies but not cafeteria workers?
50NLRB Created
- National Labor Relations Board (NLRB)
- Government agency created to enforce provisions
of the Act - 5 persons appointed by the President of the U.S.
confirmed by the Senate - Guiding principles
- Organize elections recognize majority
representation - Investigate claims of unfair labor practices and
impose sanctions or punishments for violations of
the NLRA
51President Roosevelt as Pro-Union
- If I went to work in a factory, the first thing
Id do would be TO JOIN A UNION - -Franklin Roosevelt
- Its not clear if he ever really said this, but
union leaders made poster declaring that he did
52Opportunity for AFL
- AFL primarily comprised of Craft Unions
representing skilled workers - But economy now comprised of large, mass
production industries full of immigrants, women
and Blacks - Fords River Rouge plant employed 100,000 in one
factory - Most of them were unskilled or semi-skilled
- Choices.
53Wagner Act as the opportunity of a lifetime?
- AFL leaders hold negative views of unskilled and
immigrant workers - The scramble for admittance to the union is on.
We do not want to charter the riff-raff or good
for nothings, or those for whom we cannot make
wages or conditions - Daniel Tobin, Head of the AFL Teamsters Union
- Tobin referred to the the rubbish that have
lately come into other organizations. - My wife can always tell from the smell of my
clothes what breed of foreigners I have been
hanging out with. - William Collins, AFL organizer
54Choices
- AFL You are a (skilled white/unskilled white,
Hispanic, Black, woman, Asian) worker in a Ford
Factory. Organizers from the AFL have visited
your factory, and told you that your best
strategy is to divide the workforce of 100,000
into 13 different unions, each of which should
bargain with Ford independently. This will give
skilled workers an edge. Unskilled workers, the
majority, will be lowest priority. - See next slide
55AFL Craft Unions
- Divide workers in one car factory into 13
separate craft unions. - Try to bargain separately
- Unskilled, women, Blacks, Asians and others are
low priority
56Choices
- AFL You are a (skilled white/unskilled white,
Black, woman, HispanicAsian) worker in a Ford
Factory. Organizers from the AFL have visited
your factory, and told you that your best
strategy is to divide the workforce of 100,000
into 13 different unions, each of which should
bargain with Ford independently. This will give
skilled workers an edge. Unskilled workers, the
majority, will be lowest priority. - Organizer Lewis You are a (skilled
white/unskilled white, Black, woman, Asian)
worker in a Ford Factory. Organizers from the
new group tell you that the AFL strategy is
flawed. Division into separate unions weakens
your power. It is too easy to divide and conquer.
Skilled and unskilled, regardless of race, should
form one industrial union. This will give workers
the power to shut down production, and will force
Ford to deal with you. See next slide
57Congress of Industrial Unions
- Organize all workers along industrial lines (one
factory, one local union) - Including women, Blacks, immigrants and others
- Demand that Ford negotiate a deal that applies to
all of its factories
58Choices
- AFL You are an (unskilled White, Black, woman,
Hispanic, Asian) worker in a Ford Factory.
Organizers from the AFL have visited your
factory, and told you that your best strategy is
to divide the workforce of 100,000 into 13
different unions, each of which should bargain
with Ford independently. This will give skilled
workers an edge. Unskilled workers, the majority,
will be lowest priority. - Organizer Lewis You are an (unskilled White,
Black, woman, Hispanic, Asian) worker in a Ford
Factory. Organizers from the new group tell you
that the AFL strategy is flawed. Division into
separate unions weakens your power. It is too
easy to divide and conquer. Skilled and
unskilled, regardless of race, should form one
industrial union. This will give workers the
power to shut down production, and will force
Ford to deal with you.
59Choices
- AFL You are a skilled White worker in a Ford
Factory. Organizers from the AFL have visited
your factory, and told you that your best
strategy is to divide the workforce of 100,000
into 13 different unions, each of which should
bargain with Ford independently. This will give
skilled workers an edge. Unskilled workers, the
majority, will be lowest priority. - Organizer Lewis You are a skilled White worker
in a Ford Factory. Organizers from the new group
tell you that the AFL strategy is flawed.
Division into separate unions weakens your power.
It is too easy to divide and conquer. Skilled and
unskilled, regardless of race, should form one
industrial union. This will give workers the
power to shut down production, and will force
Ford to deal with you.
60CIO Challenge to the AFL
- Debate over craft or industrial organizing came
to a head at the 1935 AFL convention in Atlantic
City. - United Mine Workers President John Lewis lost a
crucial vote to organize the auto and rubber
industries along industrial lines - Punches Out President of Carpenters Union
- Next time youre in ACwalk as far south as you
can on the boardwalkthere is a memorial to the
events - With several other AFL leaders, Lewis formed the
more militant Committee of Industrial
Organizations which ultimately become the
Congress of Industrial Organizations (CIO)
61The CIO Challenge to the AFL
- CIO
- Federation of national labor unions created in
1938 with the goal of promoting industrial
unionism - Industrial Union (as opposed to craft union)
- Unions that represent workers across a number of
different skill levels and/or occupations - Sometimes One Industry, One Union (US)
- Auto Industry Autoworkers Unionnot machinists
union, painters union, electricians union, etc - Sometimes One Sector, One Union (Germany, Sweden)
- Metalworkers Unionnot autoworkers union,
steelworkers union, machinists union
62The Rise of the CIO
- Attitudes toward minorities or women?
63The Rise of the CIO
- Attitudes toward minorities or women?
- Official Position
- Classor at least Industry based Solidarity
should trump other concerns - Racial, ethnic gender differences
inconsequential - Black and White Unite and Fight
64The CIO Challenge to the AFL
- CIO
- Federation of national labor unions created in
1938 with the goal of promoting industrial
unionism - Industrial Union (as opposed to craft union)
- Unions that represent workers across a number of
different skill levels and/or occupations - Sometimes One Industry, One Union (US)
- Auto Industry Autoworkers Unionnot machinists
union, painters union, electricians union, etc - Sometimes One Sector, One Union (Germany, Sweden)
- Metalworkers Unionnot autoworkers union,
steelworkers union, machinists union
65- 6. The United Autoworkers first great victory
occurred in Flint Michigan. What made this strike
unique? Why do you think the strike was
successful? - Video Clip
66The Rise of the CIO
- From Poverty Level Wages to Middle Class Wages
- The CIO, the United Autoworkers (UAW) and General
Motors
67Union membership as a percentage of the
nonagricultural labor force, 1930-2002
68Unions Force Re-slicing of Economic Pie
- Estimated that 1billion transferred from
capitalist class to working class in 1937 alone - This a BIG deal
- Alters American Society
- Improves the standard of living of millionshelps
create a middle class
69But for the CIOit is not just abuot wages
- AFLBusiness unionism
- using collective bargaining to improve the wages,
hours and working conditions of members who
belong to a particular union. Focus on
bread-and-butter issues - pure and simple agenda of improving wages and
working conditions (Zieger 2002 25) - Limited political activity and no vision of large
scale social transformation - Early AFL ascribed to something called
Voluntarism - opposition to government relief and welfare
legislation and stressing the need for workers to
depend on their own economic strength (Zieger
200262) - Often little inter-union solidarity
- craft unions routinely crossed one anothers
pickets and endlessly disputed jurisdictions
(Folks, 145)
70- 8. In what ways did the CIOs attitude toward
political action differ from that of the AFL?
Briefly explain one of the reasons that CIO
adopted this attitude?
71CIO Beyond Business Unionism
- workers and Labor Union members have many
problems affecting their lives in addition to
wages, hours and working conditions, and related
matters involving the employer. These are the
wide range of the citizen in the community. The
CIO Council becomes the voice of the Labor
movement about housing, public and personal
health, child care, education, public and private
welfare, city and community planning, recreating,
and a large number of things which are the
concern of the worker as citizen where he lives. - Ted Silvey, CIO Leader, 1948
72The CIO From Voluntarism to Political Action
- It is difficult to conceive of any functioning
labor organization which does not take part in
politics. For the leaders of of labor, politics
was, and is, the other side of of the trade union
coin. - CIO pamphlet
- CIO more aggressively fights to elect people who
are more tolerant of unions and to use government
to solve social problems - Goal is to reform capitalism, not abolish it
- More public housing, health care, civil rights,
jobs, etc.
73From Business Unionism to Social Unionism
- a form of unionism that focuses on using
collective bargaining to improve the wages, hours
and working conditions of members who belong to a
particular union WHILE also engaging in campaigns
that will improve the conditions of the working
class a whole. - GOAL IS TO ADVANCE A BROADER SET OF ECONOMC
INTERESTSABOVE AND BEYOND THOSE DEALT WITH BY
COLLECTIVE BARGAINING
74The CIO and Politics
- In 1936 CIO puts 74 million behind FDR (2007
dollars) - 1943 CIO Political Action Committee formed
- CIO committee created to register voters, educate
them, and get them out to vote - In some cities, extremely well organized
- City broken down into districtsdistricts into
wardswards into blockseach block had community
steward in charge of mobilizing union vote
75Brokering a New Deal
- CIO was Key Part of New Deal coalition that
passed legislation creating - Old Age Pensions (Social Security)
- Unemployment Insurance
- Why would providing money to unemployed workers
be helpful to the labor movement? - Aid for Dependent Mothers (Welfare)
- Fair Labor Standards Act (AFL initially opposes
based on commitment to voluntarism, CIO supports) - Minimum wages maximum hours prohibitions on
child labor - Agricultural workers and public employees not
covered by the wages and hours standards
76- 8. In what ways did the CIOs attitude toward
political action differ from that of the AFL?
Briefly explain one of the reasons that CIO
adopted this attitude? Who had it right, the AFL
or the CIO? - Risk for the CIO of getting so politically
involved in support of the Democratic Party?
77Next
- Unions and WWII
- Social UnionismJust how far?
- Unions in Post War America