Labor Unions in the United States - U.
Publié le 02/05/2013
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National Guard troops were used against the strikers, with the result that the strike was lost and the union that conducted it virtually destroyed.
In 1894 a strike by theAmerican Railway Union against the Pullman Palace Car Company was defeated by an injunction issued under the Sherman Antitrust Act of 1890, which made acombination or contract in restraint of trade illegal.
Thereafter employers used injunctions with increasing frequency and effectiveness as an antistrike weapon.
See also Hours of Labor; Haymarket Square Riot.
V INDUSTRIAL EXPANSION
The expansion of industrial activity after the Spanish-American War (1898) led to renewed growth of trade unionism.
By 1904 more than 2 million workers weremembers of trade unions.
Almost 1.7 million belonged to the AFL.
Although most employers remained bitterly hostile to the unions, many industries, includingconstruction, publishing, glass, ceramics, coal, and railroads, began to accept collective bargaining with unions as normal.
In 1905 the Industrial Workers of the World (IWW), which publicly adopted the revolutionary trade union principles of syndicalism, was organized in Chicago.
The IWWnever had more than about 100,000 members, who were called Wobblies, but it conducted numerous strikes, many marked by bloodshed, and exerted a majorinfluence on the American labor movement until the early 1920s.
In the early 20th century, the first female workers became members of unions, notably of theInternational Ladies’ Garment Workers’ Union (ILGWU), which lasted throughout the century, merging with other unions to become UNITE HERE in the early 21stcentury.
In the years immediately preceding United States entry into World War I in 1917, organized labor won several important gains from the federal government.
In 1913the U.S.
Congress created the Department of Labor, thereby assuring that the needs and problems of labor would receive top-level consideration.
The state ofMassachusetts enacted (1912) the first minimum-wage law in the Unites States.
The Clayton Antitrust Act, passed in 1914, restricted the use of the injunction in labordisputes.
In 1916 the independent railroad brotherhoods won a signal victory through the enactment by Congress of the Adamson Eight-Hour Act.
Although this lawlimited the working hours of railroad labor only, its passage strengthened the position of all unions struggling for shorter hours.
During World War I representatives oforganized labor were given responsible positions in the war production agencies of the government, and the rights of labor gained increasing official recognition.
Theseachievements contributed to a sharp rise in membership.
By 1920 trade unions had about 5.1 million members, of whom more than 80 percent were in the AFL.
VI UNION DEFEATS AND DECLINE
With its victories during this period, however, organized labor experienced several serious defeats.
One of the worst setbacks for the trade union movement was thefailure of the strike of iron and steel workers in 1919.
Despite the fundamental importance of the iron and steel industry in the national economy, no significant effort toorganize its workers had been made before 1918, when the AFL set up the National Committee for the Organization of the Iron and Steel Industry.
The campaign toorganize this industry was remarkably successful; the workers, many of whom worked 12 hours a day and 7 days a week, welcomed the advent of unionism.
The ironand steel companies refused to bargain with the union, however, and discharged large numbers of union members.
An industry-wide strike was called in September1919.
It involved almost 370,000 workers, one of the largest strikes in U.S.
history.
Both the intransigency of the employers and the disunity among the strikers, whoseranks were divided by splits between skilled and unskilled workers, between the native-born and the foreign-born, and between various groups of the foreign-born,forced the workers to abandon the strike without winning concessions from the employers.
As a result, the iron and steel industry remained an open-shop industry, thatis, one in which union membership is not obligatory, for almost two decades.
The trade union movement declined during the 1920s.
A major influence in the decline was the severe postwar depression of 1921-1922.
Unemployment rose steeply,and so desperate was competition for the available jobs that the unions in many industries were unable to prevent wage reductions and speedup methods, that is,methods by which workers are forced to work faster, or to produce more than they did previously in a certain period of time.
Employment in certain industriescontinued to decline even after the return of general prosperity.
The decline caused drastic losses of membership in many unions, including those of the coal miners,metal miners, and garment workers.
The garment-trades unions were particularly hard hit also by bitter struggles for power between Communist and anti-Communistelements.
The limited outlook of most trade union leaders during this period also weakened the labor movement.
Although in 1924 the AFL endorsed the Americanpolitical leader Robert M.
La Follette as the presidential candidate of the League for Progressive Political Action, this move was an exception to the federation's generalpolicy of refusing to endorse candidates.
A more serious result of the conservatism of the AFL leadership was that it made no real effort to organize the unskilled andsemiskilled workers in the mass production industries; because these industries, which expanded substantially during the 1920s, were not suited to the craft union typeof organization, the AFL would have been required to revise fundamentally its principles before embarking on a unionization campaign.
The conservative craft-unionistleadership of the AFL was unwilling to consider revision of its principles.
Taking advantage of the weaknesses of American trade unionism, many employers acted vigorously to forestall organization of their employees.
Among other measures,they moved their establishments to areas lacking trade union traditions; abrogated existing collective bargaining agreements and refused to conclude new ones;required their employees to sign so-called yellow-dog contracts binding them not to join unions and induced them to join instead company-controlled employeeassociations; and engaged in paternalistic practices, such as the establishment of health and welfare plans, as a means of making unionism seem less desirable.
Forthese and other reasons, union membership dropped from the peak of 5.1 million reached in 1920 to fewer than 3.5 million in 1929.
During the same periodmembership in company-sponsored employee associations rose from an insignificant number to about 1.5 million.
The cataclysmic economic depression of the 1930s led to a tremendous rise in unemployment and to a corresponding further decline in union membership.
The unions,attempting to offset the adverse effects of the depression on wages and working conditions, launched numerous strikes, but few were successful.
The widespread use ofthe injunction by employers contributed to the defeats sustained by labor.
In 1932 Congress, coming to the aid of the unions, enacted the Norris-LaGuardia Anti-Injunction Act, which banned yellow-dog contracts and curtailed the use of injunctions far more effectively than had the Clayton Act of 1914.
The Norris-LaGuardia Anti-Injunction Act proved to be the forerunner of the large body of prolabor legislation enacted after the election of Franklin D.
Roosevelt to the presidency in 1932.
VII GROWTH UNDER THE NEW DEAL
The first of the many laws sponsored by Roosevelt under the New Deal and passed by Congress for the specific purpose of mitigating the effects of the depression andof stimulating the growth of the trade union movement was the National Industrial Recovery Act (NIRA) of June 1933.
One of the most controversial sections of this lawstipulated that “employees shall have the right to organize and to bargain collectively through representatives of their own choosing, and shall be free from theinterference, restraint, or coercion of employers ...
in the designation of such representatives.” Quick to take advantage of this legislative encouragement, the unionscarried out successful organizing campaigns in many industries during the ensuing 22 months.
Membership in the AFL, which had dropped to about 2.5 million in 1932,rapidly mounted to more than 3 million workers.
In May 1935 the Supreme Court declared the NIRA unconstitutional, but two months later Congress enacted theNational Labor Relations Act (NLRA), which provided even stronger government support for organized labor.
The NLRA not only reafffirmed the right of labor to organizefreely and to bargain collectively, but also applied the designation “unfair” to certain practices designed by employers to impede unionization and made those foundguilty of such practices subject to penalty.
One of the most significant provisions of the NLRA made domination or financial support of unions by employers illegal.
Thisvirtually eliminated the company-dominated employee associations..
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