General Discussion
Related: Editorials & Other Articles, Issue Forums, Alliance Forums, Region ForumsUnion Membership Rate In The U.S. Fell Again Last Year
Last edited Wed Jan 22, 2020, 07:49 PM - Edit history (1)
The share of U.S. workers who belong to a labor union dropped from 10.5% to 10.3% in 2019, even as public approval of unions reached its highest level in years.
Unions face tough headwinds in Washington and statehouses around the country. An increasing number of states have passed right-to-work laws that forbid contracts requiring all the workers in a bargaining unit to pay union fees. That, in turn, has allowed workers to stop financially supporting unions that must continue to represent them. A landmark Supreme Court ruling in 2018 effectively made the entire U.S. public sector right-to-work.
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doc03
(35,363 posts)Union membership hit a high in the late 1950s and has been declining ever since.
doc03
(35,363 posts)it leveled off or increased. Since Reagan it has been a
steady decline. Looks to me the Nixon years were really bad then it improved some during Carter.
WhiskeyGrinder
(22,402 posts)had much of an impact, and this data set isn't big enough to determine what impact it's had at all.
Recursion
(56,582 posts)And France just had a 7-week transit strike which included a one day general strike. Union membership is not the magic bullet here.
xmas74
(29,675 posts)I don't have the source offhand but it was recently quoted at a meeting and then emailed with links.
avlbeerfan
(52 posts)In the 90's I worked in a union, best $$$ I ever made. Today I work for a mid size city in civil service that desperately needs union organizing because the management pays themselves top pay for top people but try's to pay the people doing the actual work and who knows the systems as little as possible.
The union reps NEED to get out there and organize and recruit new people! Hell aybe because the mobs not running it anymore they are resting on their laurels.