Zusammenfassung der Ressource
Truman and Trade Unions
- BEFORE THE END OF
WW2
- Stronger than in
1920s
- The Wagner Act (1935) increased their
power and membership
- TWO main labour
unions
- American Federation of Labour
- Congress of Industrial
Organisations
- 1945...
- 15 million
workers
- 36% of non-agricultural workforce
- AFTER THE WAR
- INFLATION in US economy
- TUs demanded higher
WAGES
- Agreed 18-19% wage increase BUT
just made inflation WORSE
- STRIKES in most
industries
- record
number
- NOV '45 = Gov
organised peace
conference
- Important to solve issue as TUs help fund Democrats
- LITLLE EFFECT in improving
relations or TUs situation
- 1946 = Coal Strike
- Potential to have large damage to
economy
- Congress (REPUBLICAN) refused to use emergency powers to deal with
strike
- Railwaymen
also
- 400,000
WORKERS
- Taft-Hartley Act, 1947
- (Labour Managements Relations Act)
- List of 'unfair' labour services
- Don't have to be a TU
member - 'closed shop'
- Sign non-communist oaths
- Bosses could sue TUs (certain
circumstances)
- President could ask for 80-day cooling period before a strike
(incase of national threat)
- Unions = ANGRY
- Truman vetoed congress but go later overturned
- "Slave labour Bill"
- 1952 = Steel Strike
- Workers demanded higher WAGES due to high
production for Korean War
- Truman took control of steel mills
- FAIL as lost Supreme court challenge
- 7 week strike followed
- Shortages
- Higher steel prices