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Mass Unionism I.The Problem of Unorganized Workers A.Extent B.Reasons II.The Birth of the CIO A.History B.Strategy III.Union explosion A.Radical nation.

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Presentation on theme: "Mass Unionism I.The Problem of Unorganized Workers A.Extent B.Reasons II.The Birth of the CIO A.History B.Strategy III.Union explosion A.Radical nation."— Presentation transcript:

1 Mass Unionism I.The Problem of Unorganized Workers A.Extent B.Reasons II.The Birth of the CIO A.History B.Strategy III.Union explosion A.Radical nation B.The CIO organizes industry C.Sit-down strikes D.New Unionists E.Craftsmen under pressure IV.Reaction

2 Unorganized Workers In 1932, only 3 million out of 49M gainfully employed Americans belong to unions Ford assembly line, 1928

3 Reasons for the Problem AFL ideology –Skill –Craft jurisdiction –Homogeneity & exclusivity Racism & racial antagonism –85,000 black steelworkers Sexism and gender roles –Journeymen Barbers’ IU “Blithering liability” Nativism and ethnic division –Tobin (Teamsters) “Rubbish” Nativist union badge

4 The Congress of Industrial Organizations Amalgamated Clothing Workers United Mine Workers ILGWU Textile workers Mine, Mill and Smelting Workers CIO leaders Sidney Hillman (garment), Francis Gorman (textile), and John L. Lewis (mining)

5 CIO strategy Organizing Committees –Not unions –Centralized –Control Grass Roots –Build on ethnicity –Communists Politics –Lewis and UMW give $600K to Roosevelt New York City garment workers’ protest, 1936

6 Radical Nation 1936 election FDR polls 60.8% of vote –Landon gets only 36.5% Inaugural, 1937 –“One-third of a nation…”“One-third of a nation…” FDR meets farmer impoverished by drought Campaign trail, August, 1936

7 Organizing Industry 4.7M workers strike in 1937 –Electric –Steel –Rubber Jones & Laughlin Steel, 1937

8 Sit-down Strikes 400,000 workers stage sit down strikes in 1937 –130,000 in March alone In one year, UAW membership rises from 30,000 to 400,000 General Motors, 1937

9 New Unionists Textile Workers’ gains 100,000 ACW gains 240,000 ILGWU gains 140,000 UE gains 90,000 Sit down strikes among workers at Woolworth’s ILGWU basketball team New Haven, 1937

10 Craftsmen under Pressure Competition forces AFL to be aggressive Uses Wagner Act to gain over 1M new members Striking cabbies, 1939

11 Reaction South resists organization Little Steel strike fails –Chicago, Youngstown –Memorial Day Massacre, 1937 Police kill ten strikers, disable nine, injure thirty Shift in political winds –Americans are tired, frustrated –FDR: “A pox on both your houses.” –Dems lose 1938 midterm elections ILGWU organizer tarred-and- feathered by Ford goon squad Dallas, Texas—1937


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