|
In Oakland, California,
and Across the Nation in 1946, a Wave of Strikes Hit the Nation
stock news photo |
The
other principal problem of the economy was labor and what to do about
labor and big labor. Labor unions, as far as conservatives were concerned,
had gotten out of handlabor had gotten too big. In the late 1930s,
unions had begun to gather strength, much to the distaste of America's
industrialists. Various strikes and acts of violence came to be identified
with the growth of labor during the late 1930s. During the war years,
controls enacted by the federal government prevented massive strikes
that might jeopardize the war effort. But after the war, as those controls
disappeared, a wave of strikes swept the nation. In 1946 alone, 750,000
steel workers went out on strike. General Motors was struck. General
Electric was struck. Over 400,000 mine workers, members of the United
Mine Workers Union walked off the job, not once, but twice during the
year. The railroad workers walked off the job. All told during the year
1946, more than 4.6 million American workers went on strike at one time
or another. Clearly something had to be done.
The conservative answer
from Congress was a major piece of legislation still on the books, still
enforced from time to time, a piece of legislation in 1947 called the Taft-Hartley Act. That act was the attempt of conservatives to
destroy big labor in America, or if not to destroy it, to hedge in and
to limit the expression of its power.
Conservatives Enact Taft-Hartley
|
Robert
A. Taft, "Mr. Republican," U.S. Senator from Ohio, Author
of the Taft-Hartley Act, 1947
National Archives Photo Division |
The Taft-Hartley Act had a number of clauses to it, but there were
several that I think are particularly important for you to know about.
Number one, Taft-Hartley prohibited
the "closed shop," meaning that to work in a particular
industry, one had to be a member of the union that served that industry.
The "closed shop" had come into being in the late 1930s. Now
conservatives wanted to put it to an end. A second part of Taft-Hartley that conservatives hoped would cripple the power
of labor was the prohibition of any "secondary strikes" or
"sympathy strikes." What that means simply is that members
of one union would refuse cooperation with an industry being "struck"
by a fellow union. Those kinds of secondary strikes had a major effect
on the economy. Third, Taft-Hartley
disallowed any political contributions by the unions. Finally,
Taft-Hartley gave the president of the United States the right to call
a "cooling-off" period of 80 days during which labor and management
sought agreement. No strikes would be allowed during that period. If
labor struck during that period when the President had declared a national
emergency, labor leaders would be fined, jailed, or both. Truman immediately
vetoed the bill, calling it totally arbitrary, totally unfair, totally
unworkable. But there were enough votes in Congress easily to override
Truman's vetoTaft-Hartley became law.
As matters turned out,
Taft-Hartley may have strengthened American labor in the long-run rather
than weakened it, because workers and union leaders tended to band together
in the face of Taft-Hartley. The American Federation of Labor (AFL)
formed back in the 1880s, and the Congress of Industrial Organizations
(CIO), which arose in the late 1930s had been in competition with one
another for national prominence and membership. They now saw a common
threat and began to have talks to join together. In 1955 the two largest
unions, the AFL and the CIO, united to become one giant union, AFL-CIO,
with some 16 million new members [note that the
audio lecture incorrectly states the year as 1945].
|
Joseph
McCarthy, U.S. Senator (Republican, Wisconsin)
AP News photo |
The economy faced major
obstacles in this crucial decade following the end of World War II.
Truman, with no success, had sought to continue a number of the New
Deal economic programs, as well as introducing even more liberal economic
reforms in his Fair Deal proposals. Conservative congressional opposition
had batted down those proposals and limited government controls over
economic affairs. Results in the economy pretty much mirrored results
in politics in general. There had been a definite political shift to
the right; there had been a definite economic shift to the right. If
we were to summarize politically and economically the Fair Deal proposals
of Harry Truman, we would have to conclude that liberalism certainly
was on its way out in America.
If we look at what I label
the psychological shift to the right that occurred in the late 1940s
and early 1950s, our conclusion becomes stronger. That psychological
shift we could fairly call the "Second Red Scare." Remember
the first Red Scare back in the 1920s. Well, there was also a fear of
radicalism, anarchy, communismparticularly the communism of the
Soviet Unionthat filled American society in the late 1940s and
into the early 1950s. That Second Red Scare is known more popularly
by one word, "McCarthyism," after the junior Republican
Senator from scenic Appleton, Wisconsin, Joseph McCarthy [voice
of Joe McCarthy].
|