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Published byAileen Evans Modified over 9 years ago
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NIRA (1933) and Wagner Act (1935) legalized labor unions Union membership grew from 3 million in early 30s to 10 million (25% of workforce) by 1941
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Formation of the CIO › Union rivalries created tension › American Federation of Labor white, skilled workers Organized by crafts › Some wanted AFL extended to all workers › Committee/Congress of Industrial Organizations breaks away from AFL Unskilled workers in auto/steel/textile industries
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Strikes › Auto GM plant in Flint, MI Sit-down strike GM asked for troops, denied Eventually recognized as UAW Ford plant Organizers beaten and driven away › Steel Small steel companies resisted Republic Steel – four protesters killed by police
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Fair Labor Standards Act › 1938 › Established: Minimum wage (40 cents/hour = $6.03/hour) 40 hour workweek (time and a half overtime) Child labor restrictions for under 16 › US v. Darby Lumber Co. Supreme Court reversed 1916 ruling declaring child labor laws unconstitutional
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Current
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1.5 million strikers in 1934 › West Coast longshoremen Two killed by police › Teamsters in Minneapolis 2 killed by police › 300k+ in the South 7 killed in South Carolina 6 other deaths throughout the South
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Black sharecroppers › AAA hurt tenant and sharecropping farmers › 2.8 million of 6.8 million total 48 sitdown strikes in 1936 477 in 1937 NLRB and Union leadership provide a measure of control
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Some help (unemployment, banks, business earnings) Recession 1937-1938 › Programs cut/moderated › Trying to balance budget New Deal weakened with Dem. majority
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Wealth still in the hands of a few System of inequality still intact Little to no feminist movement › Added pressure › More seeking work › Lower pay for same jobs
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African-Americans ignored › Mostly tenant farmers, laborers, migrants, domestic workers No unemployment insurance, minimum wages, social security, or farm subsidies › Roosevelt didn’t push an anti-lynching law › Segregation and discrimination in military and jobs › African-Americans invisible › Only radicals tried to break racial barriers Socialists, Communists, CIO
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Native Americans › Wheeler-Howard Act of 1934 Repealed Dawes Act Returned land control to tribes Mexican Americans › Lost many southern and western farm jobs to whites moving west › Thousands returned to Mexico
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Early – continuation of Populist, Progressive movements Later – Halfway revolution › Helped some, ignored others › Moderate reforms Later – Missed opportunity › Only preserved capitalist system of inequality Modern – Piecemeal solution › Did what was necessary, no radical or conservative agenda in mind
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