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by hedora
1529 days ago
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The US is closed shop. If a subset of employees don't like their union, they are not allowed to form their own union. Put another way, if employees disagree with something the union does, they have no recourse other than founding their own union and trying to get all their coworkers to vote to force every one to switch to the new union. In particular, employees are not able to call strikes in the US. In some sense, unions solved the "problem" of employee walk outs by redirecting grievances away from employers and to large unions that are (in practice) unresponsive to employee requests. When they do get things done, it's unclear what constituency they are serving, or who made the decision. For example, the California statewide teachers union managed to block vaccine mandates for teachers. All the teachers I've talked to in Silicon Valley are vaccinated and support mandates. Those teachers have no hope of joining a union that's not controlled by anti-vaxxers. |
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Employees can strike. Taft-Hartley illegalizes wildcat or secondary striking.
I still disagree with it because I don't think the Network Effect pruning was equal between Capital and Labor, but Strikes can absolutely be organized by private employees/unions.
Public sector unions are a different beast as far as I'm aware. See the Air Traffic Controller strike and how that flopped. But you've had some teacher's Union successes recently too.