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Today in Labor History

July 2, 1964
President Johnson signs Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964, forbidding employers and unions from discriminating on the basis of race, color, gender, nationality or religion. ~ Labor Tribune

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Updated: Jul. 02 (20:04)

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Greater Kansas City AFL-CIO
90 Years after Its Passage, the NLRA Is Under Siege
Teamsters Local 355
90 Years after Its Passage, the NLRA Is Under Siege
Teamsters Local 992
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90 Years after Its Passage, the NLRA Is Under Siege
Posted On: Jul 02, 2025
July 2, 2025 | U.S. LABOR | The Wagner Act — or, more formally, the National Labor Relations Act — was the product of Depression-era concern about the social and economic effects of industrial unrest manifest in citywide general strikes, factory takeovers, and many violent confrontations between workers trying to form unions and the police or private security forces defending the interests of anti-union employers. The architects of the Wagner Act were New Deal Democrats. They knew that a new national labor policy was needed to promote collective bargaining as a peaceful alternative to such unregulated labor-management conflict. [Now, 90] years after President Franklin Roosevelt signed the NLRA into law on July 5, 1935, this statutory encouragement of collective bargaining is under assault and showing its age. In These Times
 
 
Teamsters Local 992
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