Right To Work South Carolina Experiences Economic Growth and New Jobs
South Carolina has proven once again how well right to work states prosper. Now, the state has new businesses setting up while current businesses are expanding.
South Carolina has proven once again how well right to work states prosper. Now, the state has new businesses setting up while current businesses are expanding.
Even as the number of steelworkers actively employed in forced-unionism states like Pennsylvania continues to decline, new high-paying metal production jobs are being created in Right to Work states like Arkansas. Credit: Gene J. Puska/AP If You Can’t Beat ’Em…
Big Labor is now demanding that, even in staunchly pro-Right to Work states like Virginia, politicians must support compulsory unionism to receive its backing. “There is no doubt that a rising share of elected officials in Virginia are dependent on the Big Labor machine to get in power and stay in power,” noted National Right to Work Committee President Mark Mix.
Tennessee UAW official Steve Cochran flatly admitted that higher pay for production employees is not the goal.
Job-Creating Investments Pour Into Kentucky In 2018, a National Right to Work attorney went before the Kentucky Supreme Court to defend the state’s Right to Work law on behalf of factory employees William and Jacob Purvis (pictured) and one other…
Excluding the four states that banned forced unionism between 2012 and 2016, the share of all automotive production occurring in Right to Work states rose from 42% in 2006 to 55% in 2016. South Carolina BMW Plant Employment Projected to…
BOURBON AND BATTERIES: Gov. Matt Bevin thanked EnerBlu executives for bringing good-paying jobs to Pike County, Ky., then handed them a bottle of whiskey’s “sweet spot,” for which the Bluegrass State is world-famous. Credit: Missouri Times But Missouri Job Creation…
According to a senior researcher from the National Institute for Labor Relations Research’s article at CNSNews, aggregate employment growth in the 22 states that had still not adopted Right to Work legislation as of the end of last…
Foreign auto companies soon “will build more cars and trucks in America than the Detroit giants.” - Neal Asbury, from NewsMax.