August 2014 NRTWC Newsletter Now Available Online
(Click here to download the August 2014 National Right to Work Committee Newsletter) In the August 2014 Edition:…
(Click here to download the August 2014 National Right to Work Committee Newsletter) In the August 2014 Edition:…
National Right to Work Supreme Court Victory Forces SEIU to Abandon Forced Dues Demands in Illinois, Minnesota, & Massachusetts National Right to Work Foundation attorneys build on Harris precedent to aid home-based personal care providers forced into…
When it comes to business-friendliness, why is California dead last again? Study ranks California as…
For decades, Big Labor bosses have been insisting they are entitled under the U.S. Constitution to extract forced union dues from union nonmembers who are subject to union monopoly bargaining. But federal courts have never agreed. Just last year, for…
Recently, UAW Secretary-Treasurer Gary Casteel orchestrated a Kabuki Dance (political posturing) for the press and set off a several days of commotions about the United Auto Workers union and their presence in the South. But, it really was no more…
(Click here to download the July 2014 National Right to Work Committee Newsletter) In the July 2014 National Right to Work Newsletter: Pro-Right to Work Citizens Deserve a Choice — Survey…
In our interviews with CEOs of major companies over the years, many told me they wouldn't even consider moving a new plant or facility to a state unless the state has a Right To Work law. Forced-union states like Maryland aren't even in the game. It was no geographical accident that Boeing built its new assembly plant in South Carolina and not in its home state of Washington and why the unions and the Obama administration tried to block the move. South Carolina is a Right To Work state, Washington isn't. Population growth over the last decade was 13 percent in Right To Work states versus only 6.5 percent in the others. Nearly five million Americans left forced-union states for Right To Work states, no doubt because Right To Work states are where the jobs are. Total income growth was about 10 percent higher in Right To Work states. If every state had such a law, the competitiveness of the entire nation would improve and fewer jobs would go overseas. In the spirit of 1776, I would love to see Congress amend the NLRA defining a nationally protected right to work and extend to all Americans a First Amendment right not to associate with a union. Until it does, every state should improve its competitive climate domestically and internationally by enacting a Right To Work law.
Union officials, their spokespeople, and Big Labor’s ideological allies around the country are still venting their rage about the U.S. Supreme Court’s June 30 decision in Harris v. Quinn. In this case, argued in numerous written briefs and orally and…
UAW’s “strike fund dues increase” was not for the strike fund as United Auto Worker union bosses had advertised — it was to keep paying the union’s bloated payroll and other “operating” costs. But, what got the UAW bosses in this…