Forced-Dues Status Quo Challenged in States
“The evidence that prices are generally lower and living standards are higher in Right to Work states than in forced-unionism states is indeed compelling,”
“The evidence that prices are generally lower and living standards are higher in Right to Work states than in forced-unionism states is indeed compelling,”
Kansas has two new businesses settling in here, and they are Empirical Foods and KMS. Altogether, they will create 350 new jobs!
Union-label Senate Minority Leader Charles Schumer (D-N.Y.), is expected to become majority leader next year if Big Labor Democrats take over the chamber this fall.
Philadelphia electricians union bigwigs aren’t curtailing their partisan political activism the least bit as they face a federal trial scheduled for January on charges they colluded to embezzle more than $600,000 from rank-and-file workers. Photo credit: John McDevitt/KYW Newsradio (Philadelphia).
Here's a summary of what you'll find in our November/December 2020 National Right To Work Newsletter. You can read it here!
“Contrary to Nancy Pelosi’s expectations, the governors and lawmakers of Right to Work states have not joined their counterparts in Illinois, New Jersey and Connecticut in pressing for a federal bailout.
Perhaps no other state is currently in a deeper fiscal hole than forced-unionism Illinois, where there are more than $12 billion in unfunded liabilities of local public-safety pension funds alone.
Power-crazed and money-grubbing union bosses often try to force workers to continue paying full union dues after they resign.
This February, pro-forced unionism Speaker Nancy Pelosi’s (D-Calif.) House of Representatives green-lighted omnibus labor legislation (H.R.2474) including provisions that would reclassify independent contractors nationwide as “employees.”