From Union City <[email protected]>
Subject 50 ways Trump failed workers
Date September 25, 2020 9:45 AM
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50 ways Trump failed* workers

Today's Labor Quote

Today's Labor History

[link removed] LABOR CALENDAR; click here for latest listings

Union City Radio: 7:15am daily
WPFW-FM 89.3 FM; [link removed] click here to hear today's report

[link removed] Coalition to Repeal Right to Work: Fri, September 25, 7pm - 9pm
Special guest Delegate Marcus Simon

[link removed] Virtual Phone Banks (NoVA): Sat, September 26, 10am - 1pm

Metro Washington Council and Community Services Agency staff are teleworking; reach them at the contact numbers and email addresses [link removed] here.

Catch this week's [link removed] Labor Radio-Podcast Weekly: Thoroughbred Teamsters; The Voice of Oregon's Workers; Crimes of Capital; RadioLabour

50 ways Trump failed* workers
As a candidate, Donald Trump promised to protect workers and fight for us. President Trump hasn't lived up to that noble rhetoric. The Economic Policy Institute reports on [link removed] 50 ways that the Trump administration has been bad for workers. The authors of the study said "The Trump administration's mishandling of the COVID-19 pandemic marks the administration's most glaring failure of leadership. However, the administration's response to the pandemic is in no way distinct from its approach to governing since President Trump's first day on the job. The administration has systematically promoted the interests of corporate executives and shareholders over those of working people and failed to protect workers' safety, wages and rights." Read the [link removed] full report to find out all 50 of the ways Trump has been bad for working people. [link removed] Click here to hear EPI Senior Economist Heidi Shierholz discuss the report on yesterday's Your Rights At Work radio show on WPFW.
- Kenneth Quinnell, [link removed] AFL-CIO Now blog.
* or insert your preferred verb here

Today's Labor Quote: Lucretia Mott

"Any great change must expect opposition, because it shakes the very foundation of privilege."

Today's Labor History
This week's Labor History Today podcast: [link removed] Escape on the Pearl; Black Labor Week
DC Congresswoman Eleanor Holmes Norton connects a historic escape attempt by slaves with today's fight for DC statehood; AFGE's Black Labor Week on "Black History, Race and Racism in America," and on [link removed] Labor History in 2: The Fight for Equality in 1830.
Last week's show: [link removed] Labor Day: no picnic in a pandemic

September 25
American photographer Lewis Hine born in Oshkosh, Wisc. - 1874
photo courtesy [link removed] EHS Today

Two African-American sharecroppers are killed during an ultimately unsuccessful cotton-pickers strike in Lee County, Ark. By the time the strike had been suppressed, 15 African-Americans had died and another six had been imprisoned. A white plantation manager was killed as well - 1891

September 27
Striking textile workers in Fall River, Mass. demand bread for their starving children - 1875

The International Typographical Union renews a strike against the Los Angeles Times and begins a boycott that runs intermittently from 1896 to 1908. A local anti-Times committee in 1903 persuades William Randolph Hearst to start a rival paper, the Los Angeles Examiner.
- 1893

International Ladies' Garment Workers Union begins strike against Triangle Shirtwaist Co. This would become the "Uprising of the 20,000," resulting in 339 of 352 struck firms--but not Triangle--signing agreements with the union. The Triangle fire that killed 246 would occur less than two years later - 1909

Twenty-nine west coast ports lock out 10,500 workers in response to what management says is a worker slowdown in the midst of negotiations on a new contract. The ports are closed for 10 days, reopen when Pres. George W. Bush invokes the Taft-Hartley Act - 2002

- David Prosten

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Published by the Metropolitan Washington Council, an AFL-CIO "Union City" Central Labor Council whose 200 affiliated union locals represent 150,000 area union members.

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