Yesterday (September 14th) was the 61st anniversary of the Landrum-Griffin Act’s being signed into law by President Eisenhower in 1959. As Erik Loomis detailed on Twitter, the Act (also known as the Labor-Management Reporting & Disclosure Act, or LMRDA) was the immediate follow-up to the McClellan Committee, which was in name a body convened for hearings on corruption in labor and management, but, unsurprisingly to anyone with glancing familiarity with the United States, turned a much sharper focus on union corruption than its [much, much deeper] counterpart in business.
Are unions democratic?
Are unions democratic?
Are unions democratic?
Yesterday (September 14th) was the 61st anniversary of the Landrum-Griffin Act’s being signed into law by President Eisenhower in 1959. As Erik Loomis detailed on Twitter, the Act (also known as the Labor-Management Reporting & Disclosure Act, or LMRDA) was the immediate follow-up to the McClellan Committee, which was in name a body convened for hearings on corruption in labor and management, but, unsurprisingly to anyone with glancing familiarity with the United States, turned a much sharper focus on union corruption than its [much, much deeper] counterpart in business.