Difference between revisions of "Labor Today"

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(New page: '''Labor Today''' ==Communist labor movement influence== In the early 1970s, Communist Party USA aligned union members began to find their voice through new coalitions such as the [[...)
 
 
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[[Category:Trade Unionists for Action and Democracy]]
 
[[Category:Trade Unionists for Action and Democracy]]
 
[[Category:Communist Party USA]]
 
[[Category:Communist Party USA]]
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==References==
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{{reflist|2}}

Latest revision as of 01:15, 20 December 2012

Labor Today

Communist labor movement influence

In the early 1970s, Communist Party USA aligned union members began to find their voice through new coalitions such as the Coalition of Black Trade Unionists , the Labor Council for Latin American Advancement , and the National Coordinating Committee for Trade Unionists for Action and Democracy. TUAD leaders — Fred Gaboury, Rayfield Mooty, Debbie Albano and Adelaide Bean, along with Labor Today editors Jim Williams and Scott Marshall, helped bring these coalitions together. These labor coalitions, like Coalition of Labor Union Women, reflected rising communist influence in the labor movement.[1]

References

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  1. [Joy in the Struggle, My Life and Love, Bea Lumpkin, page 163]