Location: The Heritage Foundation's Lehrman Auditorium
This Labor Day presents an excellent time to reflect on the
direction of America's unions, especially in light of recent
developments at the AFL-CIO convention. Over the years, the Right
to Work movement has shown time and again that union officials
rarely represent the best interests of rank-and-file workers,
particularly the 12 million employees today who must join or pay
dues to a union or be fired from their jobs. For 50 years now, the
National Right to Work Committee has stood constant watch,
protecting the right of citizens to make their own decisions about
how best to live their lives and earn their livelihoods. It has not
been an easy task. The Committee and the Legal Defense Foundation
have fought for worker freedom in the face of oppressive New Deal
labor legislation such as the National Labor Relations Act;
initiated challenges on the state and local level to compulsory
unionism and the misuse of compulsory union dues for politics;
confronted political persecution by the IRS and FEC; as well as
battled an ugly history of violence ordered by corrupt labor union
bosses.
In spite of organized labor's assault on the basic notions of free
speech and free association, the Right to Work principle enjoys
support from nearly 80 percent of all American voters. Join us, as
our distinguished panelists review not only the history of this
movement, but also the outlook for extending this fundamental
freedom in the years ahead.
More About the Speakers
Mark Mix
President,
National Right to Work Committee &
Legal Defense Foundation
George C. Leef
Executive Director,
John William Pope Center for Higher Education,
and Author,
Free Choice for Workers: A History of the Right to Work
Movement
Charles Baird, Ph.D.
Distinguished Professor of Economics,
California State University-East Bay
Hosted By
Rebecca Hagelin
Senior Communications Fellow
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