As Trump takes aim, union membership has declined in Washington
Labor unions have been among the most vocal critics of Donald Trump and his expanding team of economic advisers, sounding warnings over the president-elect's positions on a range of issues and promising to stymie his policy agenda when warranted.
Alas, federal data indicate the influence of labor unions at least when it comes to membership is waning. A recent analysis by the Bureau of Labor Statistics found that union membership as a percentage of the entire labor force declined in 24 states in 2015, while some 34 states and the District of Columbia were down from where they were a decade earlier.
States with some of the largest declines were concentrated in the U.S. Rust Belt. Wisconsin's union membership as a percentage of its total labor force dropped 7.8 percentage points from 16.1 percent in 2005 to 8.3 percent in 2015 following a bitter policy battle that saw Gov. Scott Walker beat back rules around labor organizing and membership dues. Similar efforts in Indiana resulted in a 2.4 percentage-point slide, while Ohio (down 3.7 percentage points) and Michigan (5.3 percentage points) also ranked among the largest decliners.
In Washington, 16.8 percent of the states total workforce was unionized in 2015. The ratio was unchanged from 2014. But since 2005, union membership as a percentage of overall workers in Washington declined by 2.3 percentage points from 19.1 percent of the states workforce.
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