General Discussion
In reply to the discussion: We Live In The Emotional And Economic Wreckage Of This Broken Home.... [View all]The Magistrate
(96,043 posts)Partly because corporate pressure on what remains of industrial unions leaves them nowhere but left to go, and partly because a large portion of what unions remain are comprised of government employees of one sort or another, who must oppose a rightist 'small government' line of budget slashing and lay-offs if they are to survive.
But the voting patterns of union households in the '68, and through to '88 at least, were pretty depressing, from a left point of view.
The movement to organize low wage workers today, such as janitorial staffs and fast-food workers, is an encouraging thing. It is something the left is getting involved in, and may well herald a new alignment with a growing class of workers of a new character and attitude towards left economic views.