- Op-Ed: Mamdani Is Right To Side With The Nurses (1/28/2026) - Mayor John Lindsay famously faced a massive citywide strike of bus and subway workers as his first challenge in office. The Transport Workers Union Local 100 contract expired at the stroke of midnight on Jan. 1, 1966, just as Lindsay was sworn in. The strike was finally settled 11 days later, with union leaders jailed at Lindsay’s insistence for leading an “illegal” work stoppage. Legendary TWU president Mike Quill suffered an ultimately fatal heart attack… …
Continue reading "Op-Ed: Mamdani Is Right To Side With The Nurses"
- Review of “The Pandemic and the Working Class: How US Labor Navigated COVID-19” for H-Sci-Med-Tech (1/27/2026) - It is sometimes said that there are decades in which not much changes and years in which an entire decade’s worth of sociopolitical tumult occurs. The so-called COVID year, March 2020 until the vaccine rollout of the following year, is an example of the latter. The COVID year markedly reduced average American life expectancy, nurtured extremist politics and conspiracy-minded cynicism, frayed communities, and eroded trust in institutions. For workers who, in the words of Nick… …
- Review of Daniel J. Clark’s “Listening to Workers” for IRSH (12/9/2025) - Common to failing and fallen empires is a nostalgia for a golden age that never existed. Americans like to believe that we miss working on assembly lines in auto factories. The fantasy that “good jobs” are inherently and automatically generated by factories, or even that unionization magically converts working on an assembly line into the kind of job that workers would want their children to aspire to, motivates much of Donald Trump’s trade war. Likewise,… …
Continue reading "Review of Daniel J. Clark’s “Listening to Workers” for IRSH"
- The War on Communists in the Hotel Workers’ Union (7/21/2025) - The Hotel Employees and Restaurant Employees and Bartenders International Union (HERE) gathered in Milwaukee in 1947 for its largest convention in history. With over 400,000 members, HERE was the fifth-largest affiliate of the American Federation of Labor — and growing. But a majority of delegates arrived in a less-than-celebratory mood, seeking to ban the Communists who had been so central to the union’s successes from the organization altogether. Before the vote on a constitutional anti-communist… …
Continue reading "The War on Communists in the Hotel Workers’ Union"
- LaGuardia: the pro-union mayor: Today’s City Hall contenders must follow Fiorello’s labor agenda (4/6/2025) - In New York’s mayoral election, plenty of candidates claim to be the anti-Trump. But, when it comes to protecting workers’ rights and reducing economic inequality, the better question is who will be the neo-LaGuardia. The “Little Flower” served as the city’s mayor from 1934 to 1945. A Republican, Fiorello LaGuardia was an aggressive advocate for egalitarian and anti-corruption New Deal policies, particularly in support of working New Yorkers at a time when the ambitions of… …
- Give Mayor Adams a No Confidence Vote (2/18/2025) - New York has a fugitive from justice occupying Gracie Mansion, and no clear plan for eviction. The City Council must pass a non-binding resolution declaring Eric Adams unfit to lead and unwelcome to remain as mayor, adding to yesterday’s call for him to resign from Speaker Adrienne Adams. Only then will those who still retain power over him have the ethical high ground and democratic consent to remove him. Adams was already unfit to lead after he was indicted… …
- Sabotage as a Tool of Solidarity (12/5/2024) - Striking waiters spent a week in January 1913 throwing fistfuls of asafetida in the fancy dining rooms of New York City hotels. The spice, commonly used a pinchful at a time in Indian cuisine to replace entire onions, has a powerfully fetid odor and cleared most dining rooms (save for a few customers, the New-York Tribune joked, who were “suffering from severe colds”). The workers were on strike since New Year’s Eve – their second city-wide walkout in six months – and the playful… …
- The Right Believes It Has the Supreme Court Votes to Entirely Overturn Labor Law (10/22/2024) - The foundational 1935 labor law protecting workers is unconstitutional, according to major corporations and right-wing zealots who believe they have enough votes on the Supreme Court to overturn it. In the latest sign that anti-union forces will doggedly press the matter, a federal judge for the Northern District of Texas enjoined the National Labor Relations Board (NLRB) from processing any allegations of employer violations of workers’ rights. The National Review hailed the decision as “A Welcome Blow to the NLRB.” This is after Elon… …
Continue reading "The Right Believes It Has the Supreme Court Votes to Entirely Overturn Labor Law"
- Misjudging Labor (8/10/2024) - On June 13 the Supreme Court once again sided with a multibillion-dollar corporation over its workers. The case of Starbucks Corp. v. McKinney concerns seven employees, now known as the Memphis Seven, whom Starbucks fired in February 2022 as they tried to unionize their store in Tennessee. (Because federal law prohibits employers from retaliating against organizing, the company naturally claims they were let go for violating workplace policies.) The National Labor Relations Board (NLRB), the agency tasked with guaranteeing workers’… …
- Independent Unions Can Help Break Through the Economic Crisis and Labor’s Paralysis (8/20/2022) - In a period of extreme social and economic crises, when the major labor unions have reduced their organizing programs to a fraction of what they once were and the courts stand athwart any effort to protect workers’ interests, scrappy new independent unions raise hope against hope that maybe — just maybe — workers can fight back and win. I’m writing, of course, about the early 1930s. A newly published book finds some surprising parallels between… …
