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June 19, 2013

Tag: Movement

August 25, 2012

Trade Union – An Overview of the Movement

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Trade Union – An Overview of the Movement

A trade union comprises a group of workers, which speaks for the workers and submits proposals to the management of a company for improved working conditions. It is also considered a bargaining forum for employees, where disputes are settled through negotiations with employers. The subject of negotiation includes wage revisions, working conditions related to security and other benefits of workers such as promotions and so on.

The trade union movement originated during the industrial revolution in Europe, due to the predominance of one sided power of the employer, which was visible in the poor conditions of workers in industries due to meager payment and maltreatment. The movement has developed into larger following with different standards in different wings of trade and industry, but with the sole idea for the improvement of working class.

It is a process of collective bargaining, which has reached every sector of employment today, whereby employees’ work conditions are discussed with them in a regular manner by most of the companies that involve huge workforce by recognizing the union rights.

The membership of a trade union provides support with necessary legal guidance and all other allied benefits to a worker in the modern time. There is the provision of state laws, which give the right to join a trade-union membership by an employee for certain advantages.

We also see horrible consequences when employees insist to on going to strike as negotiations fail. Activities are backed by different political parties to gain the political objectives and they send their representatives through elections with the support of the unions. It is the larger voice that is regarded as a strong force, which is heard properly at the highest levels of management to bring solace to affected employees.

Now, different unions join hands and campaign nationwide on an issue, which may be of greater importance than merely the development of working conditions of employees.

There is a lot of history behind the formation of a Trade Union. Click here to know more about Trade Union

Mike Bordon is a renowned SEO professional and author of many articles and e-books. Presently he is working as the editor of spotwriters. He is currently providing writing service for many SEO firms.

 

August 20, 2012

UAW Tries to Copy the Occupy Movement

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UAW Tries to Copy the Occupy Movement

Hoping to regain a bit of modern day relevancy, the United Auto Workers union is trying to copy the playbook of the Occupy Movement, the nationwide protest movement that has been dirtying parks across from shore to shore for close to half a year.

UAW President Bob King said he hopes that its members will stage nationwide protests to pull America from the clutches of the “right-wing Republicans” and the unfairly successful “one-percenters” who he says have hijacked democracy.

King’s first target is General Electric who he says pays no taxes. King said, “It is morally wrong, it is absolutely wrong, that they make billions and billions and billions of dollars and pay not a single penny in taxes, enough is enough. We’re the 99 percent who want 100 percent fairness for everyone.”

King failed to share his thoughts on the fairness of Chrysler and General Motors, two companies employing many of his union’s members, not only paying no taxes a few years back, but actually receiving big piles of other people’s money in the form of bailouts.

GE responded to King’s accusations.

“We paid a billion dollars in federal, state and local taxes in 2010,” said GE spokesman Andrew Williams while presumably wishing King would scoot away on his Hoveround. “The fact is that GE is investing in America and creating jobs at home. During 2011, GE announced the creation of over 8,000 new U.S. jobs.”

Conservative observers have also voiced concern over the rhetoric emitting from Flint, Michigan. Paul Kersey, director of labor policy at the Mackinac Center for Public Policy, said, “The UAW is doubling-down on hard left-wing politics. They’re becoming more and more ideological. They’re concentrating less and less on bread-and-butter economic issues. It’s about politics. It’s not about the workplace anymore. The average autoworker is not an advocate of class warfare on this level. This is why Michigan needs right-to-work.”
 

Dax is a freelance writer and amateur racer whose love of motorcycles, sports cars, and all things fast fuels his writing.  You can see more of his work at Auto Loans Missouri and North Carolina Auto Loans.

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