The NLRB (National Labor Relations Board) might be history soon, now that a federal judge ruled it unconstitutional on three grounds.
AFT President Randi Weingarten put kids in front of computer screens for two years and now blames those screens for falling test scores.
Public-sector unions are deliberately hiding the ability of their members to opt out of membership, in defiance of the Supreme Court.
Florida's teachers unions have become political organizations, presuming to speak for many who never asked them to represent them.
A Christian leader calls on churches to remember the biblical roots of Labor Day and the contributions of all workers.
Administrative employees of the Kennedy Center want to form a union, but the grounds they cite appear specious.
Freelancers have reason to hope after a California Congressman introduces legislation to codify their status into law.
Senator Josh Hawley (R-Mo.) understands that union workers will keep voting Republican only if Republicans meet them where they live. So he is introducing pro-union legislation.
The ILA (International Longshoremen's Association) strike lost popular support, and their ultimate demands are unreasonable.
The rank-and-file of the United Steelworkers would actually benefit from the proposed Nippon Steel deal, and many of them know it.