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AFL-CIO

What history says about the new split in the AFl-CIO

 

FIFTY YEARS AGO, unions seemed invincible, but they’ve been losing battles and members ever since. The reasons why their fortunes fell suggest that they’re sure to rise again.

What should a union offer its members? A century-old fight heats up again.

Not long ago, I opened the paper and discovered, without surprise, that the final figures were in on the 1996 election campaign and that it had been—at $2.2 billion—the most expensive in our history (so far).

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