Wurf, Jerry 1919-1981

LABOR LEADER., PRESIDENT OF THE AMERICAN
FEDERATION OF STATE, COUNTY, AND MUNICIPAL
EMPLOYEES (AFSCME)

Unionization of Public Employees.

The spreading of public-sector unionism accounted for much of the labor movement's vitality in the 1960s. Public-employee union membership rose from less than 400,000 in 1955 to over 4 million by the early 1970s. This rapid in-crease can be explained in several ways. As the government assumed a larger social and economic role in post-World War II America, the number of public workers skyrocketed—by the mid 1960s one out of every eight Americans was employed by local, state, or federal government. This growth lured union leaders to mount major organizing efforts. Such unionization campaigns benefited from the steady inflation over the period that encouraged workers to worry about their salaries, but they were also aided by the federal government. In 1962 President John Kennedy...

[The entire page is 832 words long]

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