FDR's administration was beneficial for organized labor. FDR needed the support of labor, and labor needed the support of the national government. Francis Perkins, the first women cabinet member, was appointed as Secretary of Labor and she successfully promoted many elements that became part of the New Deal and helpful to labor. She and FDR urged the passage of the National Labor Relations (Wagner) Act which increased the rights of unions and created the National Labor Relations Board. The Taft-Hartley Labor Act was amended to enlarge the powers of the NLRB and allowed the government to intervene in strikes affecting the nation's safety or health. The NRA set minimum wages and maximum hours. It did away with child labor, something organized labor favored, and established the right of workers to organize. This allowed for collective bargaining. Secretary Perkins had the DOL draft a bill setting wage and hour standards that became effective even after the NRA was declared unconstitutional by the Supreme Court. In 1938 the Fair Labor Standards Act was passed which set minimum wages and a maximum work week of 40 hours.
Organized labor grew, the CIO split from the AFL and many American workers joined unions and membership continued to increase during the Great Depression.
It made the economy bad
It weakened public support for new legislation.
1st new deal
The New Deal program, Works Progress Administration, better known as the WPA, affected the lives of American workers. Monthly salary averaged $41.57, and put many out-of-work Americans back on the job.
new deal
Employers discouraged union membership, preferring to deal with individual workers.
Yes.
The union recieved trading ports after their victory at New Orleans.
The union recieved trading ports after their victory at New Orleans.
It made the economy bad
how did franklin d Roosevelt new deal coalition affect African voting patterns
dese nuts
The Progressive Party
The Middle class was increasingly angered by the focus on lower class social improvement. The New Deal Worked from the bottom-up. Not until the 2nd new deal did the middle class feel the effects of social security and union-corporation agreement movements proposed by the new deal.
it weakend the elction for a new legislation
It weakened public support for new legislation.
It weakened public support for new legislation.