Labor Union Support Remains Above 60% for Third Year - Word&Way

Labor Union Support Remains Above 60% for Third Year

construction worker
construction worker

Image by skeeze from Pixabay

Support of labor unions has ebbed and flowed in the U.S. since President Grover Cleveland signed legislation establishing Labor Day as a federal holiday in 1894.

Approval of unions among U.S. adults ticked upward again this year, according to a Gallup report published Aug. 28, rising two points to 64%.

This is the highest support level since 2003 (65%) and the third year in a row that approval was above 60%.

Since Gallup began polling about labor unions in 1936, approval has ranged from a high of 75% in 1952 to a low of 48% in 2009.

The report noted correlations between higher union support during periods of low unemployment and lower support during economic downturns.

Democrats were most likely to express support for unions (82% did so this year), followed by independents (61%) and Republicans (45%).

All parties saw increased support from 2009: Independents’ affirmation increased 17 percentage points, while both Democrats and Republicans saw a 16-point increase.

Women (66%) were more likely than men (61%) to support unions, and non-white respondents (68%) were more likely than white respondents (61%) to do so.

Union approval decreased with age – moving from 67% support among 18- to 34-year-olds to 64% (35-54) to 61% (55 and older) – and increased with education – rising from 58% approval among respondents with a high school degree or less than 66% among those with some college and 68% among college graduates.

The full report is available here.

This article originally appeared on EthicsDaily.com.