Yahoo Web Search

Search results

  1. The U.S. Labor Party ( USLP) was an American political party formed in 1973 by the National Caucus of Labor Committees (NCLC). [1] It served as a vehicle for Lyndon LaRouche to run for President of the United States in 1976, but it also sponsored many candidates for local offices as well as congressional and Senate seats between 1972 and 1979 ...

    • 1979
    • 1973
  2. The Labor Party of the United States was a short-lived political party formed by several state-level labor parties upon the encouragement of Chicago Federation of Labor leader John Fitzpatrick. [1] It was formed in the immediate aftermath of World War I, due in large part to deterioration in the condition of the country's workers due to the ...

    • July 13, 1920
    • Chicago
    • August 18, 1919
    • Left-wing
  3. People also ask

  4. In 1886, a United Labor Party was organized in Chicago under the leadership of that city's Central Labor Union. It drew over 20,000 votes for its county ticket in the fall of 1886, and in the following spring elections garnered 28,000 votes for its candidate for Mayor. However, by 1888, it had merged with the Democratic Party in that city.

  5. Oct 29, 2009 · The labor movement in the United States emerged from the artisans of the colonial era and gained steam with the widespread formation of unions in the 1800s. ... first in 1890 over Socialist Labor ...

  6. Jun 12, 2020 · As Barry Eidlin makes clear in his excellent book Labor and the Class Idea in the United States and Canada, this divergence cannot be explained primarily by the many factors commonly used to explain the absence of a labor party in the United States. Canada’s higher level of union density, as well as the fact that it has a labor party, can ...

  7. May 18, 2018 · AMERICAN LABOR PARTY. AMERICAN LABOR PARTY (ALP), formed in July 1936 as the New York State branch of the Nonpartisan League. Circumstances specific to New York—a Tammany machine unsympathetic to President Franklin D. Roosevelt and the New Deal; a large pro-Socialist ethnic bloc; and a state law permitting dual nomination—dictated creation of a separate party rather than a Committee for ...

  8. Tackling this debate head-on, Robin Archer puts forward a new explanation for why there is no American labor party—an explanation that suggests that much of the conventional wisdom about “American exceptionalism” is untenable. Conventional explanations rely on comparison with Europe. Archer challenges these explanations by comparing the ...

  1. People also search for