A timid and sorry response to Hamas butchery
The United Auto Workers are winning the battle, but have they already lost the war?
A former public school teacher documents the profound betrayal of America’s students
In America today, we have informal labor cartels for the college-educated elite, while private sector unions for the working class are all but annihilated
After a year of mounting political defeats, the Professional Staff Congress hoped a resolution accusing the Jewish state of ‘murder’ would provide a useful distraction. Now at least 100 members are resigning.
Stuart Appelbaum makes no apologies for leading his union to defeat at an Amazon facility in Alabama
A seemingly socially conscious corporate America is not a new phenomenon. It’s a revival of an old one.
A planned memorial for victims of the Triangle Shirtwaist Factory fire just cleared a major hurdle in New York City government—now who’s going to pay for it?
Indignant solidarity for my fellow golf-club workers
Third in a series on the American left: a tale of buried treasure
On election day, voters will weigh in on minimum-wage hikes. It’s a fight that reaches back to the Talmud.
The Material World, Dan Fishback’s new musical, uses the Jewish left to ask: Are consumers the new workers?
Some readings on its legacy
Kosher meat-packer acquitted