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9 Indus. & Lab. Rel. F. 97 (1973)
Working on the Railroad/IV: Birth of the Railway Labor Act

handle is hein.journals/indlref9 and id is 279 raw text is: 97

WORKING ON THE RAILROAD/ IV. Birth of the Railway Labor Act
The Railway Brotherhoods and the Railway Labor Act:
A Study in Progressive Political Action in the 1920's
by Gary Young
Successful government operation of the railroads
during World War I lent impetus to a movement for
government ownership after the war. The Plumb Plan,
embraced by the railway brotherhoods, was a hot issue
for several years, but it drew severe criticism as a
socialistic measure in the years of the Red Scare.
When the Transportation Act of 1920 was passed,
enshrining private ownership and setting up a Railroad
Labor Board to settle disputes, the unions dropped the
Plumb Plan and began to plan political action to re-
place the Act, which they considered discriminatory
and contrary to the interests of railroad labor.
The author develops the theme of progressive pol-
itical action by the railway brotherhoods from the
congressional campaign of 1922 through to the enact-
ment of the 1926 RailwayLabor Act, which, in amended
form, is still the basic law for railway labor relations
today.
Of particular interest is the discussion of railway
labor's part in the LaFollette campaign of 1924. Most
historians have cited the public ownership plank in the
LaFollette platform as the prime motivation for railway
labor support for LaFollette. Mr. Young demonstrates
that the unions had long since dropped the government
ownership issue when they embraced LaFollette; rather,
they were motivated by their opposition to the Trans-
portation Act and their hope that the election of pro-
gressives would result in the Act's repeal or modifi-
cation.
Gary Young is a 1973 graduate of the New York
State School of Industrial and Labor Relations at
Cornell University.

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