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1947 Taft-Hartley Substantive Provisions
The Taft-Hartley Act made major changes to the Wagner Act. Although Section 7 was retained intact
in the revised law, new language was added to provide that employees had the right to refrain from
participating in union or mutual aid activities except that they could be required to become members in a
union as a condition of employment.
Taft-Hartley defined six additional unfair labor practices, reflecting Congress' perception that some union
conduct also needed correction. The Act was amended to protect employees' rights from these unfair
practices by unions.
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 | 1947 Taft-Hartley Substantive Provisions |
The amendments protected
employees' Section 7 rights from
restraint or coercion by unions, and
said that unions could not cause an
employer to discriminate against an
employee for exercising Section 7
rights. They declared the closed shop
illegal, but provided that employers
could sign a union shop agreement
under which employees could be
required to join the union on or after
the 30th day of employment.
The amendments also imposed
on unions the same obligation to
bargain in good faith that the Wagner
Act placed on employers. They
prohibited secondary boycotts,
making it unlawful for a union that has
a primary dispute with one employer
to pressure a neutral employer to stop
doing business with the first employer.
Unions were prohibited from charging
excessive dues or initiation fees, and
from "featherbedding," or causing
an employer to pay for work not
performed. The new law contained a
"free speech clause," providing that
the expression of views, arguments,
or opinions shall not be evidence of an
unfair labor practice absent the threat
of reprisal or promise of benefit.
Several significant changes were made for representation elections. Supervisors were excluded from
bargaining units, and the Board had to give special treatment to professional employees, craftsmen and
plant guards in determining bargaining units.
Congress also added four new types of elections. The first permitted employers faced with a union's
demand for recognition to seek a Board-conducted election. The other three enabled employees to
obtain elections to determine whether to oust incumbent unions, whether to grant to unions authority to
enter into a union shop agreement, or whether to withdraw union shop authorization previously granted.
(The provisions authorizing the union shop elections were repealed in 1951).
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