Information AboutAfl-cio |
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|name= AFL-CIO |country= United States, Canada |affiliation= ICFTU |members= 9,000,000+ (2006) {Link without Title} |full_name= American Federation Of Labor and Congress Of Industrial Organizations |image= |founded= 1886 |current= 1955 |office= Washington, DC |people= John J. Sweeney , president |website= aflcio.org/ |footnotes= 1 |native_name= |head= |dissolved_date= |dissolved_state= Merged into |merged_into= }} American Federation Of Labor and Congress Of Industrial Organizations , commonly '''AFL-CIO''', is America's largest federation of Union s, made up of 53 national and international (including Canadian ) unions, together representing over 9 million workers. The AFL-CIO was formed in 1955 when the AFL and the CIO merged after a long estrangement. From 1955 until 2005, the AFL-CIO's member unions represented virtually all unionized workers in the United States. Since 2005, when several large unions split with the federation, the American Federation Of State, County And Municipal Employees (AFSCME), with over a million members, is the largest union in the AFL-CIO. International policy The AFL-CIO is affiliated to the Brussels-based International Confederation Of Free Trade Unions (www.icftu.org). The ICFTU is the most representative international labor grouping. The AFL-CIO also sponsors the American Center For International Labor Solidarity . Presidents
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History ''For the history of the AFL-CIO prior to and including the merger, see American Federation Of Labor and Congress Of Industrial Organizations and Labor Unions In The United States '' The AFL-CIO began an intense internal debate over the future of the labor movement in the United States in 2003, with the creation of the New Unity Partnership (NUP), a loose coalition of some of the AFL-CIO's largest unions. This debate intensified in 2004, after the defeat of labor-backed candidate John Kerry in the November 2004 U.S. Presidential Election . The NUP's program for reform of the federation included reduction of the central bureaucracy, more money spent on organizing new members rather than on electoral politics, and a restructuring of unions and locals, eliminating some smaller locals and focusing more along the lines of Industrial Unionism . In 2005, the NUP dissolved and the (SEIU), the International Brotherhood Of Teamsters ("The Teamsters"), and the United Food And Commercial Workers International Union (UFCW). The Laborers' International Union Of North America and the United Farm Workers remain members of both the AFL-CIO and Change to Win. In addition to the issues listed above, the dispute was seen as deeply personal. SEIU President Andy Stern , the most outspoken leader of the Change to Win coalition, was once considered the protege of former SEIU President and current AFL-CIO President John J. Sweeney . Some of the 53 Unions... Air Line Pilots Association - American Federation of Government Employees - American Federation of Musicians of the United States and Canada - American Federation of School Administrators - American Federation of Teachers - American Postal Workers Union - American Federation of Television and Radio Artists - Communications Workers of America - Farm Labor Organizing Committee - Federation of Professional Athletes - International Association of Fire Fighters - International Brotherhood of Electrical Workers - International Union of Bricklayers and Allied Craftworkers - International Union of Elevator Constructors - International Union of Police Associations - National Air Traffic Controllers Association - National Association of Letter Carriers - Sheet Metal Workers International Association - United American Nurses - United Mine Workers of America - United Transportation Union - Writers Guild of America, East Inc. See also
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