National Review Online
Monday, September 01, 2025
Labor Day this year is a cause for raucous celebration:
For the first time, the share of U.S. workers who are union members has fallen
below 10 percent. Looking only at private-sector workers, the share who are
union members is 5.9 percent.
Those numbers are all the more remarkable because they
come after four years of the Biden administration doing everything it could to
boost organized labor. Biden called himself the “most pro-union president
leading the most pro-union administration,” and he was probably right, at least
since Franklin Roosevelt.
The Biden administration bailed out union pension funds
with tens of billions of taxpayer dollars. It mandated union labor for
infrastructure projects and baked union-favorable provisions into the CHIPS
Act. It backed the “buy American” rules, prevailing wage rules, and
protectionism that unions love. Biden’s NLRB appointees backed unions at every
opportunity. And Biden himself was the first president to walk a picket line,
joining UAW workers in Michigan in 2023.
Biden inherited a record-low union membership rate of 10.3 percent in 2021. It set a new record low in 2022 of
10.1 percent, then another in 2023 at 10 percent, and then another in 2024 at
9.9 percent. No other president has set a new record low every year he was in
office since Ronald Reagan — impressive!
No matter who is president, the union membership rate has
been declining for decades, and it has yet to see even a dead-cat bounce.
That’s because the American people, by and large, aren’t interested in having
union bosses skim their paychecks, give some of the money to politicians, keep
some for themselves, and purport to be acting in their best interest when they
know full well they aren’t.
The relatively few workers who do find union membership
advantageous tend to work for the government. Despite government workers only
making up about 15 percent of the U.S. workforce, they make up about half of
the population of union members. About one-third of all union members are in
the National Education Association or the American Federation of Teachers, the
two largest teachers’ unions.
The blue-collar hard-hat image of union members refuses
to die even though it stopped being true years ago. Eighty-four percent of
transportation and warehousing workers, 90 percent of construction workers, and
92 percent of manufacturing workers are not union members. Policies that
benefit unions in general mostly benefit public school teachers and bureaucrats
in practice.
Two of the largest growth industries for organized labor
are journalism and higher education. The latter, which is the result of an
Obama NLRB ruling that has spawned such groups as the UAW chapter at Columbia
University that played a major role in the anti-Israel protests that shut down
campus, may diminish soon. A student at Cornell is challenging the Obama ruling, and
Trump’s NLRB appointees may overturn it.
Blue states lag behind the overall trend. New York and
California have 17 percent of U.S. workers, but almost 30 percent of U.S. union
members. The states with the lowest rates include the Carolinas, which do not
allow collective bargaining in the public sector.
More states should look to abolish public-sector
collective bargaining, as Utah did this year. And more states should pick up
where Republicans left off in the early-to-mid 2010s by passing right-to-work
laws. The first order of business should be restoring Michigan’s law that
Democrats repealed. In 24 states, private-sector workers can still be coerced
to join or financially support a union.
Public-sector workers no longer can be coerced, according
to the Supreme Court’s Janus v. AFSCME decision in 2018. But some still
are because states have failed to update their laws to reflect that decision.
All states need to end automatic dues deduction and make clear to new hires
that union membership or agency fees are not required for government
employment.
As WFB wrote in National Review’s credenda from the first issue in 1955,
“The public has been taught to assume (almost instinctively) that conflicts
between labor and management are generally traceable to greed and intransigence
on the part of management.” The media try their best to keep up this
impression, with breathless coverage of every organizing drive and hype around
union bosses like Shawn Fain. Because of a series of conservative wins in the
past 70 years, fewer Americans see things that way.
“National Review will explore and oppose the inroads upon
the market economy caused by monopolies in general, and politically oriented
unionism in particular,” the credenda goes on to say. And that’s really the
rub: Unions are government-backed monopolies, and Americans don’t like
government-backed monopolies, no matter how often they are told they should,
and especially if those monopolies take some of their hard-earned money and
send it to politicians they don’t like.
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