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NATIONAL
LABOR RELATIONS ACT (NLRA)
In July of 1935 Senator Robert R. Wagner of
New York presented the National Labor
Relations Act to congress. The intent of the
Act was to establish a governing body to
oversee labor-management relations of firms
engaged in interstate commerce. After the
Act's passage, congress created the
National Labor Relations Board (NLRB) whose
duty was to prevent unfair practices by
employers and to encourage workers to form
labor unions. As a result, the NLRB began to
persuade companies to exclusively hire union
workers. This "closed-shop hiring" was
considered an unfair business practice in
itself and in 1947 the Labor Management
Relations Act, also known as the
Taft-Hartley Act for its two sponsors Robert
Taft of Ohio and Fred Hartley of New Jersey,
was passed to amend the NLRA. The amendment
emphasized workers rights to not join labor
unions if they so chose.
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