After the air traffic controllers union walked out on talks with the Federal Aviation Administration in 1981, President Ronald Reagan deemed the strike to be illegal and said he would fire any controller who failed to return to work within 48 hours.
More than 11,000 controllers called his bluff and, to the shock of many, Reagan fired every last one of them.
The New York Times characterized the incident as “the strike that busted unions,” saying it “undermined the bargaining power of American workers and their labor unions.”
You can be assured there were protests over Reagan’s actions against the strikers — although nothing on the scale of the hysteria currently seen over President Donald Trump’s executive order on immigration and refugees.
Looking back on it today, the objections proved to be fruitless, as a social media user noted on Tuesday, “They were still fired and the protesters are gone.”
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"..called his bluff.."
ReplyDeleteHe wasn't bluffing. That's what they found out.
If people keep messing with Mr Trump, they'll learn something from him, too.
Trump should do the same thing to the government union employees!
ReplyDeleteI remember it well and he replaced those strikers with military personel until more controllers could be trained.
ReplyDeleteI remember that. He don't play dat.
ReplyDelete