Blog
- Honoring Our Corrections Officers
- Video: Memphis Comes to WashingtonThe 1,300 sanitation workers who participated in the historic 1968 strike in Memphis, Tennessee — members of AFSCME Local 1733 — were enshrined into the U.S. Department of Labor’s “Labor Hall of Fame” on April 29, 2011.
- Pres. Obama Meets with Memphis Sanitation Workers
- Fight Songs: Pro-Labor Anthems from Tom Morello
- Workers Memorial Day
- Telling the Whole Story About Public Employee Pension Funds
- The True Meaning of Tax Cuts
- Straight Talk on Retirement in San Jose
- Ohio Businesses Reject Anti-Worker Attacks, Stand with Public Service Workers
- Gov. Rick Scott, Your Report Card is Shameful!
- Gov. Walker Admits New Union Rules Don’t Help Budget
- Michigan Rally Defends Middle Class, Opposes Budget Cuts
- AFSCME Members “Ready to Do Battle”
- Happy National Library Workers Day
- In Minnesota, Reality Trumps Ideology
- 11,000 Ohioans Kick Off Campaign to Repeal Anti-Worker Legislation
- Rallies for Workers’ Rights and Public Services Still Going Strong
- Is There a Doctor in the House (of Labor)? Yes, More than Ever!
- Shutdown?
- Florida Legislature Pulls Plug on Privatization of Northeast Florida State Hospital
- 1 Kasich Budget = 51,000 Lost Ohio Jobs
- MSNBC Profiles Public Service Workers Under Attack
- 40 Years Later, Our Fight Goes On
- Memphis Sanitation Workers Remember
- Today We Are One
- Poll: Americans Back Unions Over Govs
- New Haven, Conn.: Thousands Rally in Solidarity with Workers under Siege
- AFSCME Members in Minnesota: We’re Fighting for the Middle Class
