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‘It feels like a betrayal’: anger as Apple to close US’s first unionized store
(www.theguardian.com)
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We're are surprisingly insulated to international politics like this. I didn't know that was a thing. How does that loosely work and who put that together, the government?
In addition to the other great answers, Swedes have a very, very long history of unions. Dating back as far as at least the 1500's where Dacke, a peasant, gathered other peasants and lead an uprising against the king.
We learned quickly that together we are strong. And that mentality never subsided.
Together, even kings had to meet our demands and negotiate. Without us, the king has no army. Without an army. The king does not have a kingdom.
Workers everywhere knew they had to stick together, no matter what type of work they did. Unions in Sweden are not just organisations, they are our history and culture.
Ok this will be very abbreviated.
The first thing you need to know about the Swedish labor market is that it is almost completely unregulated by the government.
Sweden has no regulated minimum wage, none, instead this is negotiated periodically by the unions and employer organizations, both of which has legal weapons to use.
Unions can strike, we even allow sympathy strikes, employers can use lockouts and other methods.
Negotiations concerning the larger unions are national news, and large strikes does happen.
Your personal membership in a union is no big deal, I am a member of the largest white-collar workers union, and I could be called out to strike, it has never happened to me.
In larger worksites there are representatives for the bigger unions among the workforce.
I am sure that I missed a lot, and I am happy to be corrected.
As to why we’re insulated from that, my parents say that’s socialism and is bad.
Who put what together? The unions?
Yes, to have an industry wide union seems hard to put together.
I think you're missing the context here that unions didn't just pop up over night.
They started as many smaller unions, and with time, as communication capabilities advanced, workers could form even bigger unions.
We've got plenty of unions older than your entire country.
I'm sure it was. Unions do get some help from the government, at least here in Norway we do not pay taxes on union dues – and the leftist parties do work very closely together with the unions – but that's today, it's certainly not always been like that - and at the end of the day, the unions are independent, as they should be.
I dunno, maybe it was easier in more honest times back in the 1800's when capitalists were more transparently evil. Also, I do think it helps that we don't have a nationally mandated minimum wage. Call me cynical.