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“The Army is a Service, Not a Job”: Unionization, Employment, and the Meaning of Military Service in the Late-Twentieth Century United States

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  31 October 2011

Jennifer Mittelstadt
Affiliation:
Rutgers University

Abstract

This article tells the story of an often-forgotten attempt to unionize the United States armed forces in the 1970s. The American Federation of Government Employees (AFGE), an AFL-CIO-affiliated union representing federal employees, voted to allow military personnel to join its union in 1976. Military personnel proved far more open to the bid than expected. Nursing grievances from threatened congressional cuts to their institutional benefits, between one-third and one-half welcomed the union. Though a worried Congress, a powerful military leadership, and skeptical public opinion quashed unionization within the year, the brief episode nevertheless left an influential legacy. Coming just after the difficult transition from the draft to the volunteer force, the union bid forced military leaders, soldiers, and supporters in Congress to defend both military service and military benefits from encroachments of an “occupational” model symbolized by unionization. Their successful distinction between military service and employment elevated the former as uniquely honorable and arduous—and thus deserving of unwavering congressional support. Public unions, the embodiment of the occupational threat to military service, emerged bruised by the comparisons to vaunted military service and endured a decades-long decline in membership and congressional protection.

Type
Special Feature: Labor and the Military
Copyright
Copyright © International Labor and Working-Class History, Inc. 2011

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References

NOTES

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42. Robert Nolan, Fleet Reserve Association, National Executive Secretary, quoted in “Unionization of the Armed Forces,” 185. Surveys bore out the analysis. T. Roger Manley et al., “A Quick-look Analysis,” Military Unions Collection, GMMA, 13. McCollum and Robinson, “The Law and Current Status of Unions,” 429.

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44. Quoted in “Unionization of the Armed Forces,” 189. See this same sentiment in Lieutenant Colonel Maurice L. Lien, “Military Associations: A Positive Force for Defense,” The Retired Officer, December 1975, 22, Military Unions Collection, GMMA. Retired Officer, now called Military Officer, was the magazine of the Military Officer's Association of America.

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49. See, for example, the advertisement Thurmond made for candidate Gerald Ford in the 1976 presidential election in which he accused candidate Jimmy Carter of not being “for the South” but for “George Meany and the unions,” because he promised to sign a repeal of southern states’ right-to-work laws. http://www.livingroomcandidate.org/commercials/1976/strom-thurmond, accessed June 21, 2010.

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