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Shadow of the Racketeer - Scandal in Organized Labor (Paperback)
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Shadow of the Racketeer - Scandal in Organized Labor (Paperback)
Series: Working Class in American History
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Shadow of the Racketeer: Scandal in Organized Labor tells the story
of organized crime's move into labor racketeering in the 1930s,
focusing on a union corruption scandal involving payments from the
largest Hollywood movie studios to the Chicago mob to ensure a
pliant labor supply for their industry. The book details the work
of crusading journalist Westbrook Pegler, whose scorching
investigative work dramatically exposed the mob connections of top
labor leaders George Scalise and William Bioff and garnered Pegler
a Pulitzer Prize for reporting. From a behind-the-scenes
perspective, David Witwer describes how Pegler and his publisher,
the politically powerful Roy W. Howard, shaped the news coverage of
this scandal in ways that obscured the corrupt ties between
employers and the mob while emphasizing the perceived menace of
union leaders empowered by New Deal legislation that had
legitimized organized labor. Pegler, Howard, and the rest of the
mainstream press pointedly ignored evidence of the active role that
business leaders took in the corruption, which badly tarnished the
newly reborn labor movement. Because he was more concerned with
pursuing political gains for the conservative movement, Pegler's
investigative journalism did little to reform union governance or
organized crime's influence on labor unions. The union corruption
scandal only undercut the labor movement. Pegler's continuing
campaign against labor corruption framed the issue in ways that set
the stage for postwar political defeats, culminating with the 1947
Taft-Hartley Act, which greatly limited the power of labor unions
in the United States. Demonstrating clearly and convincingly how
journalism is wielded as a political weapon, Witwer studies a broad
range of forces at play in the labor union scandal and its impact,
including the influence of the press, organized crime, political
corruption, and businessmen following their own economic
imperatives.
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