See also: Big Labor

English edit

Alternative forms edit

Noun edit

big labor (uncountable)

  1. (sometimes capitalized) Large trade unions or labor unions collectively, understood as having significant economic, political, or societal influence.
    • 1955 December 19, “Editorial: Is “Big Labor” Good or Bad?”, in Life, retrieved 17 December 2011, page 28:
      Some fear that Big Labor will one day form its own party and attempt to capture government.
    • 1957 June 24, “National Affairs: Defeat for Labor”, in Time:
      Among U.S. city governments, few have been more strongly controlled by big labor than Minneapolis (pop. 560700)
    • 2011 March 6, Albert R. Hunt, “In the U.S., Big Labor Just Isn't That Big”, in New York Times, retrieved 17 December 2011:
      The political battles raging in states across America are cast as about whether big labor retains its considerable clout. . . . The reality is that the U.S. labor movement has steadily lost influence, politically, socially and economically.

See also edit

References edit

  • big labor”, in OneLook Dictionary Search.