Five Books on the Democrats and Labor

We asked scholar Eric Blanc to recommend reading on the party’s contentious relationship to the trade union movement.



The Making of the National Labor Relations Board: A Study in Economics, Politics, and the Law, 1933–1937

James A. Gross

Chronicling the best wing of the Democrats at their best moment, this fascinating study demonstrates how bottom-up workplace organizing and relatively autonomous state policy were intertwined at a turning point in US history.

Crucible of Freedom: Workers’ Democracy in the Industrial Heartland, 1914–1960

Eric Leif Davin

Davin pushes back against portrayals of insurgent workers as simply the victims of Democratic co-optation. Instead he vividly illustrates how blue-collar Pennsylvania unions transformed their local Democratic parties into instruments for democracy against entrenched economic and political authoritarianism.

The Rise and Fall of the New Deal Order, 1930–1980

Steve Fraser and Gary Gerstle

This classic edited volume is chock-full of insights into how the Democrat Party’s limitations and contradictions in the decades following World War II alienated key constituencies and paved the way for the implosion of the New Deal order.

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