Vance Muse

Vance Muse (18901950) was an American businessman and conservative lobbyist from Texas who invented the Right-to-work movement against the unionization of American workers, and helped pass the first anti-union laws in Texas. Muse was editor of The Christian American and worked for the Southern Committee to Uphold the Constitution (SCUC), which used both anti-Semitic and anti-black rhetoric in their lobby work against the reelection of Franklin D. Roosevelt. The Christian American Association worked on the far right-wing in Texas labor politics.[1] He also used segregationist views as an argument against unions, stating that "From now on, white women and white men will be forced into organizations with black African apes whom they will have to call 'brother' or lose their jobs."[2][3][4][5][6][7][8][9][10]

He was born at Moran, Texas. Beginning in 1917, he worked at the Fort Worth Chamber of Commerce and participated in a wide range of conservative political organizations. He became an associate of business magnate John Henry Kirby, and supported his fight against the Adamson Act which gave an eight-hour workday to railroad workers.[11] He was strongly opposed to the New Freedom business reform legislation of Woodrow Wilson, as well as the New Deal policies of Franklin D. Roosevelt. During and after World War II, Muse was instrumental in passing a number of anti-union laws in the American South, and wished to propose a Right-to-work amendment to the United States Constitution.[12][13]

References

  1. Dixon, Marc (2007). Limiting labor: Business political mobilization and union setback in the states. Journal of Policy History, 19(3), p. 321
  2. Colby, Gerard (1984). ""Decade of Despair". Du Pont Dynasty: Behind the Nylon Curtain. Secaucus: Lyle Stewart. pp. 347–357.
  3. Southern Studies - The Racist Roots of Right to Work Laws
  4. Mark Ames. Pando.com "As “Right To Work” becomes law in Wisconsin, a reminder of its inventor’s racist past"
  5. Muse, Vance (1986). "Making Peace with Grandfather". Texas Monthly. 14 (2): 142.
  6. Green, E. C. (1999). From antisuffragism to anti-communism: The conservative career of Ida M. Darden. Journal of Southern History, 287-316.
  7. Brewer, T. B. (1970). State anti‐labor legislation: Texas—A case study. Labor History, 11(1), 58-76.
  8. Morgan, G. T. (1971). The Gospel of Wealth Goes South: John Henry Kirby and Labor's Struggle for Self-Determination, 1901-1916. The Southwestern Historical Quarterly, 186-197.
  9. Motl, K. C. (2006). Under the Influence: The Texas Business Men's Association and the Campaign against Reform, 1906-1915. The Southwestern Historical Quarterly, 494-529.
  10. Obadele-Starks, E. (2001). Black unionism in the industrial South (No. 11). Texas A&M University Press.
  11. Phillips, M., Tullock, S., Volanto, K. J., Cunningham, S., Baker, N., Green, G., & Lind, M. (2014). The Texas Right: The Radical Roots of Lone Star Conservatism (No. 39). D. O. D. Cullen, & K. G. Wilkison (Eds.). Texas A&M University Press.
  12. Green, George N. (June 15, 2010). "Handbook of Texas Online". Texas State Historical Association. Retrieved March 17, 2015. |chapter= ignored (help)
  13. Bernstein, V. H. (1943). The Antilabor Front. The Antioch Review, 328-340.
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