0 workers considered as a group that can act together to improve their situation --
1 labor unions (= organizations of workers) considered as a group --
It is important to mention here that organized labor was not of a single mind about health policy in the late 1980s and early 1990s.
The strength of organized labor is expected to cut in exactly the opposite direction.
This peculiar sequence of events meant that one of the stakeholders in state-level control, organized labor, now had a clear interest in national action.
A fourth movement, organized labor, was an outright opponent.
Calling themselves socialists, and relying almost exclusively on organized labor for money, they introduced only modest pension reforms in 1935 and 1937.
Much of organized labor jumped on the "competitiveness" bandwagon.
Or did such highly organized labor more likely go hand-in-hand with leftist attempts and strategies to mobilize workers' support and facilitate social coalition across classes?
Yet organized labor treated them as a set of uncontestable facts.