Labor movement
Labor movement or workers' movement refers to the activities organized by one or some of the labor groups for the better treatment of employers and their own groups (eg, the enactment of labor laws). These organizations are often referred to as industry associations. Many intellectuals and political groups are also involved in labor movements. The political parties that originated in the labor movement were Labor. The beneficiaries of the workers' movement are not the whole proletariat, but the collective of a worker, whose political significance lies in striving for higher income or the protection of the interests of the law, largely the struggle of the interests, and not the bourgeois domination pattern A fundamental threat or damage. In the United Kingdom and Australia, the term labor movement can refer to both political factions and industrial factions; in the United Kingdom, the former refers to the Labor Party, which refers to the Trades Union Congress, the establishment of the Labor Party due to the United Kingdom Workers' General Assembly in 1899, but Tony Blair was elected Laborian leader in 1994, the cooperation between the two has been substantially weakened. ...