The openness, visibility and participation of LGBT people in the American labor movement is closely linked to that of the
American Gay Rights Movement. But gay activism flourished in a limited way in some sectors of the "house of labor." The
National Union of Marine Cooks and Stewards (NUMCS), which represented workers on luxury liners, included among its leaders the openly gay
Stephen R. Blair. NUMCS was derided as "red, black and queer" for its leftist politics, racial integration and the large number of gay members. A sign in the union hall proclaimed, "Race-baiting, Red-baiting, and Queer-Baiting is Anti-Union." Blair's life-partner, Frank McCormick, was a vice president of the California
Congress of Industrial Organizations and an important leader in the
1934 West Coast longshore strike.
Harry Hay was an organizer for the
Retail, Wholesale and Department Store Union in New York City. whose initial five members were all union activists. later became the first executive secretary of the
A. Philip Randolph Institute. Another openly gay man,
Tom Kahn wrote speeches for and served as assistant to
AFL-CIO presidents
George Meany and
Lane Kirkland, as well as head of the AFL-CIO's International Affairs Department from 1986 until his death in 1992. Openly gay
Bill Olwell became an international vice president of the
Retail Clerks International Union (RCIU) in 1972, and was later elected to a similar position with the
United Food and Commercial Workers (UFCW) in 1986 after the RCIU merged with the
Amalgamated Meat Cutters to form the UFCW. The first public endorsement of LGBT rights by an American labor union, however, did not occur until 1970, after the
Stonewall Rebellion. A second step forward for LGBT labor activists came with the
Coors strike and boycott. As part of its anti-union efforts, the company administered
lie-detector tests to prospective employees asking about their union views. Among the questions also asked was whether the job applicant was a homosexual. In 1974, the
Teamsters were attempting to organize workers at Coors. Two straight Teamster organizers approached
San Francisco gay community leaders
Howard Wallace, a teamster union activist, and
Harvey Milk, then an emerging political activist, about supporting the boycott. Wallace and Milk agreed, if the Teamsters would agree to promote the hiring of openly gay truck drivers. The Teamsters consented. The Coors boycott took off in San Francisco, and spread nationally. In California, the
market share of Coors dropped from 40 percent to 14 percent. Facing this boycott, Coors stopped asking its applicants about their sexuality. In 1979, the quadrennial convention of the AFL-CIO unanimously adopted a resolution calling for the enactment of federal legislation banning discrimination based on sexual orientation. Throughout the 1970s and 1980s, a number of LGBT union members had formed caucuses within their respective unions. Organizations with large numbers of members which became politically active, even electorally important, included those within the
Service Employees International Union,
American Federation of State, County and Municipal Employees, the
Communications Workers of America and UFCW. ==Origins==