While the labour movement won some important victories near the
turn of the century, the struggle was an uphill one. Employers
hated granting concessions that would cut into their profits.
Furthermore, many of them were convinced that they were taking
more risks and working longer hours than their employees, and
they resented the ever-increasing demands of the workers and
their unions. Unfortunately for the craft unions, these business
leaders often found sympathetic allies within the federal and
provincial governments.
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"Undoubtedly, labor
is entitled to much consideration, but surely capital should
be entitled to much consideration also .... [L]aws are constantly
being enacted exclusively for the so-called protection of the laboring
classes--laws that do not always protect, but which, frequently, operate to
the detrimentof employers of labor."
Canadian
Manufacturer and Industrial World, June 3,1898.
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Listen to one member of the House of Commons supporting
the employers.
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