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Abstract

This paper recounts my efforts to refine the Illinois AFL-CIO’s campaign to ban captive audience meetings through developing strategic communications materials and conducting legislative research. Captive audience meetings are mandatory workplace gatherings where employers present non-work-related political or religious content. The Illinois AFL-CIO – the umbrella organization representing Illinois unions – seeks to ban these meetings because they are a primary barrier to unionization. The key challenges to the AFL-CIO’s campaign are public ambivalence towards unions as well as legal and political barriers to passing and enforcing anti-captive audience legislation. Informed by historical scholarship, political science research and legal literature, I developed communications strategies and legislative recommendations for navigating these obstacles. In the realm of strategic communications, I concluded that communications materials should focus on the socioeconomic vulnerabilities of workers and personalize the benefits of pro-labor legislation – strategies I exemplified in an op-ed for the campaign (Appendix 1). In a memo for the organization (Appendix 2), I recommended that the Illinois AFL-CIO enhance its social media strategies to disseminate such messaging more widely. My final deliverable, a white paper (Appendix 3), detailed how the organization could navigate political and legislative barriers to effective anti-captive audience legislation by calling for robust enforcement mechanisms, ensuring legislative clarity, and raising awareness among workers about their rights.

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