The anti-union sentiment, especially during the strike-bound "winter of discontent" just before the 1979 election, was largely responsible for putting Mrs. Thatcher in office.
In turn, Marshall's leading families were in contest of financial, economical, and political survival against the North thereby making the city a hotbed of anti-Union sentiment.
Tartan was fashionable at the time as an expression of anti-Union and pro-Jacobite sentiment and many of the Company were known Jacobites.
Despite the anti-union sentiments, groups like the International Oil Workers Union attracted membership and held some influence in the industry and state government.
And also despite the fact that in US neighbor Canada, where the structure of the economy and pro or anti-union sentiment among workers is very similar, unionization stayed steady.
Until the 80's, a decade when anti-union sentiment increased among corporations and in Washington, replacing strikers was considered unacceptable by both workers and managers.
Michelle Rhee remains a highly controversial figure in the field of education due to her aggressive style of reform and what some believe to be anti-union sentiments.
The county had more slaves than any other in the state, making it a hotbed of anti-Union sentiment.
Union membership and activities fell sharply in the face of economic prosperity, a lack of leadership within the movement, and anti-union sentiments from both employers and the government.
The British experience of the past two decades suggests a positive correlation between the anti-union sentiments and activities of government and picket-line disorder.