Amazon and Starbucks workers are on strike. Trump might have something 
		to do with it
						
		 
		
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		 [December 23, 2024]  By 
		HALELUYA HADERO 
						
		Amazon delivery drivers and Starbucks baristas are on strike in a 
		handful of U.S. cities as they seek to exert pressure on the two major 
		companies to recognize them as unionized employees or to meet demands 
		for an inaugural labor contract. 
		 
		The strikes that started Thursday and Friday followed other recent 
		standoffs between corporate America and organized labor. Large and 
		established labor unions secured meaningful employer concessions this 
		year following strikes by Boeing factory workers, dockworkers at East 
		and Gulf coast ports, video game performers, and hotel and casino 
		workers on the Las Vegas Strip. 
		 
		But workers at Starbucks, Amazon and some other prominent consumer 
		brands still are fighting for their first contracts. Amazon refuses to 
		acknowledge the organizing efforts of drivers and warehouse workers — 
		many of whom have voted to unionize — even though the powerful Teamsters 
		union says it represents them. Starbucks long resisted the unionization 
		of its stores, but had agreed to negotiate a contract by the end of the 
		year. 
		 
		Why are the strikes happening now? 
		Strikes — particularly ones that happen during the holidays, a time of 
		high economic activity — can help unions exercise leverage during 
		negotiations or flex their muscles by garnering support from workers and 
		sympathetic consumers. 
		 
		Both Amazon and Starbucks saw a wave of organizing efforts following the 
		COVID-19 pandemic. The pandemic focused attention on front-line workers 
		and the impact of economic inequality on the lives of wage-earning 
		Americans. 
						
		
		  
						
		Employees organized at bookstores, where unions are rare, and were 
		successful with campaigns at some stores run by Apple, Trader Joe’s and 
		the outdoor equipment company REI. 
		 
		But turning those wins into contracts can be a challenge. At Amazon and 
		Starbucks, which were not unionized before the pandemic, workers have 
		yet to secure an agreement with the e-commerce and coffee giants, which 
		both have their headquarters in Seattle. 
		 
		John Logan, director of labor and employment studies at San Francisco 
		State University, said he thinks the Amazon and Starbucks workers are 
		“desperate” to make progress before President-elect Donald Trump gets to 
		appoint a Republican majority to the National Labor Relations Board, 
		which is expected to be less friendly to unions during his 
		administration. 
		 
		“The unions want to make these disputes public and bring political 
		pressures on the companies," Logan said in a written statement. “If 
		these disputes drag on until next year, and if they are fought largely 
		through the labor board and the courts, the unions and workers will 
		almost certainly lose. This might be their last, best chance to pressure 
		the companies in public before Trump comes into office.” 
		 
		However, Trump has also given some signs that he might be friendlier to 
		labor during his second term compared to his first term. Last month, he 
		picked Oregon Rep. Lori Chavez-DeRemer to lead the Department of Labor 
		in his new administration, elevating a Republican congresswoman who has 
		strong support from unions, including the Teamsters. Teamsters President 
		Sean O'Brien also spoke at the Republican National Convention this past 
		summer. 
		 
		Teamster-led strikes at Amazon 
		The Teamsters say workers at Amazon are striking at seven delivery 
		stations in Southern California, San Francisco, New York City, Atlanta 
		and Skokie, Illinois, because the company ignored a Sunday deadline the 
		union had set for contract negotiations. At midnight on Saturday, the 
		Teamsters say workers will also strike at a prominent warehouse in New 
		York, which voted to join the fledgling Amazon Labor Union in 2022 and 
		have since elected to affiliate with the Teamsters. 
						
		
		  
						
		The prominent labor group says it's fighting for higher wages, better 
		benefits and safer working conditions for Amazon employees, many of whom 
		experience economic insecurity while working for a company worth $2.3 
		trillion. It has not said how many Amazon warehouse workers or drivers 
		are joining the striking. 
						
		The union has mainly focused on organizing delivery drivers, which the 
		company says are not its workers because they are directly employed by 
		contractors Amazon recruited to handle package deliveries. 
						
		That type of setup gives the Amazon more cover from unionization 
		attempts in an industry — transportation and trucking — that’s dominated 
		by the Teamsters. However, the union has argued before the National 
		Labor Relations Board that the drivers, who wear Amazon’s ubiquitous 
		gray-blue vests and drive similarly colored vans, should be classified 
		as company employees. 
		 
		
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            Amazon workers and members of the International Brotherhood of 
			Teamsters picket in front of the Amazon fulfilment center in the 
			Queens borough of in New York, on Friday, Dec. 20, 2024. (AP 
			Photo/Stefan Jeremiah) 
            
			
			  Meanwhile, the online retailer has 
			accused the union of pushing a “false narrative” about the thousands 
			of workers it claims to represent. Amazon has also touted its pay, 
			saying it provides warehouse and transportation employees a base 
			wage of $22 per hour plus benefits. It also recently boosted hourly 
			pay for the subcontracted delivery drivers. 
			 
			In September, the NLRB, which has taken a more pro-labor stance 
			under President Joe Biden, filed a complaint that found the drivers 
			to be joint employees of Amazon. The agency also accused Amazon of 
			unlawfully failing to bargain with the Teamsters on a contract for 
			drivers at a California delivery hub. 
			 
			The Teamsters union says it also represents Amazon warehouse 
			workers, including thousands of employees at the major New York City 
			fulfillment center who voted to be represented by the Amazon Labor 
			Union. 
			 
			Amazon objected to the 2022 warehouse election results, alleging the 
			Amazon Labor Union and the federal labor board had tainted the vote. 
			A regional NLRB director issued a complaint last year that accused 
			Amazon of violating the law by refusing to bargain with the union. 
			 
			Amazon, in turn, is challenging the constitutionality of the NLRB in 
			federal court along with Elon Musk's SpaceX. In June, the Supreme 
			Court made it harder for the agency to win court orders in labor 
			disputes, siding with Starbucks in a case brought by the company. 
			 
			Contract negotiations at Starbucks 
			Unlike Amazon, contract negotiation have been underway at Starbucks. 
			 
			But Starbucks Workers United, the union that has organized workers 
			at 535 company-owned U.S. stores since 2021, said the company has 
			failed to honor a commitment made in February to reach a labor 
			agreement this year. 
			 
			The union also wants Starbucks to resolve outstanding legal issues, 
			including hundreds of unfair labor practice charges that workers 
			have filed with the National Labor Relations Board. The agency also 
			has opened or settled hundreds of charges against Amazon. 
			
			
			  
			In launching the strikes that started Friday in Chicago, Los Angeles 
			and Seattle, Workers United said Starbucks proposed an economic 
			package with no new wage increases for unionized baristas now and a 
			1.5% increase in future years. 
			Union leaders said the strikes expanded on Saturday to include 
			stores in Denver, Pittsburgh and Columbus, Ohio. In a post Sunday on 
			X, the union said that picket lines had expanded to Brooklyn and 
			Long Island in New York, St. Louis and Pittsburgh. 
			 
			Without providing a specific number, labor leaders said dozens of 
			Starbucks stores are now affected by the strike. 
			 
			“We were ready to bring the foundational framework home this year, 
			but Starbucks wasn’t,” Lynne Fox, president of Workers United said 
			in a statement. “After all Starbucks has said about how they value 
			partners throughout the system, we refuse to accept zero immediate 
			investment in baristas’ wages and no resolution of the hundreds of 
			outstanding unfair labor practices.” 
			 
			Starbucks said Workers United prematurely ended a bargaining session 
			this week. The company also says it already offers pay and benefits 
			worth $30 per hour for baristas who work at least 20 hours per week. 
			 
			Starbucks workers walked off the job on two occasions last year. 
			Workers United has said the latest strikes could spread to hundreds 
			of stores across the country by Christmas Eve. 
			 
			Patricia Campos-Medina, who recently ran for the U.S. Senate as a 
			Democrat in New Jersey and leads Cornell University's Worker 
			Institute at the School of Industrial and Labor Relations, said she 
			expects there to be more union activity before Trump takes office. 
			 
			Trump's reactions will give the public a chance to see what his 
			“commitments are to the working class,” Campos-Medina said. 
			 
			___ 
			 
			Dee-Ann Durbin in Detroit contributed to this story. 
			
			
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