1. The ‘Year of the Strike’
More than half a million American workers
walked off the job this year. In October, companies lost more workdays to
strikes than in any month during the past 40 years.
Big 3 auto workers, Hollywood writers
and actors, Las Vegas and Los Angeles hotel staff, and Kaiser Permanente health
care employees were among those who used strikes to score big bargaining table
wins. For UPS drivers, the mere threat of a Teamsters strike
was enough to secure historic wage hikes and safety
protections.
After renewing contracts with
Ford, GM, Stellantis, and UPS, the UAW and the Teamsters doubled down on
efforts to organize the unorganized. The Teamsters picketed outside 25 Amazon warehouses, demanding a fair contract for
unionized drivers at a California-based delivery service for the notoriously
anti-union retailer. The UAW set their sights on non-unionized car companies,
causing so much indigestion among Nissan, Toyota, Honda, and Hyundai
executives that they immediately hiked wages for their U.S.
employees.
2. Black worker organizing in the south
To move the needle on the country’s
dismally low 6 percent unionization rate, the
labor movement will need to make inroads in tough territory, particularly in
historically anti-union southern states that have been magnets for
investment.
Two union victories in 2023 are the
latest proof that this goal is not impossible. The United Steelworkers won an
election at a Blue Bird bus factory in Georgia with
nearly 1,500 predominantly Black workers. In three Alabama cities, AT&T Mobility workers at In Home
Expert hubs joined the Communications Workers of America.
3. A crack in the anti-union tech sector
The past year also saw union progress
in another historically union-averse territory: the tech sector. Earlier this
month, Microsoft forged an agreement with the AFL-CIO
to remain neutral in organizing drives among their U.S.-based workers.
This will make it easier for about 100,000 Microsoft employees to
unionize, with potential ripple effects across the industry.
4. New trifecta states
In Michigan and Minnesota, pro-worker
state legislators hit the ground running after Democrats won state trifectas in
2022.
Minnesota passed a blizzard of pro-labor reforms, including paid
sick leave for most workers, minimum pay and benefits for nursing home staff,
and wage theft protections for construction workers. Teachers will be able to
negotiate over class sizes and nurses will have a greater say in staffing
levels. The new laws also ban non-compete agreements and “captive audience”
meetings designed to undercut union support.
This year Michigan became the first state in six
decades to roll back anti-union “right-to-work” laws. They also restored a
“prevailing wage” law requiring construction contractors to pay union wages and
benefits on state-funded projects.
5. Cities lead the way on low-wage worker protections
The federal minimum wage for tipped
workers has been stuck at $2.13 since 1991. In that vacuum, states and cities
are taking action. This year, restaurant servers and other advocates in the
nation’s capital successfully beat back last-ditch industry attempts to
undercut a victorious 2022 ballot initiative to phase out the local subminimum
tipped wage. After a multi-year, hard-fought campaign, DC’s tipped workers got
their first raise this past summer, putting them on track to earn the full
local minimum wage by 2027. The Chicago City Council also passed a five-year
tipped wage phaseout plan, set to begin in 2024.
App-based delivery drivers in New York
City had to fight back in 2023 against Uber, DoorDash,
and other corporations’ efforts to block introduction of the nation’s first
minimum wage for their occupation. Gig companies finally lost their legal
challenges to the pay rule in late November. Delivery driver pay rose to $17.96
an hour on December 4 and will increase to $19.96 when the legislation takes
full effect in 2025.
6. College campuses as labor hotbeds
Organizing among graduate and medical
students continued to explode in 2023, with the highest number of union elections among
these groups than in any year since the 1990s. In the first four months of 2023
alone, over 14,000 graduate students on five
campuses voted to join the United Electrical union — all by margins of over 80
percent. Campuses across the country coordinated organizing efforts through a
series of teach-ins and other events under the banner of Labor
Spring, an initiative that will continue in 2024.
7. Stock buyback blowback
Many of the labor battles of 2023
skewered corporate executives for underpaying workers while blowing money on
stock buybacks, a financial maneuver that artificially inflates CEO stock-based
pay. Two precedent-setting federal policies to rein in buybacks also took
effect in 2023. For the first time, corporations faced a one percent excise tax on buybacks. The Biden
administration also began giving companies a leg up in the competition for new
semiconductor subsidies if they agree to forgo all stock buybacks for five years.
This important precedent should be expanded to all companies
receiving any form of public funds.
8. Collective bargaining requirements on federally funded construction
projects
With megabillions in new public
investment flowing into infrastructure projects, it’s critical that the
administration ensure these taxpayer dollars support good jobs. This week,
Biden officials took an important step forward by finalizing regulations requiring the use of
“project labor agreements” between employers and workers for large federal
construction projects. The terms of these pre-hire collective bargaining
agreements must cover all parties — contractors, subcontractors, and unions. This
important rule should be expanded beyond construction to
contractors that provide goods and other services.
9. Trashing “junk” fees
Working class Americans fork out tens
of billions of dollars every year on deceptive, hidden charges that raise the
cost of banking and internet services, concerts and movies, rental cars and
apartments, and more. In October, President Joe Biden announced a plan to put these “junk fees” where they belong —
in the trash.
Under the plan, the Federal Trade
Commission aims to force companies to disclose the total price of goods and
services up front and slap violators with big fines. This will mean no hidden
fees — and more money in working families’ pockets.
10. NLRB rulings on Amazon and Starbucks
Anyone wondering whether our labor
laws need fixing need look no further than the fact that Starbucks and Amazon have been able to get
away with refusing to negotiate with workers who voted to unionize for well
more than a year. (Two years for the path-breaking Buffalo, New
York Starbucks workers). On the positive side, Biden appointees at the National
Labor Relations Board seem to be making the most of their current authority and
capacity.
In August, the labor board
issued a ruling that will make union-busting
harder in cases where a majority of workers have signed union cards but the
employer still demands an election. Under the ruling, bosses who engage in
unfair labor practices in these situations will now be forced to recognize and
bargain with the union without an election.
In the meantime, the NLRB is
continuing to try to hold Starbucks and Amazon accountable for rampant labor
rights violations. The board has 240 open or settled charges against Amazon in
26 states and they’ve issued more than 100 complaints against Starbucks, covering
hundreds of accusations of threats or retaliation against union supporters and
failure to bargain in good faith. Most recently, the NLRB ordered the reopening
of 23 Starbucks cafes, alleging the company had closed them to suppress union
activity, in violation of federal law.
Reflecting on 2023, Starbucks barista and union organizer Shep Searl marveled
at how diverse workers, “from Teamsters to actors,” demonstrated that there are
many ways to win through collective action.
“Every day, we’ve been absorbing that
information and utilizing it in our mobilization and escalation plan,” Searl
told Inequality.org. “We aren’t going anywhere and so much of that is inspired
by the other campaigns. If we stand together, there’s no mountain we cannot
climb.”
Sarah Anderson directs the Global Economy Project and co-edits
Inequality.org at the Institute for Policy Studies.
Source URL: https://portside.org/2023-12-25/10-victories-working-class-2023
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