Low-wage workers, top-down unions

    In the high-profile fight for low-wage workers, a gap has emerged between the institutional organizers and the workforce they are seeking to organize.
    Striking Subway worker addresses march in Seattle. (WNV/Joshua Stephens)
    A striking Subway worker addresses march in Seattle. (WNV/Joshua Stephens)

    August 29 was a typically cool, wet summer day in downtown Seattle. “We support you!” cried the crowd of 30 or so gathered outside Specialty’s Café, their voices reverberating off the glass facades of adjacent downtown buildings. To remain open, the restaurant had been forced to call in extra staff. Six of its workers had joined the national fast-food workers’ strike that day to demand $15 per hour and a union.

    The crowd in front of Specialty’s was distinctly of the type able to attend an anti-corporate demonstration in the middle of a workday — young and mostly white, trying to act as allies. Their chants were not those of workers with a grievance so much as those of outsiders seeking to connect with Speciality’s labor force inside.

    After much encouragement from the crowd, a young man named Jonathan Hargrove walked out of the café and met a euphoric reception. “I didn’t know there was a strike going on,” he said. “I’ve always known workers were trampled on, but I didn’t know there was a picket today.”

    As they spread across the United States, “Fight for 15” actions like this one have spurred a debate over what constitutes a living wage, casting a spotlight on working families in an economy where the odds are increasingly stacked against them. Beginning with fast-food restaurant strikes in New York City last November, the campaign has gone national in large part due to the backing of the Service Employees International Union. The effort has been a public-relations success for SEIU and for the labor movement generally, which otherwise appears to be in decline. However, a gap has emerged between the institutional organizers and the low-wage workforce they are seeking to organize.

    Speaking with Waging Nonviolence, Hargrove disclosed that he had been working at the restaurant for just two weeks. Though many who took part in the job actions across the country were industry veterans, in Seattle, Hargrove was not unique; numerous picketers had been working at the establishments they were protesting at for less than a month. A number of these striking workers were later spotted at SEIU offices at the day’s end. (When asked if their employees were taking fast-food jobs in order to agitate, SEIU officials in Seattle declined to comment.)

    Further highlighting the absence of bottom-up organizing in this campaign has been SEIU’s tight control over media surrounding the protests. During a day of strikes in New York City on April 4, an interview Waging Nonviolence conducted with a young Wendy’s employee in Brooklyn was cut short when an SEIU staffer intervened. Reporters, along with a striker who had just decided to join the protest that morning, were informed that only participants with authorization were allowed to speak to the press. Reporters who wanted to talk with a worker were told to attend another rally later that day, when designated spokespeople would be present. Activists who had come out to support the strike in New York reported similar instances of conversations with workers interrupted by union staffers who wanted to make sure the activists were not representatives of the media.

    From the get-go, SEIU organizers have been highly conscious of the campaign’s public image. They’ve retained Purpose to provide the branding that has been the public face of the campaign. The company’s CEO, Jeremy Heimans (who did not respond to requests for comment), has described Purpose’s model as one of “movement entrepreneurship.” Purpose was crafting the campaign’s messaging well before the first walkouts occurred last November. While the demand for $15 per hour and a union has resonated with a growing minority of fast-food employees, efforts by workers to become movement entrepreneurs themselves have hit stumbling blocks.

    At a national conference involving fast-food workers and campaigners in Detroit last month, blogger and labor activist Adam Weaver reported that participants arrived to discover that plans for the August 29 strike had already been devised by SEIU in advance. The conference, he reported, was little more than a “pep rally.” One worker told Weaver that participants began to speculate that “maybe this isn’t our movement” but SEIU’s.

    The Fight for 15 strikes are part of a broader shift within the labor movement, an effort to regain relevance with innovative, media savvy strategies that highlight the worst abuses of the labor market. And there are plenty to choose from; paralleling the decline of unions in recent decades, earnings for U.S. workers have gradually declined as well. With the federal minimum wage worth $2 less than it was in 1968, and nearly one third what it would be had it kept pace with productivity, low-wage workers have been the hardest hit by the decline of organized labor as a whole.

    SEIU is not the only union grasping for new strategies. The AFL-CIO, for instance, is seeking to add millions of non-union members to its books and to allow worker centers, which frequently organize immigrants in low-wage professions, into the the federation. Meanwhile, the United Food and Commercial Workers International Union is backing the Our Walmart campaign to improve pay and conditions at the mega-retailer.

    Adam Weaver describes the SEIU-organized strikes as “militant lobbying” and a “march on the media”; he surmises that the union is likely seeking either an overall industry-standards agreement with the fast-food industry or to leverage the highly visible campaign for legislative measures to raise minimum wage levels. Both scenarios would fall short of the $15 an hour and a union the campaign demands, but they would be victories that could be seized upon to help strengthen future struggles. In any case, the direction of the campaign seems to be largely out the control of the striking workers themselves.

    In Chicago, where a teachers’ strike last autumn helped permeate a sense of class consciousness in the city, the fast-food campaign has taken a more organic turn. “We have explicit conversations about our vision of what it means to be in a union,” said Trish Kahle, who is part of SEIU’s campaign in Chicago. There, it has encompassed low-wage workplaces beyond just fast-food restaurants. Employees of Nike, Victoria’s Secret and Whole Foods — where Kahle herself works — have joined in.

    “The first strike we held, on April 4, was incredibly top-down,” said Kahle, “but it gave people the courage to do it again and to start thinking about how they would do it differently. Now, we’re in control. We have organizing-101 meetings. We discuss what to do when your boss is against you; we cover the history of unions in this country, which most of the people involved aren’t aware of; and we organize around issues specific to individual workplaces.”

    Some insist that for organized labor to make a true comeback, it will have to rebuild itself from below.

    “People stick around when they feel this is their campaign, their organization,” said Joseph Sanchez, a staffer at the Brandworkers, a non-profit that has been organizing employees in New York City’s food and retail sectors on a shoestring budget since 2007. “Having workers invested and developing themselves as leaders — that forms a community they want to be a part of and attracts new workers as well.”

    Commenting on the AFL-CIO’s convention in Los Angeles earlier this month, labor historian Steve Early expressed skepticism at the zeal with which organized labor is incorporating the low-wage workers it has traditionally excluded. He argued that incorporating them into the federation has less to do with building union power in workplaces than it does with building lobbying power within the Democratic Party. Early noted a suspicious lack of “strategies for defending and re-energizing labor’s existing members” at the convention.

    In Chicago, at least, those on the Fight for 15 picket lines have included rank-and-file SEIU members in other industries. Kahle believes that they are finding common cause with the non-unionized workers who are just starting to organize. “They’re thinking, ‘I only make $10 an hour and I’m in the SEIU,” she says. “The people on top at the SEIU aren’t interested in organizing on the shop floor, but we are.”

    Like a mythical sorcerer’s apprentice who conjures a force she cannot control, SEIU may be spawning a force that will rise above its managerial powers by encouraging workers to take direct action at their workplaces. As they gain a taste for their own power, employees in the fast-food industry might realize that not only are the restaurants they labor in theirs to master, but their unions are as well.

    Joshua Stephens contributed reporting to this article.



    Recent Stories

    • Analysis

    45 years after Three Mile Island, we need a ‘No Nukes’ comeback

    March 25, 2024

    As Biden sinks billions into nuclear energy, members of the historic Clamshell Alliance are reuniting to spark a new wave of anti-nuke resistance.

    • Feature

    Student-led climate action is flourishing in DeSantis’s Florida

    March 20, 2024

    As Gov. Ron DeSantis tries to block the clean energy transition, University of Florida students are adopting Green New Deal measures and showing how public schools can lead on climate.

    • Feature

    Aaron Bushnell opposed ‘all state-sanctioned violence’ — not just the war in Gaza

    March 15, 2024

    Before his self-immolation, Aaron Bushnell supported his friend’s conscientous objection and deeply regretted joining the military.