Hundreds of thousands of US workers have walked off the job this year. Instead of the exception, labour stoppages could become the norm.
On 14 September, when members of the United Auto Workers (UAW) union walked off the job at three Midwest auto factories owned by General Motors, Ford and Stellantis, it seemed a fitting way for the US labour movement to cap this year's summer of strikes. And collective action is only continuing.
In 2023, we've seen labour stoppages in industries of all types. Beginning in May, Hollywood screenwriters in the Writer's Guild of America (WGA) walked the picket line for 148 days before reaching a tentative deal. Actors' union SAG-AFTRA, also struck in July, and remain off the job. Starbucks workers are participating in an ongoing series of labour actions; and frontline workers including nurses, hotel staff and pilots have also walked out, with some work stoppages continuing. There have also been major near-misses: in July, the package delivery company UPS narrowly averted a strike at the eleventh hour that would have been the largest single-employer labour stoppage in US history.
Across disparate industries, workers keep fighting for similar protections: fair wages, increased safety and job security. And as these concerns proliferate, even evolve, experts say US strikes may continue. They're poised to become a common part of American workers' playbooks as they negotiate working conditions, especially as public support spikes.
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Unite Here Local 11 hotel workers in Los Angeles are still on strike for wage increases (Credit: Alamy)
In our strike era
It may seem like US workers are striking more, but data shows that the number of labour stoppages is roughly on par with the past several years (excluding 2020, during the pandemic).
However, while the number of strikes is relatively unchanged, if not slightly lower in 2023, the number of striking workers far outstrips prior years, due in part to unions with large membership taking to the picket line. For instance, more than 150,000 UAW workers are on strike; the WGA and SAG-AFTRA strikes combined saw more than 80,000 workers walk off the job and forgo months of pay.
"This is certainly the biggest moment for labour, and the most active period that I've seen in my career," says Sharon Block, executive director at Harvard Law School's Center for Labor and a Just Economy.
These numbers are eye-opening because, legally speaking, mass strikes in the US are tricky to pull off, let alone on such a massive scale.
American labour laws remain relatively weak compared to countries with similar economies, say experts. Firing a worker is effectively legal under federal labour law, making it difficult for unions to convince members to strike in the first place. Companies do have a legal obligation to negotiate with unionised workers, but Block says they can easily delay bargaining and break strikes with few, if any serious consequences, which means there's no guarantee workers will get the agreements they want.
Yet, this summer, US workers were still willing to take these risks.
Experts point to many reasons. Some workers are reacting to rising income inequality, especially amid soaring prices in the current flagging US economy. With employers often unwilling to boost wages to meet rising inflation, or address safety concerns in high-risk environments, workers have turned to labour stoppages to not only make daily life sustainable, but also fundamentally secure better working conditions for the future.
Our union was empowered by the outpouring of support from working families and people who had no personal stake in our strike but told us our message resonated – Stephani De Luca
"There was a shift among US workers about what's acceptable in terms of conditions to accept, about their own worth in the workplace, and about standing up for themselves when those two things don't match up," says Block.
Spiking solidarity
At the core of many of these strikes are demands for liveable wages, job security, better working conditions and employee input into rapidly developing tech like AI that could fundamentally destabilise entire industries.
In auto plants, says William B Gould IV, professor emeritus of law at Stanford University and a former chairman of the National Labor Relations Board, workers are increasingly taking on overtime to compensate for a relative decline in earnings. Meanwhile, employers who don't want to pay for new workers keep pushing their existing employees into taking on more overtime. As a result, the UAW's demands include a 36% pay rise throughout the next four years as well as shortened workweeks, plus better pension support and paid healthcare for retirees.
At UPS, the Teamsters union wanted a nominal pay rise for part-time workers. But perhaps more significantly, one of their key contract demands was better investment in essential safety equipment, including the installation of air conditioning units for delivery trucks, whose drivers are often operating in temperatures well above 100F (38C). The Teamsters represent about 350,000 full- and part-time UPS workers, who were willing to walk off the job until the company met their demands.
These issues are not only important to the workers themselves – but also resonate with the American public at large, especially in the wake of the pandemic. September 2023 Morning Consult data shows nearly 60% of Americans agree worker pay should increase as CEO pay climbs, and that it's a company's obligation to provide strong worker protections, even if consumers have to absorb some of the costs. In terms of the UAW strike, more than 50% of US adults support the labour stoppage.
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High profile celebrities, including Ted Lasso's Jason Sudekis, walked the picket line with WGA and SAG-AFTRA members this summer (Credit: Alamy)
Many members of the American public have expressed agreement that worker demands are increasingly justified. And strikes have become an essential part of the US conversation, with extraordinary press coverage, especially as major figures show unprecedented acts of support.
On 26 September, President Biden walked the picket line in Belleville, Michigan, in favour of the striking auto workers, and met with UAW president Sean Fain. In New York and Hollywood, a slew of major celebrities walked in solidarity with the WGA for weeks; comedian and game show host Drew Carey paid more than a half-million dollars to feed striking writers in California for months.
These workers have also taken advantage of social media in new and increasingly effective ways to raise public support and visibility as well as provide outsiders an untold number of ways to show solidarity and even get involved.
"Our union was empowered by the outpouring of support from working families and people who had no personal stake in our strike but told us our message resonated," says Stephani De Luca, a WGA East member, who walked the picket line in New York.
'When are we going out next?'
US strike culture may continue, say experts, if workers increasingly see these movements can work.
Indeed, mass strikes throughout US history have won American workers everything from reduced hours to safer working conditions across dozens of industries. Their success is continuing in 2023 in huge ways: for example, experts have hailed the tentative agreement WGA reached with studios on 24 September as an extraordinary, historic victory, as writers secured nearly everything they asked for when the strike began.
Employers may be in for a long haul of strikes, say experts, especially as attitudes towards unions and collective action continue to be favourable, especially among young workers.
"I think the employers have hoped, after a month or so, that we would be exhausted and ready to pack it in," says Kurt Peterson, co-president of Unite Here Local 11, which represents striking hotel workers in Southern California. "But it's not true. Our workers are stronger than ever. They're picketing every day, even if they're not on strike. And the question I get most often from people is: 'When are we going out next?'"
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