The Phnom Penh Post

Anti-Trump groups set to march against McDonald’s

- Abha Bhattarai

THOUSANDS of Americans have taken to the street this year to march for women’s equality, environmen­tal issues and an overhaul of the president’s immigratio­n policies. Now for the first time, the anti-Trump resistance movement is setting its sights on a corporatio­n: McDonald’s.

Organisers from theWomen’s March, MoveOn.org and the Bernie Sanders campaign spin-off Our Revolution, will join forces next week to march from Trump Tower in downtown Chicago to The Rock N Roll McDonald’s a halfmile away. Their goal: To rally the fastfood giant – and the country’s secondlarg­est employer – to pay an hourly minimum wage of $15, and to allow its workers to unionise.

“McDonald’s, frankly, is the Donald Trump of corporatio­ns,” said Kendall Fells, organising director of the Fight for $15, a labour movement backed by the Service Employees Internatio­nal Union, which is leading the effort. “There’s no way to resist Donald Trump without resisting the corporatio­ns that are bringing us all down.”

Representa­tives for McDonald’s did not immediatel­y respond to emails seeking comment.

The “March on McDonald’s”, as it is being called, is backed by a number of progressiv­e groups including the Movement for Black Lives, Color of Change and Patriotic Millionair­es, a group of wealthy individual­s headed by former Blackrock executive Morris Pearl. About 10,000 demonstrat­ors are expected to take part on Tuesday, Fells said.

The following day, marchers will head to McDonald’s annual shareholde­rs meeting at its headquarte­rs in Oak Brook, Illinois, to continue their efforts. Hundreds of fast-food cooks and cashiers are expected to protest at McDonald’s stores throughout the US.

“Labor rights are women’s rights,” Carmen Perez, co-chair of the Women’s March, said in an email. “The link between the gender justice and labor justice movements is strong – but often unacknowle­dged. Women’s March is proud to join others to rise up against unfair labor practices, economic exploitati­on and workplace sexual harassment. These fights are our fights, and the only way we win is together.”

Next week’s march comes after years of heated protests at McDonald’s shareholde­r meetings. For the past three years, widespread demonstrat­ions have led the company to close down its headquarte­rs the day before its annual meeting. Last year, hundreds camped outside the company’s headquarte­rs in protest. McDonald’s has nearly 37,000 restaurant­s around the world that employ about 375,000 people, making it the world’s fourth-largest employer.

Since 2012, a number of cities and states, including California and New York as well as Seattle have passed measures requiring an hourly minimum wage of $15. Washington, DC, last summer approved legislatio­n that would raise the city’s minimum wage to $15 an hour by 2020. A number of companies, including Facebook, Aetna and Nationwide Insurance, have announced plans to raise worker pay to at least $15 per hour.

President Donald Trump, for his part, has spoken out against an hourly minimum wage of $15.

“If we’re going to compete with other countries,” he told Fox News in 2015,“we can’t do that because the wages would be too high.”

 ?? GETTY IMAGES/AFP JUSTIN SULLIVAN/ ?? A now hiring sign is posted in front of a McDonald’s restaurant on May 5 in Baton Rouge, Louisiana. Protest groups are gathering next week to call for the US giant – the country’s second-largest employer – to pay an hourly minimum wage of $15.
GETTY IMAGES/AFP JUSTIN SULLIVAN/ A now hiring sign is posted in front of a McDonald’s restaurant on May 5 in Baton Rouge, Louisiana. Protest groups are gathering next week to call for the US giant – the country’s second-largest employer – to pay an hourly minimum wage of $15.
 ?? JAYNE RUSSELL/AFP ?? A view shows a multistore­y car park (right) in the Central district in Hong Kong yesterday.
JAYNE RUSSELL/AFP A view shows a multistore­y car park (right) in the Central district in Hong Kong yesterday.

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