Albuquerque Journal

Amazon gets latest win in struggle between tech giants and workers

Labor backers dismayed after failed unionizati­on effort at Alabama site

- BY NITASHA TIKU, ELI ROSENBERG, JAY GREENE AND CRAIG TIMBERG

Amazon’s defeat of a union organizing effort in Alabama on Friday was the latest setback for workers who have been clamoring to assert more control over the technology companies that depend on them — one that showed how Silicon Valley giants still have a major edge in determinin­g where power resides in the modern economy.

Labor advocates expressed dismay after a push to organize Amazon’s Bessemer, Alabama, warehouse was rejected by a surprising­ly large margin amid fierce opposition from the Seattle-based e-commerce giant. The advocates, who have complained for years about worker treatment at Amazon warehouses, came to see the Bessemer warehouse as a top prospect for gaining a foothold in one of America’s biggest and most powerful companies.

The defeat comes amid a series of clashes between the nation’s major technology companies and workers who say they are not reaping the rewards of the digital economy, at a time when the share prices of many tech giants have reached all-time highs and created hundreds of billions of dollars in new wealth.

California voters approved a ballot initiative in November, Propositio­n 22, exempting

Uber and Lyft from classifyin­g millions of drivers as employees — in essence denying those gig workers a minimum wage and other benefits.

Similar fights have emerged at Facebook and Google, where large numbers of workers employed by third-party contractor­s complained they were not getting fair treatment by the tech behemoths.

After the Bessemer vote, labor advocates say they will argue their case that Amazon acted illegally to squash the vote, and, more broadly, are placing their hopes in a new administra­tion in Washington led by pro-union President Joe Biden, who gave his blessing to the Bessemer effort.

“Once workers understand that historical­ly the work has had better working conditions and pays much better than what Amazon thinks they’re worth, then you’re going to

have this upheaval,” said Randy Korgan, who leads efforts to unionize Amazon for the Internatio­nal Brotherhoo­d of Teamsters, who was not involved in the Bessemer drive.

Companies like Amazon and Uber say they are already at the leading edge of providing strong compensati­on, benefits and flexibilit­y to workers. Amazon routinely notes it pays a $15 minimum wage to workers — which liberals have pushed for the national standard. (Amazon CEO Jeff Bezos owns The Washington Post.)

“We hope that with this election now over, there’s an opportunit­y to move from talk to action across the country,” the company said in a statement Friday. “There are 40 million Americans who make less than the starting wage at Amazon, and many more who don’t get health care.”

 ?? MICHAEL S. WILLIAMSON/THE WASHINGTON POST ?? A sign at the entrance to Amazon’s warehouse in Bessermer, Ala., encourages workers to vote to unionize. The effort failed in a vote by workers at the fulfillmen­t center Friday.
MICHAEL S. WILLIAMSON/THE WASHINGTON POST A sign at the entrance to Amazon’s warehouse in Bessermer, Ala., encourages workers to vote to unionize. The effort failed in a vote by workers at the fulfillmen­t center Friday.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States