Why Amazon Workers Rejected Unionization

POLITICS & POLICY
A worker assembles a box for delivery at the Amazon fulfillment center in Baltimore, Md., April 30, 2019. (Clodagh Kilcoyne/Reuters)

It certainly wasn’t because they were snookered into voting against their own interests.




NRPLUS MEMBER ARTICLE

‘T
hanks, but no thanks.

So said Amazon employees — by a two-to-one margin — to the self-serving union bosses at the Retail, Wholesale and Department Store Union. The members of the disproportionately African-American work force at Amazon’s Bessemer, Ala., facility were not sold on the union’s proposal to dip into their pockets while linking their effort to the Black Lives Matter movement and decided that they didn’t need a team of highly paid political operatives to skim their paychecks.

Is this another one of those What’s the Matter with Kansas? episodes in which workers “vote against their own interests”? Why would any

Articles You May Like

How racial dogma fuels the left’s attacks on Trump
Migrants, advocacy group say city’s plan to provide 6 months of free housing, other services is ‘insufficient’
REPORT: Joe Biden’s Vote Buying Scheme to ‘Forgive’ Student Loan Debt is Benefiting Wealthy Families
Ouch: RFK Jr.’s brother Chris says he believes ‘Biden is the RFK of his generation’
Bill Maher (Accidentally?) Explains How Exposing Kids to Gender Ideology Is Grooming

Leave a Comment - No Links Allowed:

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *