No
friend of labor or working-class immigrants, President Donald Trump
is nevertheless providing a back-handed boost to the hotel workers’
union UNITE HERE by helping it sign up new members at its union
locals around the country. Trump’s threats to punish immigrants has
prompted more and more workers to look to the union as a way to
protect themselves in an uncertain political climate, UNITE HERE
leaders say.
The
boost is powerful enough that 2017 is proving to be a banner year for
new organizing at the union. Spokesperson Rachel Gumpert says UNITE
HERE is leading the field among big unions, with major recruiting
efforts underway. Some 12,000 new members have been signed up since
the beginning of the year, she tells In
These Times,
making 2017 the best year for new organizing in recent memory.
The
claim was highlighted on October 19, when UNITE HERE staged street
actions in 40 cities across North America. Timed to coincide with the
opening of the AFL-CIO convention in
St. Louis, the actions were designed to emphasize the link between
workers’ rights and immigrants’ rights as Trump attacks both.
“Donald
Trump’s anti-immigrant rhetoric, and more importantly his
anti-immigrant policies, have galvanized immigrant workers to take
action to secure basic protections for themselves and their
families,” says Gumpert.
“In
the workplace, this means unionizing,” she continues. “UNITE HERE
is proud to represent tens of thousands of immigrants. And in a
national political moment where law-abiding immigrants who have
contributed to their communities and local economies for decades are
being deported for years-old non-violent misdemeanors, we’re proud
to be doing new organizing in workplaces across America to help
protect immigrant workers.”
The
additional 12,000 members bumps up total UNITE HERE membership to
roughly 285,000. The union reported a
membership of 272,963 to the U.S Department of Labor last year,
compared to 264,104 in 2015. UNITE HERE is the fastest growing union
in the AFL-CIO, the labor federation’s spokesperson Carolyn
Bobb tells In
These Times.
Most
of the growth is among hotel and casino workers, although there have
also been gains in food service jobs, including the organizing
win for cafeteria workers at the Menlo Park, Calif.,
headquarters of social media giant Facebook. In July, more than 500
of those workers joined UNITE HERE Local 19, based in nearby San
Jose.
More
typical has been the progress at the MGM Gold Strike Casino in
Tunica, Miss., where UNITE HERE is organizing in coalitionwith
several other unions. The coalition has been reporting slow but
steady progress at the casino (near Memphis, Tenn.), and Gumpert
indicates the union is counting this as one of its victories this
year.
Another
southern victory took place in New Orleans, where about 500 workers
at the Hilton Riverside Hotel voted in early October for UNITE HERE
representation. Local journalist Richard Thompson produced
an overview of
union organizing in the city’s tourism industry for The
New Orleans Advocate on
October 8, and concluded that Crescent City workers are growing more
receptive to union membership.
One
of the union’s most active and innovative units is Local 11 in Los
Angeles. With its heavy Latino population, anti-Trump sentiment is
strong in the Los Angeles labor community, reports Local 11
spokesperson Andrew Cohen, and “is definitely providing a boost”
to new organizing efforts in the region.
It’s
been a good year so far, Cohen tells In
These Times,
with hotel victories at
the Westin Long Beach, Sofitel Los Angeles at Beverly Hills, Santa
Monica Doubletree and JW Marriott Santa Monica Le Merigot. The
Doubletree was an especially satisfying win for 23,000-member Local
11, because it required a 15-year campaign of unusual intensity.
The
local also had a smaller victory with food service workers at the
airport. A unit of the Chicago-based airline catering outfit Flying
Food was successfully organized at Los Angeles International Airport
as part of UNITE HERE’s national campaign at
that company, Cohen says. All together, Local 11 has added about
1,700 new members in the last year, he reports.
The
local isn’t resting on its laurels: It just launched a new campaign
to organize at the luxury Terranea Resort in Rancho Palos Verdes. A
key to this campaign will be targeting the
private equity firm Lowe Enterprises, which owns the resort, Cohen
says.
In
announcing the Oct. 19 ‘Day of Action,” UNITE HERE President
Donald “D.” Taylor stated, “We are in a political age where
immigrants, women, and all workers are under constant attack, and
equality for all is at risk of being no more than just a dream.”
“Unions
serve their country as a crucial answer in the fight against
deepening racial and economic inequality in our country,” Taylor
continued. “Today is only the beginning of what UNITE HERE will do
to take back our country.”
Gumpert
tells In
These Times the
union considers the October 19 street demonstrations to have been a
success, and that its various organizing campaigns will be continuing
at an increased tempo.
>> The article above was written by Bruce Vail, and is reprinted from In These Times.
1 comment:
How immigrants anti-american hate is galvanising hotel workers to fight for socialism in free market capitalism America.
When you immigrate to America you are supposed to assimilate to our culture. This means that you leave the means and ways of your old country behind. Instead we have a problem of illegal immigrants coming here looking to turn America into a version of the countries they fled
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