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Will Ebeler is a student at Harvard Law School.
In this weekend’s news and commentary, dockworkers on the West Coast ratify new contract, SAG-AFTRA begins voting on whether to authorize strike against video game companies, Republican state attorneys general urge SEC to make Shein prove it doesn’t use forced labor, and news from across the country about tomorrow’s Labor Day.
On Thursday, the International Longshore and Warehouse Union announced that its members had voted to approve a new six-year contract with the Pacific Maritime Association. According to the union, the contract was approved by 75% of the members who voted. The deal will cover 22,000 dockworkers at 29 ports along the West Coast who had been working without a contract since July 2022. Neither party has released the details of the new contract.
SAG-AFTRA will vote starting this week on whether to authorize a strike against video game companies. The union is seeking wage increases and protections against the use of artificial intelligence for video game performers. Employer use of artificial intelligence has been an important issue in negotiations throughout the entertainment industry this year and has been a continued source of tension with movie and television studios, in addition to these negotiations with video game companies. In a statement, SAG-AFTRA president Fran Drescher said, “Once again, artificial intelligence is putting our members in jeopardy of reducing their opportunity to work.” Voting will close on September 25, and according to the union bargaining is scheduled to resume on September 26.
On August 24, the Republican attorneys general of 16 states sent a letter to Gary Gensler, the chair of the SEC, expressing concern over the business practices of Shein, a fast fashion retailer. Investors expect Shein to file for an initial public offering soon, and the attorneys general urged Chair Gensler to require Shein to prove it does not use forced labor before approving a filing. The letter was sent the same day Shein announced it was buying a stake in Forever 21’s parent company and that it might start selling its products at Forever 21 stores in the United States. As I discussed earlier this year, until now Shein has relied on a direct-to-consumer business model and has been under scrutiny from Congress for its suspected reliance on Uyghur forced labor. The lead author of the letter, Montana’s attorney general, has made headlines for his high-profile and controversial efforts to ban TikTok in Montana.
Finally, there is a variety of news from around the country in the leadup to Labor Day. This morning’s Washington Post has a column that the discusses the reasons for optimism about the future of the labor movement. As the column explains, recent pro-worker decisions by the NLRB “effectively makes union organizing possible again,” and a recent report by the Treasury Department shows that 61% of the public thinks “unions help rather than hurt the U.S. economy,” a record high. The Associated Press has an article explaining the origins of Labor Day. The first Labor Day was celebrated on September 5, 1882, when 10,000 workers in New York City marched in a parade organized by the Central Labor Union and the Knights of Labor. A few cities and states recognized Labor Day in the following years, but it wasn’t until 1894 that it was recognized as a federal holiday in both the U.S. and Canada. The holiday was recognized during a contentious year between labor and the U.S. government. The Pullman Railroad Strike, which began in May 1894 and shut down rail traffic in large parts of the country, was ended after the government sent in federal troops to suppress the strike, an intervention that left more than a dozen workers dead. Federal recognition of Labor Day in the aftermath of the Pullman Strike was an attempt “to repair the trust of workers.” According to historians, it was also an attempt to shift attention away from May Day, which in other countries had become linked with socialist and radical labor movements. This year’s Labor Day celebrations include a parade in Pullman, Illinois, the city where the 1894 Pullman Strike first started.
Daily News & Commentary
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July 17
Senator J.D. Vance joins Donald Trump’s campaign, targeting pro-labor voters, Project 2025 includes gutting the National Labor Relations Board (NLRB), and Seattle Boeing workers prepare for a strike vote.
July 16
Teamsters president speaks at RNC; Starbucks decertification campaign fails; Biden taps new PBGC leader
July 15
Workday bias suit moves forward; DOL proposes new LMRDA rule; Bronx Defenders to go on ULP strike
July 14
Teamsters president to speak at RNC; youth work permit requirement rollbacks; eulogies to Jane McAlevey.
July 12
Dollar Tree and OSHA settle; union leaders split over Biden support; new report on low wages.
July 11
President Biden meets with union leadership and a New York law firm announces new applicant screening policy regarding student protest activity.