By Juliette MICHEL
04/30/22
In his colorful jacket emblazoned with the slogan "Eat the rich," Christian Smalls is accosted from all sides as he walks by the bus stop where he spent countless hours trying to convince Amazon employees to form a union.
The president of the Amazon Labor Union (ALU), which caused a stir in early April by becoming the e-commerce giant's first union in the United States, walks the sidewalk he knows so well in a New York industrial area.
He will soon learn if, after the win at the JFK8 warehouse, he has convinced employees of the sorting center located across the street, LDJ5, to unionize. The vote took place from April 25 to 29, and the counting will begin on Monday.
"There are good vibes," he says.
A week before the result, seasoned trade unionists want to take their picture with him, journalists assail him with questions, and members of his team ask him about the organization.
The president of the Amazon Labor Union (ALU) Christian Smalls at a rally in New York in April 2022 Photo: AFP / Kena Betancur
He has just shared the podium with two stars of the American left, Bernie Sanders and Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, and is preparing to lead a new rally.
Smalls, 33, unemployed, worked in the JFK8 warehouse until March 2020. With the outbreak of the Covid-19 epidemic, and faced with a still little-understood and devastating virus, he protested against the lack of protection and called for a walkout.
The protest did not draw crowds but it did gain attention, at least at Amazon. Smalls was fired two days later, officially for quarantine violations.
He has just shared the podium with two stars of the American left, Bernie Sanders and Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, and is preparing to lead a new rally.
Smalls, 33, unemployed, worked in the JFK8 warehouse until March 2020. With the outbreak of the Covid-19 epidemic, and faced with a still little-understood and devastating virus, he protested against the lack of protection and called for a walkout.
The protest did not draw crowds but it did gain attention, at least at Amazon. Smalls was fired two days later, officially for quarantine violations.
Christian Smalls, seen here at an event in New York in March 2022, does not look like a typical labor union leader
Photo: AFP / Ed JONES
According to an internal memo that leaked to the press shortly afterwards, a senior Amazon official said that Smalls was "not smart, or articulate," and that he should be made "the face of the entire union/organizing movement"
"I demonstrated that," Smalls told AFP two years later.
In the meantime, he protested outside several residences of Amazon founder Jeff Bezos to defend the rights of essential workers during the pandemic.
He also went in the spring of 2021 to support activists trying to form a union at an Amazon warehouse in Alabama.
It was after that trip that he and his small team decided to try their luck in New York, on their own terms and without support from a traditional labor organization.
According to an internal memo that leaked to the press shortly afterwards, a senior Amazon official said that Smalls was "not smart, or articulate," and that he should be made "the face of the entire union/organizing movement"
"I demonstrated that," Smalls told AFP two years later.
In the meantime, he protested outside several residences of Amazon founder Jeff Bezos to defend the rights of essential workers during the pandemic.
He also went in the spring of 2021 to support activists trying to form a union at an Amazon warehouse in Alabama.
It was after that trip that he and his small team decided to try their luck in New York, on their own terms and without support from a traditional labor organization.
Christian Smalls (C) celebrates after workers voted to form a union at the Amazon sorting warehouse in New York on April 1, 2022
Photo: AFP / Andrea RENAULT
Smalls became a mainstay at the bus stop, where he waited for shifts to change so he could chat with employees. Others -- his friend Derrick Palmer and a few employees persuaded of the need to fight, as well as a handful of activists who deliberately got hired at Amazon to join the struggle -- worked the break rooms.
They listened, tirelessly explaining what a union is, bringing in food, distributing a little cannabis. To reach the night shifts, they sometimes lit bonfires.
Experts on labor movements said they had little chance of success.
The team had almost no money at the outset: before the first vote, they raised $120,000 through internet fundraising and T-shirt sales, while Amazon spent $4.3 million to counter their campaign.
With the help of a pro bono lawyer, they officially filed their request for the organization of a vote after obtaining the signatures of 30 percent of the employees, when the traditional unions often expect to have at least 50 percent.
Their leader was a complete unknown.
With his rapper-inspired style, the African-American activist "doesn't look or dress like a typical union leader," said Justine Medina, a member of ALU.
But, she said, he is "brilliant, he knows how to inspire, to put people at the role they are good at, how to rally."
All the media attention "does not get to his head," she added, calling him "down to earth."
He did celebrate the union's victory on April 1, though. Smalls came bounding out of the building where the counting took place, dressed all in red from baseball cap to sneakers, before cracking open the bubbly and thanking Jeff Bezos for going into space while they were campaigning back on Earth.
ALU arrived at just the right moment. After the pandemic brought harsh working conditions for essential workers, and in the midst of inflation, employees are ready to ask for more.
And in a tight labor market, they know the ball is in their court. Starbucks, Apple, Alphabet are also facing unionization plans.
Smalls hopes that ALU "the spark for a whole movement at Amazon."
Smalls became a mainstay at the bus stop, where he waited for shifts to change so he could chat with employees. Others -- his friend Derrick Palmer and a few employees persuaded of the need to fight, as well as a handful of activists who deliberately got hired at Amazon to join the struggle -- worked the break rooms.
They listened, tirelessly explaining what a union is, bringing in food, distributing a little cannabis. To reach the night shifts, they sometimes lit bonfires.
Experts on labor movements said they had little chance of success.
The team had almost no money at the outset: before the first vote, they raised $120,000 through internet fundraising and T-shirt sales, while Amazon spent $4.3 million to counter their campaign.
With the help of a pro bono lawyer, they officially filed their request for the organization of a vote after obtaining the signatures of 30 percent of the employees, when the traditional unions often expect to have at least 50 percent.
Their leader was a complete unknown.
With his rapper-inspired style, the African-American activist "doesn't look or dress like a typical union leader," said Justine Medina, a member of ALU.
But, she said, he is "brilliant, he knows how to inspire, to put people at the role they are good at, how to rally."
All the media attention "does not get to his head," she added, calling him "down to earth."
He did celebrate the union's victory on April 1, though. Smalls came bounding out of the building where the counting took place, dressed all in red from baseball cap to sneakers, before cracking open the bubbly and thanking Jeff Bezos for going into space while they were campaigning back on Earth.
ALU arrived at just the right moment. After the pandemic brought harsh working conditions for essential workers, and in the midst of inflation, employees are ready to ask for more.
And in a tight labor market, they know the ball is in their court. Starbucks, Apple, Alphabet are also facing unionization plans.
Smalls hopes that ALU "the spark for a whole movement at Amazon."
No comments:
Post a Comment