https://inthesetimes.com/article/teamsters-amazon-alabama-union-labor-rwdsu

The Teamsters Hint at a Combative National Project to Organize Amazon

Fearing a threat to more than 100 years of worker gains, “This entire union is 
focused on dealing with Amazon.”

By Hamilton Nolan/In These Times/ March 17, 2021

As the drive to unionize Amazon warehouse workers in Bessemer, Alabama draws 
international attention to the Retail, Wholesale and Department Store Union 
(RWDSU) that is leading the effort, other unions are planning their own 
strategies to organize parts of Amazon’s sprawling operations as well. The 
Teamsters, who see Amazon as a direct threat to their historic work organizing 
the trucking industry, are engaged in a concerted project targeting Amazon — 
and though they’re tight-lipped about the details, they appear committed to a 
long-term, nationwide effort that could make them one of the company’s most 
formidable union foes. 

The 1.4 million-member Teamsters are more than ten times bigger than the RWDSU. 
They see Amazon’s vast pool of non-union delivery employees as an existential 
threat to not only their own members, but to the ability of the trucking 
industry to provide living wage jobs. Randy Korgan https://www.randykorgan.com/ 
, a goateed organizing veteran whose current title is Teamsters National 
Director for Amazon, frames the standoff with Jeff Bezos’ company as just the 
latest incarnation of a struggle that the union has been waging for more than a 
century. 

“We fought to regulate the industry because of the working conditions that were 
happening in the [19]20s, 30s, and 40s. We obviously find some similarities 
today,” Korgan says. Despite the popular view of the “roaring 20s” as a grand 
era, “history clearly shows that working people suffered greatly. And here we 
come back into the roaring 20s again. Is this a repeat of history? We’ve got to 
ask ourselves that.” 

Korgan is particularly angered by Amazon’s ongoing effort 
https://www.vice.com/en/article/y3gj87/why-amazon-is-flooding-the-country-with-dollar15-minimum-wage-ads
 to portray itself as a good corporate citizen because it pays a $15 per hour 
minimum wage to its employees — a wage lower than what Korgan himself made as a 
union warehouse worker more than 30 years ago. Amazon itself is the primary 
driver of a process that is changing warehouse jobs that once paid a living 
wage into low-income, tenuous, temporary work. 

“At every level of the organization you see this high turnover rate, and then 
you see them introducing this rate of $15, $16 an hour and trying to claim that 
they need to be patted on the back,” says Korgan. “Aren’t they talking out of 
both sides of their mouth? Because what is the average wage of someone that 
works in a warehouse in this country, and is Amazon exploiting and capitalizing 
on that wage being reduced?”

Currently, the only Teamsters members with a direct connection to the company 
are workers at Atlas and ABX Air, two firms that do business with Amazon. But 
the union is eyeing a much larger pool of Amazon employees, particularly 
delivery drivers, many of whom work for subcontractors rather than for Amazon 
itself. Though this process serves to insulate Amazon, the Teamsters have in 
the past organized tens of thousands of workers at subcontractors throughout 
the trucking industry. Warehouses are also in the Teamsters traditional 
wheelhouse, and it was reported last month 
https://www.desmoinesregister.com/story/money/business/2021/02/26/iowa-teamsters-organizing-union-amazon-and-threatening-strike/6841952002/
 that the union has spent several months organizing hundreds of Amazon 
warehouse workers in Iowa, though the outcome of that campaign remains 
uncertain. 

The Teamsters have been chewing over the threat posed by Amazon for years. 
Various Teamster websites are rife with posts like “ TEAMSTERS MUST TAKE NOTE 
OF THE DANGER ON THE HORIZON 
https://www.teamstersjc42.com/teamsters-must-take-note-of-the-danger-on-the-horizon/
 ” and “ TAKING ON AMAZON https://www.tdu.org/taking_on_amazon ,” all of which 
note the direct threat the company poses to the stability of the entire 
transportation industry. But as the Alabama warehouse union campaign has drawn 
a tidal wave of press, the Teamsters are now loath to divulge too much of their 
strategy. Korgan is leading the union’s “Amazon Project,” and says he is 
engaged with workers across the country, and is “absolutely” working with other 
unions, as well. But he declines to discuss the project’s funding, timeline, or 
specific targets. He does, however, hint that the Teamsters may pursue a more 
radical and confrontational strategy when it comes time to seek union 
recognition from the famously intransigent company. 

The classic pathway of seeking an NLRB election to certify a union — the 
process that is currently underway for the Amazon workers in Alabama — has the 
benefits of being clearly defined by law, but it also enables companies to 
spend months bombarding workers with anti-union propaganda, and to throw money 
at legal challenges. Korgan implies that the Teamsters may seek other pathways 
to try to force voluntary recognition of unions. (In fact, a Teamsters 
organizer in Iowa said 
https://www.desmoinesregister.com/story/money/business/2021/02/26/iowa-teamsters-organizing-union-amazon-and-threatening-strike/6841952002/
 that the union would prefer to use strikes to pressure the company to 
recognize its union.) 

“There are many platforms to seek recognition, there are many platforms for 
workers to do concerted activities,” Korgan says. “Truth be told, that [NLRB] 
process is where corporate America wants organizing to be, and that’s how they 
want it to be defined. Because they clearly have more of an advantage there 
than they do in other spaces.”

The recognition that Amazon has become so powerful that allowing it to remain 
non-union is not a viable option 
https://inthesetimes.com/article/amazon-workers-union-public-relations-jeff-bezos
 seems to have finally become conventional wisdom within organized labor. It is 
safe to assume that the Teamsters are only one of several major unions planning 
ways to organize their own slice of the company. The union campaign in Alabama, 
where the votes will be counted at the end of this month, will likely be only 
the first step down a long and contentious road that will last for years. 

“No matter what happens in Bessemer,” Korgan says, “it doesn’t change the 
trajectory of anything that’s going on.” 

Hamilton Nolan is a labor reporter for In These Times. He has spent the past 
decade writing about labor and politics for Gawker, Splinter, The Guardian, and 
elsewhere. You can reach him at Hamilton@ InTheseTimes. com.




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