Return to Washington Examiner Homepage
May 21, 2013 | 07:55 AM
politics
Washington D.C. weather
Politics

Wal-Mart & Big Labor: Natural enemies

December 26, 2012 | 10:47 am
Leave a comment
Photo - MEXICO CITY, MEXICO - APRIL 23:  Wal-Mart store signage is seen from the store lot on April 23, 2012 in Mexico City, Mexico. According to reports, Wal-Mart de Mexico orchestrated a campaign of bribery to win market dominance by paying bribes to obtain permits in parts of the country. Wal-Mart Inc, along with two U.S. congressmen is conducting internal investigations over the allegations.  (Photo by Daniel Aguilar/Getty Images)
MEXICO CITY, MEXICO - APRIL 23: Wal-Mart store signage is seen from the store lot on April 23, 2012 in Mexico City, Mexico. According to reports, Wal-Mart de Mexico orchestrated a campaign of bribery to win market dominance by paying bribes to obtain permits in parts of the country. Wal-Mart Inc, along with two U.S. congressmen is conducting internal investigations over the allegations. (Photo by Daniel Aguilar/Getty Images)

My column today for the Examiner is about Big Labor’s latest tactics to try to bring the retail giant to heel:

Big Labor has lately been attempting to organize work stoppages at warehouses and other facilities used by the retailer. They’ve had some modest successes.

In June, eight Mexican guest workers walked off the job at CJ’s Seafood in Breaux Bridge, La., a company that supplies Wal-Mart. They later filed a complaint against the supplier with the Labor Department. Wal-Mart has reportedly suspended the supplier.

There have been strikes at various company warehouses in California. A strike at a major supply center in Elwood, Ill., lasted for three weeks. Those strikers eventually got the attention of top officials as well as pay for the time on strike and the reinstatement of four fired workers.

Wal-Mart was willing to deal in part because those strikers weren’t Wal-Mart employees. Although it owns the warehouse, the workers were actually employed by a temp agency with whom Wal-Mart contracted — a standard arrangement within its supply chain.

So the company apparently felt it wasn’t giving unions much of a toehold. After all, if the workers did organize, Wal-Mart can just find a new contractor.

Nevertheless, the stories have become a cause celebre on left-wing websites and magazines. They represent some of the first victories, no matter how minor, that organized labor can claim against the retail giant.

Read the whole thing here.

From WeeklyStandard.com

  • Ideological Revenue Service

    With three different scandals threatening to consume the White House last week—the Benghazi cover-up, the Justice Department’s seizure of the phone records of dozens of Associated Press...

    Read More...

  • The Real Scandal

    Everyone in Washington, except those in the crosshairs, likes a good scandal, and THE WEEKLY STANDARD is no exception. What’s more, in the case of the Obama administration, comeuppance is well...

    Read More...

  • When It Rains, It Pours

    There is no curse on the second term of presidents. When presidents lose credibility, when trust vanishes and their word is no longer accepted, they have only themselves to blame. That was true...

    Read More...