Still, the remarks were the most explicit about Amazon from Mr. Biden, who has called himself the “most pro-union president” ever and has long hinted that he disapproves of the company’s efforts to attempt to dissuade its workers from unionizing. Last year, Mr. Biden expressed his support for warehouse workers trying to unionize an Amazon warehouse in Alabama. But at that time, the president did not call out the company by name.
A Landmark Win for Unionization at Amazon
Workers at an Amazon warehouse on Staten Island delivered one of the biggest victories for organized labor in a generation.
- The Vote: Despite heavy lobbying by the company, workers at the warehouse chose to unionize by a wide margin.
- How the Union Won: After Amazon fired Christian Smalls, he and his best friend rallied other warehouse workers with home cooking and TikTok videos.
- Amazon’s Approach: The company has tried to counter unionization efforts with employee “training” sessions that carry clear anti-union messages.
- Times Investigation: In 2021, we found that the Staten Island facility clearly displayed the stresses in Amazon’s employment model.
“Let me be really clear: It’s not up to me to decide whether anyone should join a union,” he said at the time in a direct-to-camera address posted on the White House Twitter page, after a pressure campaign by pro-union groups pushed him to weigh in on the drive. “But let me be even more clear: It’s not up to an employer to decide that either.” Workers there narrowly voted against forming a union. Amazon has also said that workers have a right to decide to unionize, but the National Labor Relations Board has filed a number of cases saying the company has improperly interfered with their right to do so. Amazon denies that.
The success of the unionization drive at the Staten Island warehouse — the only Amazon fulfillment center in New York City — caught many by surprise. Employees cast 2,654 votes to be represented by Amazon Labor Union and 2,131 against, according to the National Labor Relations Board, giving the union a win by more than 10 percentage points.
The victory comes at a perilous moment for the labor movement. Despite rising public approval for labor unions, high demand for workers and pockets of successful labor activity, the portion of U.S. workers in unions dropped last year to 10.3 percent, the lowest rate in decades.
Critics — including some labor officials — say that traditional unions have failed to devote enough resources into organizing campaigns and that they have often bet on the wrong fights.