EMAIL SIGN UP!
Most Popular This Week
- One American Who Isn't For Sale
- Edward Snowden: Saving Us from the United Stasi of America
- Major Loss to Organic Farmers as Court Rules in Favor of Monsanto
- The Judicial Lynching of Bradley Manning
- Remembering Satyajit Ray’s Hirok Rajar Deshe: On Edward Snowden, Resistance and Inverted Totalitarianism
Popular content
Today's Top News
Target Comes Under Fire Around the World
he retail giant Target is under fire from all sides, for union-busting at home and labor violations overseas. The reports that have come out in the past several weeks highlight a continuum of cruelty in the global supply chain.
Though WalMart has long served as labor's arch nemesis, United Food and Commercial Workers (UFCW) has lately zeroed in on Target as a new battlefield—with its hundreds of thousands of employees and recent expansion into the supermarket sector. Although UFCW Local 1500 recently lost a vote to unionize a branch in Valley Stream, New York, their campaign deftly exposed Target's arsenal of intimidation and smear tactics, which ranged from anti-union websites to leaflets warning that a yes vote might ruin the company and force the store to close.
Now plastered across the blogosphere, the propaganda campaign has steeled the outrage at the company's resistance to unions. Organizers have announced they will keep up the fight:
Target's honeymoon is over, the national attention from the election at Valley Stream showed the American public the type of company they really are, one who has little respect for the hard working people who make their company so successful. Target still has the opportunity to change, and they should start by respecting their employees.
UFCW still aims to unionize all Target stores in the New York area, the AP reported in July. And Target's “victory” over UFCW ironically has become an inspiration for organizers (reflecting perhaps labor's desperate state as well as yearning for fresh motivation):
And the UFCW's local 1189 in St. Paul, Minn., is using the New York election as an impetus to recharge its campaign, which failed a couple of years because it didn't collect enough votes. The chapter is organizing a group of people to go door- to-door to almost 2,000 Target workers in four stores. It's also planning to reach out to UFCW's local Chicago, San Francisco and Seattle chapters to enlist them to join the battle.
"I was inspired. Once we heard that Local 1500 had been building toward an election, we thought we better ramp it up," said Bernie Hesse, director of special projects at UFCW'S St. Paul chapter. "We have been intrigued with what a national campaign may look like."
But despite the grassroots push, Target remains shielded by a pro-business NLRB bureaucracy, argues Pete Ikeler at SocialistAlternative.org:
This was not the first time an allegedly “free and fair” National Labor Relations Board (NLRB) election at a big-box retail store has gone the way employers wanted it to. Several single-store organizing drives have been run at outlets such as Home Depot and Wal-Mart—most of which similarly failed. …
The initial failure of the single-store drive in Valley Stream, NY, displays yet again the depth of employers’ class-based anti-unionism and the completely employer-biased character of the NLRB system. This organizing drive also exposes the centrality of retail and other low-wage service work to the profound crisis in wages and living standards facing the U.S. working class today.
The corporate bias embedded in the NLRB system, Ikeler says, has cowed unions onto the “institutional path to unionization” which emphasizes labor-management “partnership.” Only militant organizing strategy can beat back the corporate phalanx:
If Local 1500 is serious about organizing Target workers, the next phase of struggle—which has already begun, by its own account—will be a longer-term process of building consciousness and solidarity among workers at various Target stores in the area, as well as building links with other unions and community allies, including Target shoppers. Achieving recognition and a union contract may well require direct action—strike, boycott, or both - to push past the soul-draining deadlock of the NLRB “process.”
UFCW has initiated a formal NLRB review and now hopes to get a new vote following an enactment of proposed reforms that purport to make NLRB elections fairer and more efficient. That might make Target a testing ground for whether workers can really gain ground under the new procedures.
Meanwhile, far from the Valley Stream suburbs, the Big Box profit model takes an even more devastating (and hidden) toll on factory workers in "emerging" economies.
The U.S.-based advocacy group China Labor Watch implicated Target in a scathing new report on Chinese manufacturing plants tied to major U.S. chains. The group said excessive work hours, poor sanitation and possibly child labor plague a Target-affiliated plant in Dongguan. In a formal email response to China Labor Watch (later released by the group), Target said it was “taking these claims very seriously” and “reexamining [the company's] recent audit of the Dongguan factory.”
Another recent investigation by the Institute for Global Labour & Human Rights, alleged major abuses at the Jordan-based manufacturer Classic Brands, which churns out clothing for Target, WalMart and Macy's. The Institute reported that workers, mostly migrants from South Asia, were subjected to sexual abuse along with wage theft and prison-like living conditions. The organization called on Target and other companies not to “cut and run, which would only further punish the workers,” but rather “take immediate and concrete steps to clean up the Classic factories and guarantee that the legal rights of the workers will finally be respected.” Here, too, reported Huffington Post, Target said it was "taking these claims seriously."
These workers' struggles may seem worlds away from the labor battles at U.S. Target outlets. But store employees fighting to unionize should know they aren't just defending their local communities from a Big Box empire; they've fired a tiny opening shot on a global industrial battlefront.
Comments
Note: Disqus 2012 is best viewed on an up to date browser. Click here for information. Instructions for how to sign up to comment can be viewed here. Our Comment Policy can be viewed here. Please follow the guidelines. Note to Readers: Spam Filter May Capture Legitimate Comments...




11 Comments so far
Show AllI stopped shopping Target long ago when they outlawed bell ringers at Christmas time in front of their stores. That demonstrated to me that their only interest was ringing every last cent our of the customers, would you expect them to treat their employees any differently? I wouldn't.
Actually, that's one of the few good things Target ever did. Those bell-ringers work in the service of a homophobic organization.
Any day now our people's President will put on those famous walking shoes and show up at a picket line, won't he? Just like he did in Wisconsin, no? Most likely he and/or his Labor Secretary have been in consultation with Target executives offering to be helpful in any way they can. And if push ever comes to shove in any labor action, as it did in the 1930s, we all know that Obama will order out the troops on the side of thug capitalism. Every day this University of Chicago trained Obamanation shows by both his inactions and his actions what his actual character is. He has about has much empathy for the working and middle class as the Koch brothers.
There is no earthly reason why the Prz couldn't have gone to Wisconsin several times, over the past few months since the union busting legislation was proposed and passed. Could he not have visited the Dems who left Wisconsin in protest? What about personally supporting those Dems involved in the recall at least in those districts at risk? But then as soon as I ask the question 'Why didn't he....? All those OTHER 'why didn't he....' questions arise and the answer is the same in every case. The promise of supporting working class people was just a 'tell them what they want to hear to get elected' ploy...the reality is as we see it now....no support!
Just another Big Box to avoid, sigh.
"Big Box to avoid" contains a pretty obvious redundancy.
Add to a good story. But why the reference to Huffington Post? Wasn't this a story about anit working class abnormal Western savagery behavior?
I won't boycott Target until unions organize a boycott. If Target is playing unfair, publicize that fact and ask labor-friendly people to stay away from the chain. Just keeping away from Target without telling the company why has no effect whatsoever.
RE: "Just keeping away from Target without telling the company why has no effect whatsoever."
TELL THE COMPANY! Tell them in NO UNCERTAIN TERMS! Be a MYSTERY SHOPPER.
Go to Target. Get a big shopping basket and fill it to the brim. Wander all over the store and grab whatever looks interesting. THen, leave your (pre-written) letter to Target telling them that the stuff in the basket is what you WOULD HAVE purchased had they not been so anti-union/homophobic/prehistoric and then WALK OUT OF THE STORE. You have sent a message and you have cost Target money. You have created work for Target employees. All that stuff is not going to PUT ITSELF back in the right place. Target will have to pay SOMEBODY to replace it and that costs Target money. The employees will know that somebody is out there rooting for them and their working conditions.
BE A MYSTERY SHOPPER! ANYONE AND EVERYONE CAN DO IT!!!
(Works great for grocery stores using scabs during labor disputes. It is HILARIOUS to watch SCABS trying to figure out where the food goes.)
Target is simply Wal-Mart junior.
Regarding the introduction of food into these big box stores: this is the last area where they see any major growth potential.
But...
Having been an outside food vendor at both companies for many years, I would not suggest buying any perishable/ refridgerated/ frozen products from them. Their handling and pushing (stocking) procedures are too sloppy. They will stage all the new stock then just take their break while the items thaw, etc.
They also want it both ways: buying their merchandise at rock-bottom prices and not paying their employees sh1t...
Target will soon be opening 105 stores in Canada. I wouldn't be surprised to see them adopt the Walmart tactic of actually CLOSING stores in which the workforce votes to unionize. Walmart has already done this twice in Canada.
I never shop at Walmart as a result of these outrages, but unfortunately Target is taking over one of the last nationwide department store chains in the country so retail choices will become even more limited for the consumer.