When Food Workers Rebel | Part 2 in a Series
Moderator’s Note: The struggle of the indigenous berry pickers in Washington State is capturing the attention of labor and working-class movements and organizers everywhere. It should. This is a historic strike and, now, boycott. It is the first farm worker strike in Western Washington conducted by workers without a formal union; this strike represents a pure form of worker direct self-organizing. It is the first strike in which the workers are not just demanding a fair living wage and better working and living conditions but are also asking for a direct role in the management of production. In a word, they are demanding workplace democracy. And this is the first strike in Washington State history organized and led by indigenous farm workers, in this case Triqui and Mixteco Mesoamerican diaspora workers. Given the state of the “labor” movement in this country – which faces a fifth decade of declining membership and withering political power – the self-organization of the w...