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May Day is a reminder that solidarity must defy borders

May Day is a reminder that solidarity must defy borders
136 years since the first May Day when hundreds of thousands took part in a general strike in the US, Liam Kennedy reflects on workers resisting around the world today, and argues that solidarity between movements must be built across borders.
5 min read
30 Apr, 2022
Exploitation of workers by companies like Amazon is multinational, the resistance against it must also be built across borders [Getty]

It feels appropriate to start a commemoration of May Day where it began – in the United States. 136 years after the processions in 1886, the US is experiencing a new wave of labour militancy. In the space of a few months, have successfully unionised 41 stores across 15 states, with dozens more in the process of voting over the coming weeks.

At the same time, Amazon workers at a warehouse in Staten Island, New York, made history by voting in favour of the newly formed Amazon Labor Union. The site became the first () union in Amazon’s history. After official results were announced, Chris Smalls, ALU’s temporary president “for going to space because while he was up there we were organising a union.”

Pandemic inequalities

Smalls’ comment really speaks to the wider political and economic moment. The ongoing Covid-19 pandemic has inevitably exacerbated pre-existing inequalities. Recent notes that the world’s ten richest men doubled their wealth throughout the pandemic. The numbers are barely comprehensible, increasing their wealth at a rate of $15,000 per second, and pouring the proceeds into various obscenities: , and in Bezos’ case, rampant .

Meanwhile the pandemic put a halt to annual declines in extreme poverty, with (less than US $1.90) in 2020 than the previous year. Obviously these impacts are spread unequally. Those in low and middle-income countries, typically without robust and who are dependent on, for example, , are among the most severely impacted. In fact, the , report that the number of extreme working poor – people in work but earning less than $1.90 a day – increased by 8 million in 2020.

Voices

Of course, these two trends are intimately related.Ìę Huge corporations squeeze suppliers who, in turn, squeeze desperate workers in more ‘informal’ labour markets. Let’s take the example of Amazon, who not only rely on , but increasingly outsource ‘microwork’ to those in the Global South.

The platform allows workers across the Global South to perform sporadic data labelling tasks which Amazon then use as the bedrock for artificial intelligence systems back in the Global North. As , “so for a penny you might pay someone to tell you if there is a human in a photo.” And, of course there is no might about it, the workers – in , , – are getting pennies.

Karen Hao has argued that these dynamics represent which is, in her words, “impoverishing the same communities and countries already impoverished by former colonial empires.” is evident but these multinational forms of exploitation pose questions for unions and organisers everywhere. How, for instance, to connect the increasing labour militancy in the Global North to the workers ostracised and invisibilised in the Global South?

A climate-inflected reality

Ultimately any global labour movement needs to be informed by what Sharad Lele has called the . That is the simultaneous need to mitigate the worst impacts of climate change and live within planetary boundaries whilst also allowing countries who have not yet ‘developed’ the material inputs necessary to do so (and in the process, lift billions out of poverty). The fact that Earth is “firmly on track toward an unlivable world”, as the , is evidence enough of the need for this framing.

So what to do? For the Global North, , a movement to decarbonise through as quickly as possible is paramount. Recognition that work in carbon-intensive industries must be wound down but also that work in and of itself can lock people into environmentally unsustainable lifestyles. As such, the movement for post work and all that that entails (productivity gains passed to workers through , , a genuine social safety net etc
) must be taken seriously.

Perspectives

It is worth reiterating that not all those in rich countries are equally responsible for excessive resource use. Nor is post work a viable option for the millions of workers in these contexts who are on zero-hours contracts, insecure contracts and / or on poverty pay. The struggle for better work where necessary obviously continues. The struggle for less work where possible should be framed as part of the Global North owes to the Global South.Ìę

Onwards

Connecting these industrial demands to wider political movements is the only route to an economic system that can provide a decent life for all on a sustainable planet. And, as we celebrate May Day, resistance to the status quo is . From the UK where , to Sri Lanka where unions are leading . From platform workers resisting , to Sudanese trade unions to bring about regime change.

that to be progressive is to “start with the edges” and be “aware of what’s on the horizon.” For the cause of labour to truly be the hope of the world, we must do just that: build solidarities and movements across borders, learn from each other, connect the dots of shared struggles.

As Justine Medina, Amazon organiser in Staten Island, , “do not be afraid to fight, to get as dirty as the bosses will. Use every tool in your toolbox. Protest. Keep building.”

Liam Kennedy is a researcher at the Communication Workers Union (CWU) and an editor at Red Pepper magazine.

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Have questions or comments? Email us at: editorial-english@alaraby.co.uk.

Opinions expressed in this article remain those of the author and do not necessarily represent those of °źÂț”ș, its editorial board or staff.

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