Union Coordination Is Essential to Organizing Amazon

Unions have the resources to organize Amazon and are already working to do so. Building Amazon “labor tables” in key metro areas — regular meetings where unions agree to coordinate their efforts — will be crucial to advancing organizing efforts further.

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Amazon workers protest in front of an Amazon facility in the City of Industry, Los Angeles County, California, on December 19, 2024. (Zeng Hui / Xinhua via Getty Images)


The tentacles of the global logistics juggernaut Amazon reach into every corner of the economy, gripping the planet and workers. Amazon dominates retail e-commerce with a 40 percent market share. It is making major inroads into health care (One Medical), grocery (Whole Foods), Hollywood (Amazon Studios MGM), information technology (Amazon Web Services), and artificial intelligence.

Amazon’s operations are full of flash points for potential resistance. Its warehouses are rife with safety violations and record injury rates. Its web services collaborate with Immigration and Customs Enforcement agents, facilitating the Trump administration’s assault on workers and rights.

Its stranglehold includes sectors where workers have major leverage because they are key to the economy. Take international transport, where Amazon is now a Non-Vessel Operating Common Carrier, meaning it provides shipping services for customers without owning any ships. There has even been speculation that Amazon might seek to operate the Port of Pittsburg, California — upriver from Oakland — to bypass the power of the dockworkers in the Oakland Bay Area, and eventually have its own fleet of ships.

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