Why are tech workers striking? Because they are being exploited, and the law isn’t helping.
New Industrial Revolution
Comparing the plight of workers in modern-day Europe and the U.S. to workers during the Industrial Revolution is stretching things, but there are parallels. Back then, laws made it illegal for workers to come together and protest working conditions or anything else. “For the most parts, trade unions still work on the model of the ‘shop floor’—where people work in an environment with fixed boundaries, with a largely static workforce,” Anindya Raychaudhuri, lecturer in English at the University of St. Andrews, writes for the Huffington Post. “Trade unions are ill-equipped to represent the worker on multiple zero-hour contracts, moving from one site to another, working for multiple employers at the same time, and getting stability from none.”
Gig Economy Divide and Conquer
The gig economy thrives on the “divide and conquer” principle. An Uber driver is classed, by Uber, as a self-employed contractor, with none of the usual employee protections such as minimum wage, health benefits, or paid vacation time. That’s a clear short-term economic benefit for the employer, but even better for the likes of Uber is that these workers cannot organize. If you’re scraping a living with several low-paying gigs, then you don’t have time to fight for your rights. And if you try, you’ll either be fired, or your work will mysteriously dry up.
Prop 22
In November 2020, California passed Proposition 22, which let gig employers continue to classify their employees as contract workers. The proposition was financed by Uber, which contributed $200 million, along with money from Lyft, DoorDash, Instacart, and others. This exempts these companies from having basic employment rights and protections, like a minimum wage, unemployment insurance, paid sick leave, unemployment insurance, and everything else you get from a regular job. “Billionaire corps just hijacked the ballot measure system in CA by spending millions to mislead voters,” writes the campaign Gig Workers Rising on Twitter. “The most expensive ballot measure in U.S. history, is a loss for our democracy that could open the door to other attempts by corps to write their own laws” [emphasis added]. Back in the birthplace of unions, Britain, this attempt to circumvent employment law hasn’t gone down so well. In October 2016, Uber drivers in the U.K. won the right to be classed as employees. The tribunal concluded that “the notion that Uber in London is a mosaic of 30,000 small businesses linked by a common ‘platform’ is to our minds faintly ridiculous,” stating what is obvious to any normal person looking at the situation.
Union Pushback
Unions are a way of people working together to empower themselves against otherwise too-powerful entities, and those entities do not like it. One person I contacted about attempts to unionize the workforce at their place of work refused to talk, because of tensions between employees and management. If the threat of unions wasn’t apparent, Uber’s $200 million contribution to prevent workers uniting in California makes it obvious. And the law needs to change. Even if gig workers are classified as contractors, shouldn’t they still be able to unionize? The answer seems obvious to the workers themselves, but without working together, we have little power to change anything.