Sanders Pushes Workers to Organize as Advocates Celebrate “Year of the Worker”

As labor advocates hail 2021 as the “year of the worker,” Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-Vermont) is encouraging workers to maintain the momentum by using their collective leverage to organize.

On Wednesday, Sanders warned corporations and executives via Twitter. “For the ruling class, greed is a religion. They will cut back on workers’ wages, on workers’ benefits, on workers’ safety on the job — all for the sake of having more, more, more,” he wrote. “I’ve got news for the ruling class: you cannot have it all. The working class is fighting back.”

Sanders’s statements come at the end of a consequential year for the labor movement. Over 100,000 workersWith authorization strikes this year John Deere employees, Kellogg, more – along with health care workers across the country – securing wins in contract negotiations with employers. The workers organized in solidarity against anti-union retaliation by companies like Amazon Starbucks, which have employed illegal union-busting tactics in response to workers’ demands.

Sanders has repeatedly celebrated this year’s major labor moves – and on Thursday, he once again encouraged employees to organize their workplaces. “It’s true that corporate profits have never been higher. And still, they want more,” he said. “But there is another more important truth: there are a lot more of us than there are of them. Now is the best time to organize. Now is the time to end their greed.”

Sanders rallied with striking workers as the labor movement experienced a roaring revival in 2021. In November, he sent a message to them. pizza and a donationTo strike Kellogg employees and They joined them in Battle Creek (Michigan).During the 11th week during their strike. He also Buffalo Starbucks workers were praised when they formed the company’s first-ever union, and John Deere was slammedIt took drastic measures to end the strike of 10,000 workers.

This week, Sanders sent a letter to billionaire Warren Buffett asking him to compel executives to offer a fair contract to workers in a manufacturing plant owned by Buffett’s company, Berkshire Hathaway. Since October 1, nearly 450 workers in the metal manufacturing industry at Precision Castparts, Huntington, West Virginia, have been on strike for almost three months.

The workers, who make specialty parts used in aircrafts and other equipment, say that they’re pushing for better working conditions, health care and wages – but that the length of the strike has been taking its toll.

The union expects to be back at the bargaining table next Wednesday. Chad Thompson, president United Steelworkers Local 40 union said The Associated Press that the company hasn’t been negotiating in good faith, and that the union would be open to agreeing to a fair contract. But “we don’t think they’re even being in the ballpark of fair,” Thompson said.

Sanders condemned the company’s treatment of its workers. “At a time when this company and Berkshire Hathaway are both doing very well, there is no reason why workers employed by you should be worrying about whether they will be able to feed their children or have health care,” Sanders wrote to Buffett. The senator then asked the billionaire to intervene in negotiations and to present an offer to workers that is better than the ones they’ve previously rejected.

“There is no reason why the standard of living of these hard working Americans should decline. I know that you and Berkshire Hathaway can do better than that,” Sanders continued.

Buffett rejected Sanders’s request. “Our companies deal individually with their own labor and personnel,” he wrote back.

According to ForbesBuffett is the eighth-richest person in the world. $109.3 billion in wealth. Like other billionaires in the U.S.His fortune has only grown in the years since the pandemic started; per Bloomberg, Buffett’s wealth has increased by$21.4 billion alone this year