Marco Rubio Backs Amazon Workers’ Unionization Drive

Marco Rubio Backs Amazon Workers’ Unionization Drive

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Senator Marco Rubio (R., Fla.) departs after House impeachment managers rested their case in the impeachment trial of former President Donald Trump on Capitol Hill in Washington, D.C., February 11, 2021. (Joshua Roberts/Reuters)

Senator Marco Rubio (R., Fla.) is backing Amazon workers’ attempt to unionize in the city of Bessemer, Ala., in an op-ed published Friday morning in USA Today.

Rubio came out in support of the unionization attempt at a massive Amazon distribution facility in the city. Portions of the op-ed also appeared in Axios on Friday morning.

“[T]he days of conservatives being taken for granted by the business community are over,” Rubio writes. “I stand with [workers] at Amazon’s Bessemer warehouse.”

The senator added that one of his “earliest political memories was marching the picket line with my dad in a Culinary Workers Union strike when he worked as a hotel bartender.”

“Our laws,” Rubio writes, “should help build more productive relationships between labor and businesses, the vast majority of which treat their employees with dignity and want to work cooperatively with them.”

Rubio is among a number of Republicans, including Senator Josh Hawley (R., Mo.), who have embraced a “pro-worker” conservatism in the wake of President Trump’s 2016 victory and subsequent defeat.

“We must…embrace a pro-American capitalism—one that promotes the common good, as opposed to one that prioritizes Wall Street and Beijing—and become a patriotic, pro-worker party that fights for dignified work, strong families, and vibrant communities,” Rubio said in December 2020.

The Bessemer unionization attempt, the largest in Amazon’s history, is taking place with a mail-in vote comprising roughly 6,000 workers, begun in February and continuing through the end of March. The attempt is being organized by the Retail, Wholesale and Department Store Union.

“When Amazon and Jeff Bezos looked at Bessemer, they saw one of the poorest cities in the state of Alabama,” Michael Foster, an organizer for RWDSU, told The Los Angeles Times on Thursday. “What they failed to uncover is that this was a union city of steelworkers and coal mine workers. … These people know about unions, even though this is a red state.”

Alabama is a right-to-work state where workers are not required to pay union dues.

Send a tip to the news team at NR.

Zachary Evans is a news writer for National Review Online. He is a veteran of the Israeli Defense Forces and a trained violist.



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Marco Rubio Backs Amazon Workers' Unionization Drive

 

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