Disgruntled Wal-Mart workers are mounting strikes and protests over poor pay and mistreatment at the world’s largest retailer, threatening the coming Black Friday peak shopping day.
Walmart store and warehouse workers began walking off the job on Wednesday, in California and Washington state, to protest the company’s efforts to silence workers seeking better pay and benefits, a workers group said.
Protests will hit 1,000 Wal-Mart stores leading up to and on Black Friday, November 23, the Organization United for Respect at Wal-Mart (OUR Walmart) had said in a statement yesterday.
The campaign will hit cities from Chicago and Los Angeles to Dallas and Miami, and include rallies, flash mobs and online actions “to inform customers about the illegal actions that Wal-Mart has been taking against its employees’’.
It was not clear how many people would take part in the labour action; Wal-Mart’s workers do not belong to unions and the company has long been an opponent of allowing them to do so.
The labour action comes after Wal-Mart Stores announced last week that it would move up its Black Friday sales to Thursday, Thanksgiving Day, one of Americans’ most cherished and family-focused holidays.
Special in-store discount events will start at 8:00 pm (0100 GMT Friday) on November 22, while “customers can get a jump start on shopping” starting early on Thanksgiving Day, Wal-Mart said.
Last year the discount chain opened for the first time at 10:00 pm on Thanksgiving, along with other retailers that pushed the annual sales frenzy earlier to get a jump on the competition.
Black Friday, the day after Thanksgiving, is the traditional kickoff to the year-end holiday shopping season and is considered crucial for retailers’ annual earnings.
Wal-Mart worker Charlene Fletcher said she was dismayed to find out both she and her husband Greg, also a Wal-Mart employee, were scheduled to work on Thanksgiving instead of being home with their two young children.
“It’s heartbreaking to miss the holiday with them, and it’s just one more way that Wal-Mart is showing its disregard for our families,” Fletcher, an OUR Walmart leader from Duarte, California, said in the statement.
“But when our co-workers speak out about problems like these, Wal-Mart turns their schedules upside down, cuts their hours and even fires people.
“We’re going on strike for an end to Wal-Mart’s attempts to silence its workers.”