Los Angeles Times

Labor unions are hot, but their moment may not last

Ed Markey speaks to Airport Workers, SEIU Members and supporters rally and demand a Bill Establishing National Legislation for higher wagers and benefits for workers at the US Capitol on May 12, 2022, in Washington, DC.

WASHINGTON — American labor leaders see this as a moment for radical change: Workers in Starbucks coffee shops and Amazon warehouses are rising up and demanding representation. Polls show millions more support unions or wish they had the chance to join them. President Biden, with majorities in both chambers of Congress, wants to lead the most pro-union administration since Franklin D. Roosevelt.

“There’s a great reckoning and workers have had it,” said Mary Kay Henry, president of the Service Employees International Union, one of the largest and most influential unions.

Yet even as experts acknowledge the newfound excitement around labor, they caution that unions, which have suffered decades of declining membership, are unlikely to turn the tide. Unions’ moment of opportunity could already be slipping away.

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