Walmart workers plan more strikes, demonstrations

Opening a new front in their long campaign to improve Walmart, the “Walmart moms,” members of the employee group Our Walmart, are taking on the company’s chairman and namesake, Rob Walton.

And their demands, including a shareholder resolution by the Teamsters calling for an independent chairman at the giant retailer, have enthusiastic backing of the nation’s unions.

The moms are part of a larger movement of workers conducting an inside campaign to force Walmart to raise its notoriously low pay, improve its bad benefits, give its workers full-time 40-hour-a-week jobs with set schedules and end retaliation against workers who speak out.

The moms and their allies will be part of a demonstration at the anti-worker retailer’s shareholders meeting in Bentonville in the first week of June. Walmart workers, members of Our Walmart, also plan strikes at stores nationwide. A separate group of Walmart Moms will picket in front of Rob Walton’s mansion in Phoenix. And the moms will have institutional muscle behind them.

Several unions, including the Teamsters, the UAW’s Voluntary Employees Benefits Association – which runs the health insurance for its GM and Chrysler workers – and the Change To Win investment group, filed shareholder resolutions for Walmart’s meeting. And Institutional Shareholder Services recommends that mutual funds vote to force Rob Walton out of his chair and for the Teamsters’ move to have an independent chair instead.

Some Of Us, an online mobilizer, gathered 17,000 names on petitions for the same causes, which include Change To Win’s challenge to Walmart’s executive pay. It sent the petitions to two big mutual funds, Vanguard and Fidelity, that hold Walmart stock.

The moms contrast their pay with the hordes of cash Walton reaps. They also make the point that they’re the workers who make Walmart go, that they want to see the company do better, and that the way to achieve that is to pay them a decent living wage of $25,000 yearly, with better benefits, for a full 40-hour predictable workweek.

 “Our goal is to make sure that when people are working hard, they should be able to provide for their families,” said Ellen Bravo, longtime leader of the women’s movement’s 9to5. “Many policies in the workplace, including at Walmart, are set in the old era” of working dads and stay-at-home moms, added Bravo, now executive director of Family Values At Work.

 “Large profitable companies like Walmartt are at the center of the struggle of working families,” Bravo said during a press conference with members of the Walmart Moms. At the retailer, the workers “are creating $16 billion in profits and $144 billion in wealth” for the Walton family, the firm’s owners, “while the Walmart moms earn less than $25,000 a year.”

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