In this episode of Labor Force Podcast, we break down a turbulent moment for workers’ rights in America—where real gains are colliding with aggressive rollbacks, corporate greed, and an economy that looks strong on paper while millions struggle to get by.
We start with developments in Washington, where the House passes the Protect America’s Workforce Act, aiming to restore collective bargaining rights stripped from federal workers in previous administrations. From there, we head to Utah, where massive protests force lawmakers to repeal one of the most restrictive public-sector bargaining bans in the country—proof that sustained pressure still works.
But for every step forward, there’s a reminder of what workers are up against. New York’s attorney general sues UPS over alleged wage theft targeting seasonal workers. TSA leadership moves once again to eliminate collective bargaining for nearly 50,000 security officers. At the federal level, the NLRB is effectively paralyzed, leaving union elections and labor complaints stuck in legal limbo while corporations run out the clock.
We also look at the fightback: Starbucks baristas risking arrest on picket lines, Teamsters at Sysco winning a historic first regional contract with major wage and benefit gains, and video game workers protesting mass layoffs and AI-driven job cuts at the Game Awards.
Zooming out, we examine the broader economic reality—over a million layoffs in 2025, booming stock markets, rising debt, and a middle class increasingly forced to rely on credit just to survive. As automation and AI accelerate, the old promise that hard work leads to stability is rapidly eroding.
We close with a reminder that solidarity doesn’t end at the workplace—especially during the holidays. In a season marked by economic strain and uncertainty, taking care of ourselves and each other remains an act of resistance.
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