“What Is Salting, the Organizing Tactic Spicing Up the Labor Movement?” [Kim Kelly,
Teen Vogue].
“The resurgence of the American labor movement is being led in no small
part by a cohort of young, diverse, fired-up workers around the
country. Union density remains embarrassingly low overall, but last
month the National Labor Relations Board, or NLRB, released some
genuinely inspiring numbers that suggest the perceived upswing in union
activity is more than just a vibe. During the 2024 fiscal year, which
ended in September, the number of union petitions filed jumped 27%
compared with 2023 — and was more than double what the agency received
in 2021. Why does this matter? Basically, filing these petitions is a
concrete sign that more people are trying to unionize their workplaces…
This new generation of organizers is embracing all sorts of strategies,
including one of the oldest tactics in the pro-union handbook: salting.
Salting is an organizing tactic in which a person gets a job at a
specific workplace with the goal of unionizing their coworkers. This
kind of shop-floor organizing has a long history within the labor
movement, and was once so common it was thoroughly unremarkable; if you
were a young worker with socialist or progressive ideas in, say, the
early 1900s, it was the most normal thing in the world to start talking
to your coworkers about unionizing as soon as you’d learned their
names.” • It’s great that Teen Vogue has a labor beat, but why only Teen
Vogue? quote from
nakedcapitalism.com