Facebook Instagram Twitter YouTube

Why Is It Taking So Damn Long to Get the Results of the Amazon Union Vote?

The last day for mail in-voting on unionization of the Amazon warehouse in Alabama was last Monday. So when will we know the results? The short-hand answer is… we don’t know.

Tatiana Cozzarelli

April 5, 2021
Facebook Twitter Share
AP Photo/Jay Reeves

For those of us watching closely, it’s like the 2020 election 2.0 — but this time without having to memorize every county of Pennsylvania.

While we don’t know when the results will be announced, we can explain why it’s taking so long and assess some of the possible scenarios.

5,800 ballots were sent out starting February 8 for the mail-in vote. Both full-time and part-time workers at the Amazon Fulfillment Center in Bessemer, Alabama were eligible to vote and the last votes were received on March 29.

Come to a panel with a Bessemer Amazon worker and Robin D.G. Kelly, author of Hammer and Hoe to discuss the results of the unionization vote. Sign up here.  Find the Facebook event here. 

Throughout the election period, Amazon led a vast and expensive anti-union campaign. Every day, workers were subject to countless anti-union meetings, text messages, and even threats. There were even anti-union signs in the bathrooms, yet there were no mechanisms for the union to get unhindered access to workers.

Counting the Votes

After two months of voting, the ballots were sent to the National Labor Relations Board to be counted in front of observers from Amazon and the Retail, Wholesale and Department Store Union. In the first step, the NLRB checks the names of everyone who voted against the official employee roll. Both sides are able to contest ballots and those challenged will be set aside.

Some of the reasons to contest ballots include that a person doesn’t work at the warehouse anymore or should not be included in the bargaining unit because of job classification or managerial responsibilities. Reuters reported that 19 people received ballots even though they no longer worked at Amazon.

Then the ballots will be counted: for and against the union. They are counted twice in batches of 100. Slate reports that if thousands of people voted, this process could take weeks. A simple majority of votes is needed to win the union. The NLRB has not released the number of ballots submitted, nor how many have been contested so far.

If the number of contested votes is high enough to change the final outcome, hearings may be held to have those votes counted. This would further delay results. Both sides would then argue their case for each ballot.

Is It Over When It’s Over? 

Even after the final results come out, the struggle for a union won’t be over. If the union wins, it’s likely that Amazon will file objections to the vote and a legal battle will ensue.

If the “no” votes prevail, the RWDSU will rightfully contest the election. Amazon, after all, used illegal measures to stop the unionization effort. In this case, the NLRB would schedule a hearing to decide if the results should be disregarded because the company “created an atmosphere of confusion or fear of reprisals” for workers. If that happens, the NLRB could demand that a new union recognition vote take place.

In this interim — and we have no idea how long it will last — Amazon workers should begin to organize protests and actions. The RWDSU should be on the front lines of this. If they lose the election, workers can and should force a new vote. If the workers do win union recognition, next comes the contract struggle and another brutal battle. So Amazon workers should begin to fight and organize now.

It Shouldn’t Be This Hard to Form a Union 

It shouldn’t be this arduous to form a union. The way the process works now, there are essentially two elections. Workers need to ratify a union twice: the first time signing up co-workers for a union petition, and then, weeks later, getting workers to certify the union. The extensive time between “going public” and actually ratifying the union gives bosses tons of time to interfere with the vote and hire law firms that specialize in union-busting. And the bosses rarely even try to be sneaky or secretive about their union-busting tactics. It’s all out in the open because the penalties are meager. For the bosses, illegal anti-union activities are just good business.

The PRO Act is a start in the struggle against repressive anti-union measures. The proposed law would ban the anti-union captive-audience meetings Amazon used to bully and harass workers, and would also dramatically shorten the time between a unionization petition and the vote. The PRO Act would be a step forward. But as is true throughout history, reforms are not handed to the working class, they must be won through active struggle — mass protests and even strikes. Unions and the working class as a whole will need to actively participate in the struggle to win these reforms, not passively hope that Biden will pass them.

It should be easy to form a union. Every worker should have the democratic right to be part of one. The Amazon example and the long wait for the results only highlight the difficulties of unionizing in the United States today.

Facebook Twitter Share

Tatiana Cozzarelli

Tatiana is a former middle school teacher and current Urban Education PhD student at CUNY.

Labor Movement

Let’s Make a Historic May Day for This Historic Moment

As encampments for Palestine are being organized all over the country, it is essential for us to heed the call of Palestinian labor unions and mobilize on May Day. We must unite workers and students in a movement against the genocide, against repression, and for a free Palestine.

Tatiana Cozzarelli

April 28, 2024
SANDWICH, ENGLAND - OCTOBER 26: Activists protesting against the bombing of Gaza blockade the entrance to the Instro Precision factory which is linked to the Israeli owned Elbit systems company on October 26, 2023 in Sandwich, England. Instro Precision is a subsidiary of Elbit Systems, an Israeli military contractor whose UK companies have been frequent target for activists.

Our Unions Can Tip the Balance for the Campus Palestine Revolt

Unions are starting to join students in the fight for Palestine. Rank and filers can organize our unions to join the encampments, strike for Palestine --- and push our leaders to throw their full support behind us.

Jason Koslowski

April 28, 2024
a group of health care workers hold signs including a banner that says "Healthcare workers for the people of Palestine."

Healthcare Workers Need to Defend the Gaza Solidarity Encampments

As Israel’s genocide continues, student encampaments have started popping up throughout the U.S. in solidarity with the people of Palestine. Healthcare workers should mobilize nationally to defend students and help massify the movement.

Mike Pappas

April 27, 2024
Texas State Troopers on horseback work to disperse pro-Palestinian students protesting the Israel-Hamas war on the campus of the University of Texas in Austin on Wednesday April 24.

Faculty at University of Texas Austin Strike in Solidarity with Student Protesters

Pro-Palestine movements on college campuses are facing harsh repression, and faculty across the nation are taking action in solidarity. At UT Austin, faculty are the first to call a strike in solidarity with their repressed students. More faculty across the country must follow suit.

Olivia Wood

April 25, 2024

MOST RECENT

Echoes of Resilience: Even Beyond Gaza Palestinian Families Are Torn Apart

A nurse from Nablus in the West Bank talks about how the war has affected work and even in vitro fertilization.

Four masked protesters drop a banner that reads "Hind's Hall" over the balcony of Hamilton Hall at Columbia University

Columbia Students Occupy Hamilton Hall — Down with Repression and for Full Divestment and Amnesty

Early Tuesday morning, student activists at Columbia University began occupying a building on campus. It is vital to fight with these students against repression and for full divestment and amnesty.

Left Voice

April 30, 2024

Dispatch from the Rutgers Encampment for Palestine

A report from a pro-Palestine union teacher at Rutgers.

Jason Koslowski

April 29, 2024
A flagpole in the Gaza Solidarity encampment with Palestine flags, a sign that reads "free gaza, CUNY" and a sign in the center that read "Harlem University, est. 1969, re-est. 2024, Free Palestine, Divest Now"

CUNY Students Occupy Campus in Solidarity with Palestine, Building on the University’s Legacy of Radical Organizing

Students at the City College of New York have a vibrant history of protests and occupations. This week’s Gaza Solidarity Encampment explicitly references and honors that legacy.

Olivia Wood

April 27, 2024