Sign up to our newsletter and become a Club Huck member.

Stay informed with the cutting edge of sport, music and counterculture

Why we should all support the Fast Food Strike

Stand together — Companies like McDonalds, Deliveroo and UberEats need to learn how to treat their workers, argues Dawn Foster. Collective action is the only way to teach them.

Don’t go to McDonald’s today. Don’t go to Wetherspoons either. Most people probably won’t go to TGI Fridays anyway, but if you’re at home and contemplating a takeaway, don’t use Deliveroo or UberEats.

Rather than being a food snob, I’m encouraging you not to cross a picket line today, of the low paid workers in these establishments. The bar staff, cooks, couriers and waiting staff are demanding £10 an hour from their well-remunerated bosses, working with the IWW union, a punchy and agile union that specialises in organising workers in roles that have been designed specifically to make union organisation and recognition hard.

Zero hours contracts are exploitative in so many ways, but trying to organise a union branch in organisations where they’re rife is intensely difficult. The employers using them know this. The most obvious aspect is money: if your wages ebb and flow with little opportunity to predict when you’ll be skint and when you’ll be comparatively flush, paying monthly subs to your union can become impossible. In the past, I’ve cancelled my union membership three times, because the choice was between that direct debit going out, or me eating that week.

The more insidious part is how zero hours contracts affect social solidarity and camaraderie. As a teenager, I worked in a large supermarket chain on a zero hours contract. On our first day, we were bored into a coma by the induction videos, then a very intense man from human resources told us, as he was legally mandated to do, that there was a recognised union in the supermarket but – crucially – there was also a company-run ‘jobs club’ where we could come to catered meetings and give ‘job feedback.’ This option was £3 a month cheaper than the union.

'If we don't get it, SHUT IT DOWN!' as McDonald's workers in Brixton strike for £10/Hr and a union #FastfoodGlobal #McStrike #FFS410 pic.twitter.com/njSJ5UvTlH

— The McStrike! (@FastfoodRights) October 4, 2018

Naturally I joined the union, aghast at this naked union-busting and astounded they offered to charge people to complain about their jobs. But plenty of people with less knowledge of the structures of unions doubtless signed up, paying part of their minimum wage earnings to a company that were cynically stiffing them.

Then came the rotas: with no guaranteed hours, bosses were free to choose who to dole hours out to. A group of us were hired as seasonal staff before Christmas, and it was immediately obvious they had chosen to hire more people than they needed. I was a hard worker, and got on with my managers easily. Another guy was a little socially awkward and slower to pick up the routines and company procedures, clumsy in his dealings with customers. One woman had a three-year-old child, and was late once, and shortly after had to cancel a shift when her childminder was ill. A woman I’d gone to school with had a habit of being late. Within weeks, these workers found their name appearing on fewer and fewer shifts. One woman slightly older than me saw the power dynamics at play in the tyranny of the rota, and went out of her way to draw the managers’ attention to latecomers, and ratting out anyone who made an error, purely in the hope of scooping up more shifts by depriving others of the opportunity.

These occurrences were a feature, not a bug: mooted as a way of improving flexibility for both the employer and employee, zero hours contracts deliberately leave you entirely at the mercy of your managers’ whims. Increasing precocity in the workforce, through the shift from contracted employment to false self-employment, leaves you dependent on a good relationship with your manager. That, in turn, means not complaining about pay and conditions, or the fact you’re deprived of sick, holiday and maternity pay, and pension contributions, because your boss has claimed you’re self-employed. The atomisation of work leaves you feeling isolated and increases your fear and risk of not earning enough.

#Breaking Wetherspoons workers have walked out on STRIKE! TGI Fridays, McDonald’s, Uber Eats and Deliveroo couriers are on strike today too. Pls RT this video & show solidarity with workers demanding £10/hr & a union. #FFS410 #SpoonStrike #McStrike #AllEyesOnTGIs #FastFoodGlobal pic.twitter.com/xQtUXne1nw

— War on Want (@WarOnWant) October 4, 2018

The only solution is to work together. Young people in particular are pushed onto these dreadful contracts, and for years the Conservatives have trashed trades union powers in the hope of stopping action. Stories of how abysmal conditions are in Amazon distribution centres abound, the working conditions of couriers are appalling, and the stories of life in Sports Direct warehouses defy belief, so quasi-Victorian are they.

These companies aren’t struggling, they’re revelling in vast profit margins, and Jeff Bezos has more money than he knows what to do with. They could pay more and see little to no change in their profit margins. But they won’t unless they are forced to do so by collective action, and the workers refusing to put up with poor conditions.

Amazon this week announced they were raising wages for employees in their warehouses. This only came about because of a concerted and hard-fought campaign to get better pay and conditions and union recognition.

Younger generations are shafted often by the contractual conditions and poor wage growth the government have allowed to flourish, and isolated by the stress and nature of working life now. New unions like the IWW are fighting back, and showing that solidarity and working together works far better than individual lobbying for more cash and a better quality of work.

So don’t cross a picket line in McDonalds today (or ever cross a picket line in your life), skip the Deliveroo for tea, and join a union, or work to get one recognised in your workplace. It’ll annoy your boss more than a prank – and really, isn’t that all anyone wants to do?

Dawn Foster is a journalist based in London. Follow her on Twitter.

Enjoyed this article? Like Huck on Facebook or follow us on Twitter.


You might like

Outsiders Project

As salmon farming booms, Icelanders size up an existential threat

Seyðisfjörður — The industry has seen huge growth in recent years, with millions of fish being farmed in the Atlantic Ocean. But who benefits from its commercial success, and what does it mean for the ocean? Phil Young ventures to the remote country to find out.

Written by: Phil Young

Activism

Activists hack London billboards to call out big tech harm

Tax Big Tech: With UK youth mental health services under strain, guerrilla billboards across the capital accuse social media companies of profiting from a growing crisis.

Written by: Ella Glossop

Activism

In photos: The boys of the Bibby Stockholm

Bibby Boys — A new exhibition by Theo McInnes and Thomas Ralph documents the men who lived on the three-story barge in Dorset, giving them the chance to control their own narrative. 

Written by: Thomas Ralph

Activism

‘We’re going to stop you’: House Against Hate tap Ben UFO, Greentea Peng and Shygirl for anti-far right protest

R3 Soundsystem — It takes place on March 28 in London’s Trafalgar Square, with a huge line-up of DJs, artists and crews named on the line-up.

Written by: Ella Glossop

Activism

In photos: Lebanon’s women against a backdrop of war

Where Do I Go? لوين روح — As war breaks out in the Middle East once again, we spotlight Rania Matar’s powerful new photobook, which empowers women of her home country through portraiture.

Written by: Miss Rosen

Culture

Clavicular isn’t interesting, really

Dreaming Small — The ‘looksmaxxer’ of the moment has garnered widespread furore over recent controversies. But newsletter columnist Emma Garland asks whether the 20-year-old influencer is actually doing anything that new, and what his rise says about modern turbo-nostalgia’s internet dominance.

Written by: Emma Garland

Huck is supported by our readers, subscribers and Club Huck members.

You've read articles this month Thanks for reading

Join Club Huck — it's free!

Valued Huck reader, thank you for engaging with our journalism and taking an interest in our dispatches from the sharp edge of culture, sport, music and rebellion.

We want to offer you the chance to join Club Huck [it's free!] where you will receive exclusive newsletters, including personal takes on the state of pop culture and media from columnist Emma Garland, culture recommendations, interviews and dispatches straight to your inbox.

You'll also get priority access to Huck events, merch discounts, and more fun surprises.

Already part of the club? Enter your email above and we'll get you logged in.

Accessibility Settings

Text

Applies the Open Dyslexic font, designed to improve readability for individuals with dyslexia.

Applies a more readable font throughout the website, improving readability.

Underlines links throughout the website, making them easier to distinguish.

Adjusts the font size for improved readability.

Visuals

Reduces animations and disables autoplaying videos across the website, reducing distractions and improving focus.

Reduces the colour saturation throughout the website to create a more soothing visual experience.

Increases the contrast of elements on the website, making text and interface elements easier to distinguish.