Journalists at the left-wing Washington Post walked off the job to begin a 24-hour strike Thursday while issuing a plea to the general public for support.
The striking employees have planned a picket and rally outside the Post’s downtown Washington office to bring attention to their cause.
In the process they have asked the general public to observe a simple request: do not read the newspaper or website for the duration of the industrial action, the Hill reports.
As Breitbart News reported, the strike at the far-left outlet comes after 18 months of failed talks to reach a new deal covering pay, remote work, and other conditions — and after the daily, owned by Amazon founder Jeff Bezos, warned more layoffs were possible.
File/The news of billionaire Jeff Bezos buying the Express newspaper, a publication of the Washington Post, is displayed on the front page in Washington, D.C., U.S., on Tuesday, Aug. 6, 2013. Amazon.com Inc. Chief Executive Officer Bezos agreed to buy the Washington Post for $250 million. (Andrew Harrer/Bloomberg via Getty)
The Post’s correspondents’ video, which gives their side of the dispute, includes employees recounting they had risked their lives and covered wars, a global pandemic and news on all subjects, from the hyperlocal to the global.
Ultimately the staffers argue such dedication does not come cheap and maintain they deserve “fair pay and a transparent pay process.”
“I’m worth a living wage, I’m worth raises that keep up with inflation. I’m worth equal pay to my colleagues, regardless of my race or gender. I’m worth job protections that value my years of service,” multiple employees are seen saying in the video.
Workers @washingtonpost have been in contract negotiations with our bosses for 18 months.
— Washington Post Guild (@PostGuild) December 5, 2023
But the company is refusing to pay us what we’re worth or bargain in good faith.
So on Dec. 7, we’re walking off the job for 24 hours. pic.twitter.com/GCraL1I0nm
The company has made clear it will be able to print and deliver its newspapers as normal Thursday and Friday, the Hill report confirms.
Sarah Kaplan, chief steward and bargaining committee member for the guild, has indicated she expects editors will “still try to get a paper out” Thursday but they can’t “get a good paper out without us.”
Even so, potential readers have been asked to ignore the paper and not visit the online site.
The company is projected to take a $100 million loss by the end of 2023.