Facebook Instagram Twitter YouTube

ARGENTINA: Action in Solidarity with PepsiCo Workers

PepsiCo workers, students, and other sectors of the working class blocked a road in the center of Buenos Aires as part of the fight against the firing 600 PepsiCo workers.

Mira Craig-Morse

July 5, 2017
Facebook Twitter Share

Support PepsiCo workers today by signing this PETITION. Also, help Left Voice send a delegation to Argentina this August! A portion of your donations will go toward the workers’ fight for their jobs against the US-based multinational. You can send photos with a message of solidarity for PepsiCo workers to [email protected]

While Americans prepared to celebrate another 4th of July, workers and supporters gathered for a different kind of celebration in downtown Buenos Aires. Workers, educators, intellectuals, students and political representatives came armed with signs, layers against the morning chill, and thermoses for seemingly endless cups of yerba mate to show solidarity with workers from PepsiCo whose factory in the north of the capital was closed last month. The multinational, PepsiCo, produces products such as Pepsi, Lay’s, Quaker, Dorito, Starbuck’s Ready-to-Drink, 7UP, Cheetos, Aquafina, Mountain Dew, Gatorade and Tropicana.

pepsio_7.jpg
Don’t buy PepsiCo products.

Despite a lack of support from the union leaders, the workers voted in an assembly to fight against the multinational company and are currently occupying the PepsiCo plant. With all of the money and political powers against them, the workers are gaining popular support among the Argentine population as well as among the working class in Argentina and around the world.

pepsico_5.jpg

A significant crowd had already formed by the time the first light of the day began to glow against the white obelisk in the Plaza de la República. At 8am, the crowd spilled across the sprawling intersection, forcing motorcyclists to weave through the edges of the protest and cars to wait patiently (or not-so-patiently) for traffic police to guide them to a different route.

An enthusiastic and positive attitude emanated throughout the crowd of supporters. Reporters from local and national press snapped photos of political representatives, mostly from the socialist electoral coalition, El Frente de Izquierda y Los Trabajadores (The Left and the Workers’ Front), who joined the leaders of the action in the front, carrying large banners condemning PepsiCo, Argentinian President Macri and Rodolfo Daer, the absent and unsupportive leader of the food industry union.

pepsico_2.jpg

Riot police blocked several possible routes for the group to march, one of which led to the National Ministry of Labor, where the group aimed to end their action, leading the protesters to direct their march instead in a circle around the Obelisk. Several vans, two full-sized buses and an armored vehicle parked at the edge of the action brought riot police pouring single-file into the street, lining the edges of the action. They wielded batons, shields and, in some cases, canisters of tear gas. The crowd chanted pro-labor and worker unity songs, waved union flags and clapped along to the drum beating steadily at the front of the march.

pepsico_3-2.jpg

At 9:30am, as the crowd settled back to one side of the intersection, organizers addressed the crowd through a megaphone, thanking each group who had showed their support for the PepsiCo workers. The crowd cheered steadily for each group in attendance as police formed a solid circle around the crowd, standing firmly until the supporters at last dispersed, several hours after the first sign-bearers arrived.

The protest, organized and direct in its message, successfully expressed the support for those left without jobs as PepsiCo moves operations from Vicente Lopez to their factory in Mar del Plata, over 250 miles south of Buenos Aires. Workers and supporters came from many sectors of society, including education, auto-manufacturing, transportation, activism and others — solidarity was clearly widespread. Several of Congressional representatives leaders have expressed support for the workers as well.

pepsico_6.jpg

In the middle of an economic crisis, it is unfortunately not uncommon for factories to close or for workers to get fired. It is uncommon for workers to defy the union bureaucrats and a multi-national like PepsiCo to fight for their jobs. It is essential for people in the United States to demonstrate solidarity and support with PepsiCo workers as part of an anti-imperialist struggle for the working class.

Facebook Twitter Share

Guest Posts

Xenophobia on the Rise in Russia  

After the deadly attack on a music hall in Moscow, racism against non-Russian people is growing. This has a long history in Russia. 

Alina Tatarova

April 5, 2024
A group of protesters gather in front of the University of Michigan. Some are holding Palestinian flags

University of Michigan Proposes a Harsh Policy Curtailing Freedom of Speech and Protest on Campus

A new policy proposal targeting activists, protestors, and union organizers is cause for concern, but might help groups engaged in a range of struggles find a common enemy.

Ryan McCarty

March 30, 2024

Lord Balfour Was an Imperialist Warmonger 

We should give our full solidarity to the Palestine Action comrade who defaced a portrait of Arthur Balfour at Cambridge University. But the problem for everyone who opposes the genocide against Gaza is how to massify and politically equip the movement.

Daniel Nath

March 21, 2024

“Poor Things” Floats Like a Butterfly and Stings Like a Butterfly

Poor Things is a fantastical comedy with beautiful set design and costumes and an Oscar-winning performance from Emma Stone. So why did it leave me feeling so empty? Despite juggling feminist and socialist ideas, the film is ideologically muddled and often self-contradictory.

Basil Rozlaban

March 16, 2024

MOST RECENT

The Movement for Palestine Is Facing Repression. We Need a Campaign to Stop It.

In recent weeks, the movement in solidarity with Palestine has faced a new round of repression across the U.S. We need a united campaign to combat this repression, one that raises strategic debates about the movement’s next steps.

Tristan Taylor

April 17, 2024

Chicago Mayor Brandon Johnson Has No Place at Labor Notes

The Labor Notes Conference will have record attendance this year, but it’s showing its limits by opening with a speech from Chicago’s pro-cop Democratic mayor, Brandon Johnson. Instead of facilitating the Democratic Party’s co-optation of our movement, Labor Notes should be a space for workers and socialists to gather and fight for a class-independent alternative.

Emma Lee

April 16, 2024

U.S. Imperialism is Pushing Tensions in the Middle East to a Boiling Point

U.S. Imperialism's support for Israel is driving the tensions behind Iran's attack and the escalations in the Middle East. It is all the more urgent for the working class to unite with the movement for Palestine against imperialism and chart a way out of the crisis in the region.

Samuel Karlin

April 15, 2024

Thousands of Police Deployed to Shut Down Congress on Palestine in Berlin

This weekend, a Palestine Congress was supposed to take place in the German capital. But 2,500 police were mobilized and shut down the event before the first speech could be held. Multiple Jewish comrades were arrested.

Nathaniel Flakin

April 12, 2024