7
What Is a Strike?

What Is a Strike?
The economic hit to employers makes this a powerful tool for workers looking to effect change in their workplace.
How a strike works
The National Labor Relations Act of 1935 gives U.S. employees the right to strike.Deciding to strike
Workers decide to strike for a variety of reasons. In 2022, the top reason was pay, followed by health and safety issues and staffing, according to the Labor Action Tracker, an annual report on work stoppages by unionized and nonunionized workers compiled by researchers with the Cornell University ILR School.Meet MoneyNerd, your weekly news decoder
So much news. So little time. NerdWallet's new weekly newsletter makes sense of the headlines that affect your wallet.So much news. So little time. NerdWallet's new weekly newsletter makes sense of the headlines that affect your wallet.
So much news. So little time. NerdWallet's new weekly newsletter makes sense of the headlines that affect your wallet.
Often, strikes are organized by labor unions, which have the role of representing their members in contract negotiations with employers. For a union to go on strike, it has to have support from union members who cast secret ballots in a strike authorization vote. Voting to authorize a strike doesn’t guarantee a union will go on strike. Instead, authorizing a strike shows the employer on the other side of the bargaining table that the threat of a strike is credible because members have authorized union leaders to call for a strike. The Screen Actors Guild and the American Federation of Television and Radio Artists (SAG-AFTRA), which represents 160,000 performers, authorized a strike in early June 2023. Then, on July 13, its national board held a second vote to launch the strike, which lasted until a new contract was ratified on Dec. 5.