‘Whatever it takes’: Starbucks workers launch US strike and call for boycott

A picture


More than a thousand Starbucks workers have commenced a strike in more than 40 cities across the US on Thursday amid stagnant negotiations with the world’s largest coffee chain over a first union contract.On the company’s annual “red cup day”, hailing the start of the lucrative holiday season, Starbucks Workers United is launching an unfair labor practice (ULP) strike, with rallies planned in locations including New York City; Philadelphia, Pennsylvania; Chicago, Illinois; Columbus, Ohio; and Anaheim, California.About 65 stores are initially affected.Organizers plan to expand the strike to more locations should executives hold firm – and want customers to steer clear of the chain as part of a campaign dubbed “no contract, no coffee”.Starbucks said it was “disappointed” that Workers United had voted to strike, rather than continue bargaining, but insisted the “vast majority” of stores would be unaffected by the action.

The company stands accused of “stonewalling” at the table by union officials.Since the first Starbucks store voted to unionize in 2021, more than 650 have followed, in the face of vehement opposition from the chain’s management.Contract negotiations broke down earlier this year, following the union’s rejection of Starbucks’ economic offer.Starbucks Workers United announced last week that workers had voted to authorize an open-ended ULP strike with 92% voting in favor.The union had spent months demanding that managers consider new proposals to improve staffing and pay, and resolve hundreds of unfair labor practice charges filed by the union against Starbucks throughout its organizing campaign.

“We have not been given meaningful proposals to finalize this contract since the announcement of the strike authorization vote,” Jasmine Leli, a Starbucks barista for three years and strike captain from Buffalo, New York, told the Guardian.“The baristas are prepared to do whatever it takes to get this finalized contract.”Striking baristas are asking that customers “do not buy at Starbucks while workers are on strike”, Leli added, to help “win the fair contract that we have spent many, many months negotiating with Starbucks”.“We’ve waited long enough,” said Leli.“We are so close to finishing this contract, and we need them to just finish it.

”The beginning of the strike coincides with Starbucks’ “red cup day”, a promotion in which customers receive a reusable red holiday cup with the purchase of a holiday drink.It is typically one of the company’s biggest sales days of the year.The chain is scrambling to turn around its US business and win back customers, after several years of sluggish sales.In September it announced plans to shut more than 100 cafes across North America and lay off about 900 corporate staff.“Union baristas mean business and are ready to do whatever it takes to win a fair contract and end Starbucks’ unfair labor practices,” said Michelle Eisen, a Starbucks Workers United spokesperson and veteran barista of 15 years.

“We want Starbucks to succeed, but turning the company around and bringing customers back begins with listening to and supporting the baristas who are responsible for the Starbucks experience.“If Starbucks keeps stonewalling, they should expect to see their business grind to a halt.The ball is in Starbucks’ court.”A spokesperson for Starbucks, Jaci Anderson, said: “We are disappointed that Workers United, who only represents around 4% of our partners, has voted to authorize a strike instead of returning to the bargaining table.When they’re ready to come back, we’re ready to talk.

”Any contract “needs to reflect the reality that Starbucks already offers the best job in retail, including more than $30 an hour on average in pay and benefits for hourly partners”, added Anderson.“The facts show people like working at Starbucks.Partner engagement is up, turnover is nearly half the industry average, and we get more than 1m million job applications a year.“Our customers can be assured that our partners will be ready to serve them at the vast majority of our more than 10,000 company operated coffeehouses and nearly 7,000 licensed locations throughout the holiday season, regardless of the union’s plans.”
businessSee all
A picture

UK exports to US hit lowest level since January 2022 as tariffs bite, and economy shrinks – as it happened

UK exports to the US have fallen to their lowest level since January 2022, as Donald Trump’s trade war has hit demand for British goods.New trade data from the Office for National Statistics this morning shows that the value of UK exports to the US, including precious metals, fell by £500m or 11.4% in September.The ONS says:The value of goods exports to the United States in September 2025 were at their lowest level since January 2022 and have remained relatively low since the introduction of tariffs in April.This drop in trade comes despite the deal agreed by Donald Trump and Keir Starmer this summer, under which the UK aerospace sector faces no tariffs at all from the US, while the auto industry now has 10% tariffs, down from 25%

A picture

Liberty Steel being investigated in Romania for embezzlement

Sanjeev Gupta’s Liberty Steel is under investigation in Romania for embezzlement and tax evasion, adding to the metals tycoon’s difficulties after the loss of his key British operation.Romania’s prosecutor’s office said in a statement last week that they raided seven homes and the registered office of an unnamed company.Liberty Steel and its parent organisation, the Gupta Family Group (GFG) Alliance, said the company would “vigorously defend itself against the unfounded allegations directed at the company”.Gupta, who is Indian-born and UK-educated, was once known as the “saviour of steel” for his plans to turn around struggling metalworks. However, his empire, previously stretching through the UK, eastern Europe and Australia, has unravelled in the years since the collapse of the lender Greensill Capital in 2021

A picture

Scotland plans to issue £1.5bn of its own bonds – ‘kilts’ rather than gilts

The Scottish first minister John Swinney has said Edinburgh is on track to issue its own government bonds, nicknamed “kilts”, after the country was given the same credit rating as the UK.Two ratings agencies Moody’s and S&P Global gave Scotland a score of Aa3 and AA respectively, echoing their judgment for the UK as a whole.The jokey name for the new financial instruments is a play on gilts, as UK government bonds are known.In a statement, Moody’s said its rating was “supported by the well-established devolution framework” that Scotland operated under, “with a requirement to maintain a balanced budget and predictable grant allocation”. The ratings agency added that the Scottish National party (SNP) government had “demonstrated prudent fiscal management”

A picture

Oversupply of oil could create glut of 4m barrels a day, says energy watchdog

The world is producing more oil than it needs and by next year there could be a glut of 4m excess barrels a day entering the market, according to the global energy watchdog.The International Energy Agency said the surplus in 2026 was likely to be larger than previously forecast, despite a decision from the biggest oil producers to pause their plan to increase crude exports.The Paris-based agency, which was set up after the 1973 oil crisis to monitor global supplies, pointed to a slower-than-usual growth in the world’s oil demand to explain the growing glut.“Global oil market balances are looking increasingly lopsided, as world oil supply is forging ahead while oil demand growth remains modest by historical standards,” the IEA said.The warning of a looming oversupply has emerged in the same week that the agency published its energy outlook report, including a controversial scenario in which global oil demand would continue to grow until 2050

A picture

Burberry bosses urge Rachel Reeves to reinstate tax-free shopping for tourists

Bosses at Burberry have urged Rachel Reeves to reinstate a tax-free shopping scheme for tourists in the budget to “unlock further growth” and increase tourist spending.Executives at the British luxury brand called on the chancellor to pursue “progressive policies” to boost shopping sprees from tourists, pointing specifically to a value-added tax (VAT) refund programme for foreigners that was scrapped five years ago.Tax-free shopping was abolished at the end of 2020. The policy made a brief return under Liz Truss’s short-lived government in 2022 but was scrapped again weeks later by her successor as prime minister, Rishi Sunak.Burberry said the UK had been losing out ever since, with shoppers from the US, Middle East and Asia apparently flocking to Paris and Milan rather than London for luxury goods

A picture

Amid disappointing UK growth, how can Rachel Reeves escape the doom loop?

Rachel Reeves’s autumn budget is not simple: Britain’s economy is misfiring and things need turning around fast. Yet a fiscal consolidation on the scale the chancellor is expected to require could push in exactly the opposite direction.The latest figures from the economy are hardly encouraging. Growth slowed from 0.3% in the second quarter to just 0