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Race to the Bottom
The Nation - March 24, 2005
By Liza Featherstone
"Wal-Mart
is working for everyone," read the newspaper ad, which ran
in January in more than 100 newspapers nationwide, including the
Wall Street Journal and The New York Times. "Some of our critics
are working only for themselves." The same day, the company
launched walmartfacts.com, a web site to counter criticism of the
kind you may have read in this magazine. Along with some misleading
information intended to make Wal-Mart's wages and benefits sound
much better than they are, the new campaign materials feature many
smiling African-American faces; the web site explains, accurately,
that Wal-Mart is a "leading employer" of Hispanics and
African Americans.
As
Jesse Jackson and other black leaders have pointed out in response
to this boast, the slave plantation was once a "leading employer"
of African Americans as well. But this ad campaign was only the
latest salvo in Wal-Mart's fervent battle for the goodwill of black
America, inspired by the difficulties the company is having as it
tries to move into urban areas.
Wal-Mart
spent more than $1 million on a PR campaign backing a voter referendum
to build a Supercenter in Inglewood, Calif., where the majority
of voters are people of color, and was decisively defeated last
year. The company faces continued resistance in Chicago as well,
where it has been trying to open stores in black neighborhoods.
A Wal-Mart on that city's West Side is scheduled to open by next
February - to the frustration of those who opposed it - while plans
for a South Side store have been scuttled. Controversy continues
to rage about a Wal-Mart project in New Orleans, and in late February
plans for a New York City Wal-Mart were scrapped in the wake of
protests by labor, small business and neighborhood groups. Much
of the opposition to the retailer has been led by activists of color.
And, of course, since many people of color are poor, Wal-Mart depends
on them as shoppers and as workers. It's no surprise, then, that
the company would be eager to appeal to racial minorities.
If
you own a TV, you've probably seen what many of Wal-Mart's critics
call its "happy black people" ad, which has been airing
since 2003, when the Inglewood fight heated up. Filmed at a Wal-Mart
store in Crenshaw, a Los Angeles neighborhood, the ad features smiling
African Americans giving glowing testimony to what Wal-Mart has
done for the "community." ("Community" in Wal-Mart
World often seems to mean "black" - on the web site, for
instance, the word is illustrated not by a group of people, as it's
commonly understood to mean, but by one exuberant, young woman of
color, a beneficiary of a Wal-Mart scholarship.) In another TV spot,
a black woman who works for Wal-Mart raves about the "opportunities"
she's found working with the company. As the writer Earl Ofari Hutchinson
has observed, the fact that black women are absent from most advertising
imagery potentially makes Wal-Mart's campaign that much more powerful.
The company also takes out ads in black newspapers, especially in
cities where it faces political opposition, and radio spots during
Sunday-morning gospel hour. And Wal-Mart celebrates Black History
Month, distributing free booklets to consumers with inspirational
sayings from accomplished African Americans.
Much
like that of the Bush administration, Wal-Mart's image-making strategy
includes not only advertising but paying for positive media coverage
from black journalists. This year the company will begin awarding
scholarships to minority journalism students at Howard, Columbia
and elsewhere - a worthy use of Wal-Mart's funds, given that people
of color are under-represented in this profession, but a rather
transparent move to buy off potential critics. (In an unusual twist,
the recipients will attend Wal-Mart's annual shareholders' meeting,
a massive pep rally whose primary purpose is to immerse attendees
in the company culture.) The company knows what favors its money
can buy: Wal-Mart underwrites Tavis Smiley's popular television
talk show in Los Angeles, and Smiley returned the favor last year
when, during the heated battle in Inglewood, he invited Wal-Mart
CEO Lee Scott on the air for a fawning interview, taking no calls.
Wal-Mart
even gives money to civil rights organizations fighting racism -
groups like La Raza, the Mexican American Legal Defense Fund, the
Urban League, the United Negro College Fund and the NAACP. As with
the journalism scholarships, this isn't all bad: far better that
Wal-Mart's money be used to fight for racial equality than to elect
Republicans or simply further enrich its own CEO, who at nearly
$23 million a year makes well over 1,000 times as much as the average
Wal-Mart worker. Unfortunately, however, taking money from Wal-Mart
may sometimes compromise organizations politically. In Chicago,
the NAACP chapter supported Wal-Mart in the political battle over
the South Side store; likewise, in a recent battle over Wal-Mart
in suburban Atlanta, Wal-Mart found the NAACP on its side.
Indeed,
the company has become a skillful grassroots player. In both Inglewood
and Chicago, Wal-Mart gave money to black churches, community groups
and politicians. Wal-Mart courted Emma Mitts, an African-American
alderwoman representing Chicago's West Side, and found her easily
seduced. Mitts became a strident advocate for the retailer. Like
many other organizations and individuals, she wasn't much of an
expense; according to campaign disclosure documents filed with the
State of Illinois, Wal-Mart rewarded her efforts last November with
$5,000. (Mitts did not return calls for this article.)
Many
black community activists were appalled that black leaders were
so easily bought off. "I was ashamed to be black!" says
Elce Redmond of the South Austin Coalition, a Chicago neighborhood
organization, describing how the clergy and elites rolled over.
"A lot of people have no principles. They will wear the dashiki,
but always take the green money from a multinational corporation."
Wal-Mart was deliberate, Redmond observes: "In almost twenty
years of organizing, I have never seen anything so divisive. If
you're going to take their money, take it, but don't pretend Wal-Mart
is good for the community." He's not posturing: Redmond's South
Austin Coalition received a check from Wal-Mart for a youth center,
cashed it and continued to work politically to oppose the retailer.
But
the organizing Wal-Mart representatives did, and the arguments they
made, may have been just as important as any cash they doled out.
They talked to ministers and community groups about the jobs the
company was going to bring, and the low prices. "It was just
smart," says Renaye Manley, the national field representative
in the AFL-CIO's Midwest office, which is based in Chicago. "And
it made our job that much harder." Manley, who is black and
from Chicago's South Side, thinks Wal-Mart's outreach was more important
than its money and that most community leaders were not bought off
but genuinely convinced: "People just wanted to see jobs. These
folks have a vision for their communities." James Thindwa,
a Zimbabwean who heads Chicago's Jobs With Justice, says, "A
lot of good, decent people bought the argument that any job is better
than none." Glen Ford and Peter Gamble, writing for The Black
Commentator, had a harsher take on this "slavish" acceptance
of anything corporate America has on offer, chastising Chicago's
black politicians for failing "to address [b]lack community
development as an issue of democracy."
Most
destructively, Thindwa says - and other Chicago activists agree
- "Wal-Mart played the race card." The company told the
city's black leaders that the unions fighting the retailer were
racist, effectively exploiting existing racial tensions in the city.
As elsewhere, the building trades unions in Chicago have historically
discriminated against blacks. But it is service unions like the
Service Employees International that are speaking out the most against
Wal-Mart, and in cities, their membership is mostly people of color.
"[Wal-Mart] knew what buttons to push," Redmond acknowledges,
but he's outraged that so many black leaders bought the simplistic
line that all unions are racist. "I've never seen so much ignorance.
They had no sense at all of the history of African Americans in
unions. A. Philip Randolph, ever heard of him? So they're going
to side with the corporate enslaver, like, 'Wal-Mart will save us
Negroes!'"
Thindwa
says, "Wal-Mart was able to paint this as white unions protecting
their turf, instead of as a broad-based community issue." Worse,
activists now agree, the anti-Wal-Mart coalition failed to respond
effectively to the company's race-baiting. Dorian Warren, an African-American
community activist and member of the Chicago Workers' Rights Board,
says, "The media framed it as 'white labor versus the black
community.' We were not able to change the frame."
There
are clearly profound racial tensions in the labor movement, and
as Wal-Mart continues to move into cities it is likely to continue
to exploit these tensions. Warren, a public policy scholar at the
University of Chicago, says, "I've been at a loss to figure
out why the labor movement can't have an honest conversation about
race." Contributing to the problem, black-led labor activism
has declined in recent decades, and many mainstream unions aren't
training black leaders (which is closely related to their failure
to develop leaders from the rank and file of any race). There's
a sense - in these battles over Wal-Mart, as in many other situations
- that labor uses communities of color when it's convenient but
drops them when a particular campaign is over. That's easily exploited
since, as Warren puts it, "there's just enough truth to it."
Of
course, there's still plenty of skepticism among African Americans
about Wal-Mart.
Indeed,
some black clergy were leaders in the fight against Wal-Mart in
Chicago. Community opposition probably did contribute to the retailer's
defeat on the South Side and may help the coalition's attempts to
pass an ordinance requiring Wal-Mart to pay a living wage to workers
on the West Side. In Inglewood, the fight against Wal-Mart was led
by black and Latino church and community activists, and very few
leaders were bought off. Blacks there did not buy the line that
Wal-Mart was anti-racist and the unions - therefore, all of Wal-Mart's
opponents - were racist. That's partly because in Inglewood relations
between the United Food and Commercial Workers and the community
groups were much better. Whereas in Chicago the union often insisted
on having its white and male leadership speak at public events,
in Inglewood black women who lived in the town and worked in supermarkets
were prominent faces in Wal-Mart's public opposition; they knocked
on doors and talked to their fellow citizens about why their unionized
grocery job was so important to them and their families, and why
Wal-Mart was such a threat.
Madeline
Janis-Aparicio of the Coalition for a Better Inglewood says about
her campaign's success: "We were also lucky - Wal-Mart did
something really stupid." In trying to pass an ordinance exempting
itself from the town's laws, the company violated the largely black
community's most basic requirement: respect. "We used that,"
says Janis-Aparicio, who credits that theme with winning over the
church leadership and many Inglewood voters. After one large, mainstream
black church joined the anti-Wal-Mart fight, the rest followed,
not just lending passive endorsement but enthusiastically rallying
their forces. Another helpful issue was crime - Wal-Mart is the
nation's leading purveyor of guns. To rural white communities, that's
often a political asset, but to urban black voters it's a harsh
liability. In the last few days of the Inglewood campaign, the anti-Wal-Mart
coalition hung a flier in the shape of an M-16 rifle on everybody's
door. "Some on our side felt it was a scare tactic," Janis-Aparicio
admits, but, she adds with justified pride, "it had a powerful
impact."
Even
in Chicago, Wal-Mart's own actions may end up helping its opponents.
Elce Redmond says, "A lot of people who supported Wal-Mart
at first are now saying, 'Elce, you were right.' Wal-Mart made a
lot of promises, and hasn't delivered." Politicians and community
leaders are now finding that since Wal-Mart secured permission to
open the West Side store, its officials aren't returning their calls
too readily. Rather than agreeing to pay workers decently, the company
sent 300 holiday turkeys for the community's needy. That struck
many people as a shallow response to concerns about the store's
economic impact. "People are beginning to ask questions,"
says Redmond. "Why can't Wal-Mart pay a living wage? Why can't
its workers have a union if they want one? Why not?"
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