Under the banner of "Walmart moms," mothers who work at Walmart launched strikes in 20 cities across the United States on Wednesday to protest what they say are poverty wages and routine policies of retaliation against workers who organize. From Chicago to Pittsburgh to Miami, the mass actions were part of rolling strikes launched last Friday by Our Walmart members. They are slated to continue through Walmart's shareholders meeting in Bentonville, Arkansas on Friday.
The company has worked hard to cultivate the image of a family-friendly establishment, even setting up a web page dedicated to "creating community" between "Walmart moms"—a term that has become a common buzzword to refer to a subset of swing voters in U.S. presidential elections.
But the vast majority of real moms who work for Walmart are trapped in low-wage, unstable jobs that make it nearly impossible to save money to protect their families against hardship. A majority of Walmart moms earn less than $25,000 a year and, according to a new studyreleased by the think tank Demos, their problems include likely gender discrimination, mistreatment of pregnant workers, unstable and unpredictable work schedules, and more.