Here’s How Professional Union Busters Talk About ‘Woke’ Tech Organizers

A law firm webinar advised employers on how to avoid becoming a target of CODE, an organizing initiative in tech and video game industries

Sarah Kessler
OneZero

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Employees holding protest signs at a global Google walkout on November 1, 2018 in New York.
Employees at a global Google walkout on November 1, 2018 in New York. Photo: Bryan R. Smith/AFP/Getty Images

On July 30, the employment and labor law firm Jackson Lewis put on a one-hour webinar designed to educate employers on a new threat: a wave of union organizing in the video game and technology industries. More specifically, it promised to teach them to defend against it.

The webinar, called “Breaking the CODE: Union Organizing in the Video Game and Technology Industries,” focused on a group called Campaign to Organize Digital Employees (CODE) that was formed in January 2020 by the Communications Workers of America (CWA). CODE won its first campaign in March when it successfully organized employees at the communication software startup Glitch, and it is part of an unprecedented surge of tech worker activism: Throughout the last couple of years, Microsoft employees have protested the company’s work with ICE, Google employees have protested the company’s work with police departments, and Amazon workers walked out in protest of the company’s response to Covid-19. Meanwhile, a group of tech contract workers for Google, Kickstarter employees, and a small subset of Instacart

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