The International Longshoremen’s Association (ILA) has announced a resolution, or at least a temporary respite, in their port strike, delaying further actions until Jan. 15. The announcement temporarily eases pressure on Democratic presidential nominee Kamala Harris.
The tentative agreement was reached shortly after Florida Governor Ron DeSantis authorized the deployment of the Florida National Guard and Florida State Guard to key ports to restore operations affected by the labor halt and ease supply chain issues following Hurricane Helene.
🚨BREAKING: Gov. DeSantis announces deployment of Florida National Guard and Florida State Guard to critical ports amid Hurricane Helene aftermath to resume operations interrupted by dragging dockworkers strike
— Benny Johnson (@bennyjohnson) October 3, 2024
pic.twitter.com/kM9YRFUTqV
Breitbart has further details about what is being described as a narrowly averted catastrophe for Democrats:
“The union that represents tens of thousands of East Coast dockworkers and the shipping industry reached a tentative agreement on wages and are extending an expired contract through Jan. 15, 2025,” announced Politico on Thursday.
The union said on Facebook that “effective immediately, all current job actions will cease and all work covered by the Master Contract will resume.”
The threat of a strike could have severely hurt the American supply chain, which would have dramatically affected the economy going into the November presidential election between former President Donald Trump and Kamala Harris. Upon news that the strike would be going forward earlier this week, Americans began to panic-buy essential goods.
“I don’t know how bad it’s going to get, but the south east just got smacked by a hurricane and now the supply chain is going to be impacted through this strike … I would rather be overprepared than scared,” a woman in Fort Worth, Texas, said in a social media post this week.
The strike, which began on Tuesday at 12:01 a.m., brought operations to a standstill across 36 ports along the U.S. East Coast and Gulf of Mexico, halting cargo movements and escalating concerns over supply chain stability. Industry analysts estimated that the strike’s impact could cost up to $5 billion per day if prolonged.
According to ILA President Harold Daggett, the labor action is in response to what he called 50 years of wage exploitation by the United States Maritime Alliance (USMX). Daggett’s demands include a 77% wage increase for union members over five years and assurances against job losses due to automation and artificial intelligence in port operations.
However, Politico disclosed that Daggett received $901,000 from the union in 2023, a detail that undermined public perception of the union’s demands.
Moreover, unionized dockworkers in major hubs such as New York, Philadelphia and Miami often earn more than $100,000 annually. Reporting from the Associated Press highlighted that ILA members earn approximately $81,000 as a base salary, with the potential for some to exceed $200,000 annually when working extensive overtime.
President Biden chose not to intervene directly in the labor dispute, standing by his commitment to “collective bargaining” as a means to resolve the conflict.
Many had urged the president to consider invoking the Taft-Hartley Act, a federal law that could have mandated workers’ return to the docks and averted further strain on supply chains.
The strike threatened to exacerbated logistical challenges in the storm-ravaged southeastern U.S., where essential supplies like bottled water, non-perishable food and hygiene products are dwindling.
This is Western NC right now.
— Ryan Fournier (@RyanAFournier) September 29, 2024
Our governor is useless, and a moron, who cannot pull off a rescue evacuation.
Stop voting for Democrats. pic.twitter.com/dGZLKu1PbV
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Why pause to 1-15?
More bad news, more strikes
Think of this as an illegal, priceless campaign Contribution!
Delay the chaos…fool voters!